OPINION
Case Summary
Medical Assurance of Indiana ("MAI") and Dr. R.C. Patel appeal the trial court's entry of summary judgment against them and in favor of the Indiana Patient's Compensation Fund ("the Fund"). «We affirm.
Issue
The restated issue before us is whether MAI is required to pay the statutory maximum under the Indiana Medical Malpractice Act ("the Act") for each of two acts of malpractice committed by Dr. Patel during one surgery.
Facts 1
This is the second appeal concerning an operation performed in 1993 by Dr. Patel on Mary Barker. We set forth the facts underlying the first appeal as follows:
Barker was diagnosed with a malignancy in her colon and referred to Patel for surgery. Patel performed the surgery, which involved resectioning the colon. During this surgery, Patel used hemoeclips to control bleeding. At some point following the surgery, it was discovered that Barker's colon was leaking into her abdominal cavity at the point of reattachment. Patel performed a see-ond surgery to create a colostomy.
Later, doctors discovered that a he-moclip had been left on Barker's ureter. A colorectal surgeon and a urological surgeon then performed a third surgery to remove the hemoclip and reverse the colostomy.
Barker filed a suit for medical malpractice against Patel. At trial, Barker claimed that Patel breached the standard of care in two ways: by suturing the colon in such a way that it leaked and by leaving a hemoclip on her ureter. The case was tried to a jury, which awarded Barker $1,800,000 in damages. The trial court reduced the award to *740 $1,500,000, in compliance with the Indiana Medical Malpractice Act limitation of $750,000 in damages per act of malpractice.
Patel v. Barker,
MATI's predecessor-in-interest had issued a malpractice policy to Dr. Patel that was in effect in 1998. It provided malpractice liability coverage in the amount of $100,000 per cccurrence/$8300,000 per year, as required to make Dr. Patel a "qualified health care provider entitled" to the protections of the Act under the versions of Indiana Code Sections 34-18-3-2 and 34-18-4-1 in effect at the time. 2 After our supreme court denied transfer in Potel, MAI filed a declaratory judgment action against the Fund, asserting that although we had held Barker was entitled to two maximum $750,000 recoveries, the Act only required MAI to pay the health care provider malpractice liability maximum of $100,000 in effect at the time of the surgery once, not twice. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of the Fund and held MAI was required to make two $100,000 payments, not one, on Patel's behalf to discharge his liability to Barker under the Act. MAI and Dr. Patel now appeal. 3
Analysis
At the outset, we acknowledge the Fund's argument that MAI is estopped from litigating the issue of how much of the $1.5 million Barker is entitled to recover must be paid by MAI/Dr. Patel, and how much must be paid by the Fund, because of our decision in Patel. It is true that collateral estoppel bars subsequent relitigation of the same fact or issue where that fact or issue was necessarily adjudicated in a former suit and the same fact or issue is presented in a subsequent cause of action. Slutsky v. Crews,
We do not believe collateral estoppel is appropriate in this case. First, we observe that the judgment appealed in Patel solely held that Barker was entitled to recover $1.5 million. The decision did not specify how the judgment was to be paid, which is a crucial consideration in view of the unique arrangement by which medical malpractice judgments are paid partly by the health care provider/malpractice insurer and partly by the Fund. Second, we also observe that in the first appeal, Dr. Patel did in fact expressly make the argument that "the acts about which Barker complains constitute one 'occurrence' of malpractice under the Indiana Medical Malpractice Act...." Patel,
Our standard of review for a summary judgment motion is the same as that used in the trial court: summary judgment is appropriate only where the evidence shows that there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Ind. Trial Rule 56(C); Reeder v. Harper,
If a statute is unambiguous, we may not interpret it but must give the statute its clear and plain meaning; # a statute is ambiguous, we must ascertain the legislature's intent and interpret the statute to effectuate that intent. Robinson v. Gazvoda,
The legislature passed the Act in 1975 in response to a health care crisis in this state that was blamed in significant part upon increasing malpractice liability exposure for health care providers and their insurers. Seq, eg., Johnson v. St. Vincent Hospital, Inc.,
Specifically, Indiana Code Section 34-18-14-3 as now written provides:
(a) The total amount recoverable for an injury or death of a patient may not exceed the following:
_ (1) Five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) for an act of malpractice that occurs before January 1, 1990.
(2) Seven hundred fifty thousand dollars ($750,000) for an act of malpractice that occurs:
(A) after December 31, 1989; and
(B) before July 1, 1999.
(3) One million two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($1,250,000) for an act of malpractice that occurs after June 30, 1999.
