EMANUEL FLINTROY, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF HIS DECEASED DAUGHTER, JESSICA WRIGHT v. THE STATE OF LOUISIANA HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER-MONROE, DR. RICK CAVELL, DR. GWEN HOLDINESS, DR. STUART MELTON, S.M. BEAL, RN, RANDY RATCLIFF, RN, LAUREN TUCKER, RN, K. RICHARDSON, RN AND S. DUNHAM, RN
No. 53,777-CA
COURT OF APPEAL SECOND CIRCUIT STATE OF LOUISIANA
March 3, 2021
Judgment rendered March 3, 2021. Application for rehearing may be filed within the delay allowed by Art. 2166, La. C.C.P.
EMANUEL FLINTROY, INDIVIDUALLY AND ON BEHALF OF HIS DECEASED DAUGHTER, JESSICA WRIGHT Plaintiff-Appellant
versus
THE STATE OF LOUISIANA HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER-MONROE, DR. RICK CAVELL, DR. GWEN HOLDINESS, DR. STUART MELTON, S.M. BEAL, RN, RANDY RATCLIFF, RN, LAUREN TUCKER, RN, K. RICHARDSON, RN AND S. DUNHAM, RN Defendant-Appellees
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Appealed from the Fourth Judicial District Court for the Parish of Ouachita, Louisiana Trial Court No. 2011-3383 (Civil)
Honorable Robert C. Johnson, Judge
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WILLIAM E. LEBLANC Counsel for Appellant
HUDSON, POTTS & BERNSTEIN, L.L.P. By: Jay P. Adams Counsel for Appellees
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Before MOORE, STEPHENS, and THOMPSON, JJ.
Emanuel Flintroy appeals a judgment that sustained an exception of no right of action and dismissed his claim of medical malpractice arising from the allegedly substandard treatment received by his daughter, Jessica Wright, at LSU Health Sciences Center-Monroe (at the time known as E.A. Conway Hospital, but referred to herein as “LSU“). For the reasons expressed, we affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The 20-year-old Ms. Wright, who suffered from Sickle Cell disease, went to LSU on August 5, 2008, with a Sickle Cell crisis. Doctors gave her a cocktail of strong narcotics, to control her pain, but early on the morning of August 7, she coded and could not be resuscitated. The plaintiff, Flintroy, filed a timely request for Medical Review Panel (“MRP“) with the Division of Administration on July 31, 2009. The instant record does not include a copy of this request.
The MRP rendered its opinion on August 1, 2011, finding no breach of any standard of care by LSU or by any of the doctors or nurses who treated Ms. Wright.
Flintroy filed this petition for medical malpractice on November 2, 2011, alleging that Ms. Wright died from narcotic intoxication. He alleged that he was suing “individually and on behalf of his deceased daughter, Jessica Wright,” and demanded damages for wrongful death and survival. LSU answered with general denials, and the parties proceeded to discovery. At a deposition in September 2015, Flintroy stated that he was Ms. Wright‘s father, but admitted that he was never married to her mother. In a separate deposition, Ms. Wright‘s mother, Carolyn Shareef, testified
LSU filed a “peremptive exception of no right of action.” This argued that because Flintroy was not married to the patient‘s mother and never filed an avowal action, he had to prove filiation, under
In an “additional response” (the record does not include his original response), Flintroy argued that the documents did not clearly establish the date of Ms. Wright‘s death, so the court could not rule on timeliness of a filiation action. Mostly, however, he argued that the Medical Malpractice Act (“MLSSA“)¹ “substantially impedes the ability of tort victims to obtain a full recovery of damages, is in derogation of established rights and is to be strictly construed,” citing Watkins v. Lake Charles Mem. Hosp., 13-1137 (La. 3/25/14), 144 So. 3d 944.
At a hearing in September 2019, LSU offered Ms. Wright‘s death certificate, which showed that she died August 7, 2008, and Flintroy‘s petition, filed November 2, 2011, over one year later. Flintroy argued that
The court wrote an opinion laying out the arguments and noting that it could find no case law interpreting MLSSA as allowing the suspension or interruption of the peremptive period of Art. 198. The court therefore found that filing the MRP request, on July 31, 2009, did not interrupt the peremptive period. Because Flintroy failed to bring a paternity action within that period, he had no standing to sue on Ms. Wright‘s behalf. The court sustained the exception and rendered judgment dismissing Flintroy‘s claims with prejudice.
Flintroy appealed devolutively.