(b) A health care provider qualified under this article (or IC 27-12 before its repeal) is not liable for an amount in excess of two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) for an occurrence of malpractice.
(e) Any amount due from a judgment or settlement that is in excess of the total liability of all liable health care providers, subject to subsections (a), (b), and
(d) [concerning respondeat superior liability], shall be paid from the patient's compensation fund under IC 34-18-15.
At the time of Barker's surgery, a health care provider's liability under subsection (b) "for an occurrence of malpractice" was limited to $100,000; the $250,000 limit was added in 1998. See P.L.111-1998, § 14. Thus, Section 34-18-14-3 provided in 1993 that the total amount a patient could recover for "an injury or death" resulting from "an act of malpractice" was $750,000; the negligent health care provider was required to pay up to $100,000 "for an occurrence of malpractice" but no more, and the Fund was (and is) required to pay any recoverable amount not paid by the health care provider or insurer.
At this point in the litigation, there is no dispute that while performing surgery on Barker, Dr. Patel twice breached the appropriate standard of care and inflicted two separate and distinct injuries on Barker by (1) ineffectually suturing her colon and (2) leaving a hemoclip attached to her ureter. These two breaches necessitated two subsequent surgeries. Additionally, as established by our decision in Patel, Barker is entitled to recover $1.5 million for these injuries, or one $750,000 maximum statutory recovery for each injury. MAI essentially asks us to shift the entire cost of the second act of malpractice Dr. Patel coramitted to the Fund by only making one $100,000 maximum health care provider payment. -It claims that the surgery Dr. Patel performed on Barker was a single "occurrence of malpractice," regardless of the number of injuries inflicted and negligent acts committed during the surgery by Dr. Patel.
We very recently held that Section 34-18-14-38 is "unambiguous." McCarty v. Sanders,
First, MAT's urged result would undermine fundamental principles of tort law. It is axiomatic that a defendant is liable for breach of a duty of reasonable care owed to a plaintiff that proximately results in compensable injury. See Bader v. Johnson,
Here, Dr. Patel twice breached a duty owed to Barker and inflicted two readily distinguishable injuries to two different bodily systems. "In tort actions generally, all damages directly related to the wrong and arising without an intervening agency are recoverable.... In negligence actions specifically, the injured party is entitled to damages proximately caused by the tortfeasor's breach of duty." Id. at 1220. Additionally, it goes without saying that in the ordinary case, the tort-feasor (or the insurer) is the party required to pay the damages. The Act, and specifically the Fund, changes this equation to a degree in that the Fund will pay damages caused by a health care provider's malpractice that exceed a certain amount. However, we perceive no legislative intent to completely absolve a health care provider of liability for committing multiple, separate acts of malpractice that result in separate, distinct, and compensa-ble injuries, albeit during the course of a single medical procedure. Dr. Patel, and by necessity MAI, must be held liable for those two breaches and injuries, in accordance with longstanding common law that we conclude was not altered by the Act.
Second, we believe that construing the phrase "an occurrence of malpractice" to be the functional equivalent of "an act of malpractice" for purposes of determining a health care provider's maximum liability in this particular factual seenario is consistent with the case law addressing Section 34-18-14-3. We have held that even where two separate and distinct acts of malpractice are established, a patient or survivor is only entitled to one maximum statutory recovery if the multiple acts of malpractice only resulted in one injury or death. St. Anthony Medical Center v. Smith,
In Miller v. Memorial Hosp. of South Bend,
In Patel, of course, we expanded upon Miller to hold that a patient suffering multiple distinct injuries caused by multiple acts of malpractice by a single health care provider during a single medical procedure is entitled to a maximum statutory recovery for each such injury. Patel,
This court recently addressed yet another rare factual scenario in the context of Section 34-18-14-3. In McCarty v. Sanders,
*745 Subsection (b) limits the amount that a health care provider has to pay for an "occurrence of malpractice." The plain meaning of "occurrence," a term not defined by the Act, is "act or instance of occurring," "happening," "event," "episode," or "incident." The American Heritage College Dictionary at 944 (3d ed.1993). An occurrence of malpractice is the actual act itself, not the resulting injury. The legislature could have chosen to require a health care provider to pay up to $100,000.00 for each "injury or death of a patient" resulting from an occurrence of malpractice, but it clearly did not do so.
Id. at 899. We are largely in agreement with this language, except to question making too much of a distinction between an "occurrence of malpractice" and "the resulting injury." To be an actionable "occurrence of malpractice," a health care provider's negligent act must proximately result in injury; the existence of injury is an "indispensable element" of any negli-genee claim. See Bader,
Smith, Bova, Miller, Patel, and McCarty have established the following: (1) a patient who suffers only one compensable injury, regardless of the number of negligent acts causing that injury, is entitled to only one maximum statutory recovery; (2) a doctor who commits more than one negligent act in treating a patient is only liable for one maximum statutory payment if only one compensable injury results; (8) a patient who suffers two or more distinct injuries from two or more negligent acts by one or more health care providers is entitled to the maximum statutory recovery for each injury; and (4) a doctor who commits only one act of malpractice, yet causes more than one compensable injury to more than one patient, is still only lable for one maximum statutory payment.
In our view, the most logical extension of these holdings is that a doctor who commits two or more negligent acts in treating a patient and thereby causes two or more distinct injuries is liable for the maximum statutory payment for each com-pensable injury. Each distinct act of malpractice resulting in a distinct injury is "an occurrence of malpractice" under Section 34-18-14-8(b) for which a health care provider is liable up to the maximum amount. We can conceive of no reason in this case to divorcee subsection (a), governing the total amount an injured patient may recover, from subsections (b) and (c), which divvies up how and by whom that recovery will be paid for-ie., the first $100,000 (now $250,000) by the health care provider/insurer, and the remainder by the Fund. When a patient suffers a compensa-ble injury due to malpractice, the patient and the Fund reasonably should expect the health care provider to pay his or her statutory share for each separate injury caused by separate acts of malpractice, regardless of the temporal proximity of those acts.
Perhaps the best way to address the variations on the multiple negligent acts/multiple injuries factual seenarios and provide guidance in future cases is to give a definition of "occurrence" that is consistent with plain meaning, the purposes of the Act, and the cases from this court and our supreme court: "an occurrence of malpractice" under Section 34-18-14-8(b) is the negligent act itself plus the resulting injury, with a health care provider's liability limited to the lowest common denominator between act and injury. That is, if there is only one act but two injuries, there can only be one "occurrence" and *746 health care provider payment; if there are two acts but only one injury, there can only be one "occurrence" and health care provider payment; if there are two distinct acts and two distinct injuries, there can be two "occurrences" and health care provider payments.
MAI suggests throughout its brief that requiring it to pay $100,000 for each act of malpractice Dr. Patel committed, which led to distinct injuries, will frustrate the overarching intent of the Act to limit malpractice liability, lower malpractice insurance rates, and thereby ensure access to healthcare by more Hoosiers. It reminds this court of the spiraling. costs in Indiana of malpractice insurance and, therefore, health care generally that prompted the Act's passage, as recounted in Johnson v. St. Vincent Hospital,
Conclusion
The trial court correctly concluded that Dr. Patel and MAI are required to make two maximum health care provider payments totaling $200,000 to discharge their liability to Barker pursuant to Indiana Code Section 34-18-14-8(b). We affirm the grant of summary judgment in the Fund's favor.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Fund has filed a motion to strike a factual assertion from MAI's brief that it did not support with any citation to evidence, concerning the effect of one doctor's malpractice on the setting of malpractice insurance premiums, and which the Fund claims is inaccurate in any event. We grant the motion to strike. See Ind. Appellate Rule 46(A)(6)(a) and (8)(a) (setting forth rule that factual assertions in brief must be supported by references to the Record on Appeal or Appendix).
. Section 34-18-4-1 now requires an individual health care provider to carry malpractice liability insurance in the amount of $250,000 per occurrence/$750,000 per year.
. Although Dr. Patel has joined in this appeal, it appears MAI prepared the brief in this case. Hence, we will refer to the brief and arguments as MAI's throughout this opinion.
. We observe that this case is not a coverage dispute between Dr. Patel and MAI based upon the specific language of MAI's malpractice policy, at least on appeal. Rather, the issue presented is whether Dr. Patel and his insurer, MAI, are jointly required to pay the $100,000 maximum once or twice under the language of the Act. The trial court issued a specific holding that MAI is required to cover Dr. Patel in the amount of $200,000, not $100,000, under its policy with Dr. Patel. On appeal, MAI makes no argument that even if Dr. Patel himself is liable for $200,000, it is only required to cover $100,000 of that amount.
. As we noted in Patel, the statute now reads "an injury or death," which we did not believe effected any substantive change. Patel,
. Our supreme court has used "occurrence" interchangeably with "act'" when discussing medical malpractice in other contexts. See Martin v. Richey,