THE PARTIES’ POSITIONS
By his sole assignment of error, Flintroy urges the district court erred in granting LSU‘s exception of “preemption” by applying Art. 198 to a MLSSA case; specifically, the court did not acknowledge that filing the MRP request stopped the peremptive period from running, and thus disregarded Udomeh. He argues that Art. 198 simply does not apply to MLSSA cases. He cites cases that generally hold that MLSSA (or the private Medical Malpractice Act) governs malpractice claims, such as Conerly v. State, 97-0871 (La. 7/8/98), 714 So. 2d 709, and Correro v. Ferrer, 50,476 (La. App. 2 Cir. 3/2/16), 188 So. 3d 316, rev‘d on other
LSU reiterates that Flintroy was not married to Ms. Wright‘s mother, is not listed on the birth certificate, and never filed a paternity action; thus, he needed to file a suit to establish paternity. Under Art. 198, this suit had to come within one year after the child‘s death, and the year is peremptive. Since Flintroy filed no timely suit, he has no standing. LSU argues that Udomeh is factually distinguished from this case, as that plaintiff filed a tort suit alleging paternity within one year, while Flintroy did not. LSU strongly disputes that the timely MRP request could interrupt the one year, as Art. 198 is peremptive and, as such, cannot be interrupted,
APPLICABLE LAW
To recover under a claim for wrongful death or survival damages, a plaintiff must fall within the class of persons designated as a beneficiary under
Peremption is defined as a period of time fixed by law for the existence of a right. Unless timely exercised, the right is extinguished upon the expiration of the peremptive period.
Jurisdiction over the subject matter is the legal power and authority of a court to hear and determine a particular class of actions or proceedings, based on, among other things, the object of the demand.
The filing of a request for MRP in accordance with MLSSA suspends the running of prescription against all joint or solidary obligors, including but not limited to health care providers.
DISCUSSION
The essential facts are that Ms. Wright died August 7, 2008; Flintroy, who was not married to her mother and filed no paternity action during Ms. Wright‘s lifetime, had a peremptive one year after her death in which to file a paternity action; he did not do so, but alleged paternity when he filed this petition for medical malpractice, November 2, 2011, over one year later. Because of the failure to assert paternity timely, Flintroy did not establish his right to assert damages for Ms. Wright‘s death. Perry v. Clay, supra; Burkette v. General Motors, supra. The analysis, however, does not end here.
In Udomeh, supra, the plaintiff sued the mother of his 11-year-old son, a state agency, and a health care provider for the wrongful death and survival damages of his son. The plaintiff, however, had never been married to the boy‘s mother, adopted him, or filed a paternity action; on this basis, the defendants filed exceptions of no right of action, which the lower courts
In the instant case, we ask the same question: can we liberally construe the request for MRP, filed with the Division of Administration, as sufficient to preserve the claim of paternity? The record does not include a copy of Flintroy‘s request for MRP, but for purposes of discussion, we will assume that it made the same allegation as his petition, that Jessica Wright was his deceased daughter. Rando v. Anco Insulations Inc., supra.
We are constrained to note that in Udomeh, Miller, Caceras, and Jackson the petitions were all filed in district courts, which have subject-matter jurisdiction to resolve a paternity claim.
Moreover, MLSSA specifically defines the effect of filing an MRP request, in
The filing of a request for review of a claim shall suspend the running of prescription against all joint or solidary obligors, including but not limited to health care providers, both qualified and not qualified, to the same extent that prescription is suspended against the party or parties that are subject of the request for review. Filing a request for review of a malpractice claim required by this Section with any agency or entity other than the division of administration shall not suspend or interrupt the running of prescription.
It refers only to the review of a malpractice claim (and no other civil matters) and to the suspension of prescription (and not peremption). With this limited grant of authority, an MRP request in the Division of Administration cannot be treated as a paternity claim for purposes of Art. 198. Filing a wrongful death or survival action before the MRP process would be premature,
Finally, we must address Flintroy‘s specific contention that because MLSSA interrupts prescription during the pendency of the MRP proceedings, it must also interrupt peremption. We find no authority for this, with Art. 3461‘s clear statement that peremption “may not be renounced, interrupted, or suspended.” Moreover, the analogy between
The Supreme Court, however, literally applied Art. 3461 and found that peremption cannot be subject to suspension or interruption. Id. 21-28, 85 So. 3d at 624-628. The court rejected the argument that the legislature must have “intended the principles of equity, justice, and fairness to apply” to
The facts in Jenkins are, of course, framed by the issue of legal malpractice and the effect of contra non valentem, but the reasoning appears to apply to any form of peremption, and follows the plain language of Art. 3461. Flintroy‘s contention that the MRP request interrupted the peremptive period of Art. 198 does not have statutory or jurisprudential support.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons expressed, the judgment is affirmed. All costs are to be paid by Emanuel Flintroy.
AFFIRMED.
