Thе Nardones filed this medical malpractice suit in May 1971, more than five years after Nicholas Nardone’s treatment at and discharge from Jackson Memorial Hospital in Dade County, Florida. The District Court granted summary judgment for the several defendants
The sad facts of the case detailing the deterioration of young Nardone to a comatose state of blindness and irrеversible brain damage
Of course we accept these answers as authoritative determinations of Florida law and as a result the case is now narrowed to a very small compass.
The plaintiffs are charged with knowledge of Nicholas’ condition
To the suggestion there should be a remand to determine this limited factual issue, the defendant professionals urge that even assuming nondisclosure of a known condition/cause, the tolling stopped at the time the relationship of patient-doctor expired. They base this on some quotations in the Florida opinion, including a Mississippi diversity case in from the Fifth Circuit, Sheets v. Burman, 5 Cir., 1963,
We do not read the opinion so strictly. Had the Florida Supreme Court thought so it would not have had any occasion to discuss the nature of this fiduciary duty. This is so because the Court expressly acknowledges that after July 1965, “none of the defendants had аny further contact with the child,”
We therefore, as a matter of Florida law, construе the Court’s opinion as holding that with respect to limitations and tolling questions the consequences of the breach of the duty to disclose a condition/cause known by him during the continuance of doctor-patient relationship do not expire simply by reason of the termination of that consensual-contractual relationship. As а policy matter, this is especially desirable in cases such as this one in which the patient (or family) knows only of the condition, not the cause. To reason that on the termination of the doctor-patient relationship the patient is then free to consult others ignores several things, the first of which is that on the hypothesis of the disclosurе rule, the doctor knows the condition/cause and the patient is entitled to be informed. Next, it may well be that no one subsequently can ever ascertain the condition/cause.
In summary, if the doctor during the existence of the relationship has or should have knowledge of the cause of the condition, the statute is tolled so long as the doctor fails to reveal his knowledge to the patient.
Several of the physician defendants also argue that even if the cause survives because of failure to inform, the fiduciary relationship exists only between the patient and the physician directly engaged by him or with whom he has direct contact. Therefore, radiologists, surgeons, or other doctors unknown to the patient would be relieved of the responsibilities that accompany the fiduciary relationship. In the light of today’s highly refined medical-hospital practices we reject this reasoning. Whenever a patient is treated by a series of surgeons and doctors the fiduciary relationship exists regardlеss of whether the patient is aware who is treating him. This Hippocratic duty is born out of the doctor’s purpose to render professional service. Treatment of infants, the senile and the unconscious proves that the duty does not spring from a consensual basis. It is possible that one or more defendants may be exonerated because they were doing a technical job that did not give them familiarity with a substantial portion of the medical record and therefore they had no way to learn of a specific causative incident. The mere fact that several doctors treated the patient or that some were not known to the patient does not by itsеlf exonerate any defendant.
We do not intend to indicate any opinion on whether there is evidence that
In remanding for this limited factual inquiry we are not holding that a trial is proper on the merits of the whole case.
Here this truncated approach is applicable as it was in Crummer. The fact that some issues are foreclosed by the Florida Court and therеfore summary judgment is proper as to them, does not eliminate issues where there is still a fact question. See F.R.Civ.P. 56(d). But a first step determination on the limited limitations question we have posed will obviate the immediate need for consideration of such difficult questions as damages, including pain and suffering, and may put an end to the litigation altogether. On remand, the District
The result is that except for this limited issue the summary judgment is sustained in the sense that it is not open for further inquiry or review. But since the summary judgment as a conclusory whole holds the actions barred by limitations on a critical element as to which there was insufficient evidence to warrant summary judgment, that judgment has to be vacated to permit the factual and legal determination of whether at the critical times any defendant, considered separately as to each, knew, or had reasonable grounds for knowing of the condition/cause and failed to disclose this to the patient/parents. If that determination — on summary judgment, if appropriate, or by the trier of fact — is that this limited duty of disclosure was not breached, judgment of dismissal would follow in behalf of the respective defendants, and appeal would lie from a final judgment. If the District Court detеrmines the duty was breached, the case could proceed to trial on the full merits, but to prevent a costly trial the District Court might consider certifying the ease for interlocutory appeal, 28 U.S. C.A. § 1292(b) which this Court would almost necessarily have to allow.
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The named defendants include Drs. David H. Reynolds, Theodore Sarafoglu, Fredie P. Gargano,- and Donald Sheffel, Metropolitan Dade County (owner of the hospital), and their respective insurance companies.
. The statute has since been amended to provide basically a two-year statute of limitations. FSA § 95.11(4)(b) (Supp.1976).
. This case once again indicates the value of the magnificent tool of certification. We reсently have had opportunity to praise this aid to federal-state harmony, as it is permitted in Alabama and Louisiana as well as Florida, in Tyler v. Insurance Co. of N. Am., 5 Cir., 1975,
. This opinion is not written so all who run may read. It is structured on the basis of our prior opinion, the accompanying unpublished detailed certificate, and the Florida Supreme Court’s opinion.
The Court phrases the single issue:
Evident from the record, the United States District Court’s decision, the certificate of facts, and as conceded by the parties, the injury was patent and therefore there could be no concealment and resulting duty to dis-. close the fact of the injury on the part of the physicians. The record is not clear on the cause of the injury and on this issue wе render no opinion as to whether this was an adverse condition known to the doctor for which he had a duty to disclose, failure of which would toll the statute.
Nardone v. Reynolds, supra,
. By proper suggestion of death we are now informed that young Nardone has since died.
. These questions were phrased by us because of the inability or refusal of counsel to agrеe (see n. 7,
. Under the Florida opinion, Questions I, II, III, and IV are foreclosed. The Court also held that there were no misrepresentations. Likewise on our independent review of the record under federal standards, we hold as to all matters save the single issue left open by the Florida Supreme Court summary judgment was justified. F.R.Civ.P. 56; Boeing Company v. Shipman, 5 Cir., 1970,
. For ease in discussion throughout the term “condition” means the patient’s deteriorated physical state which was apparent to all by March 1965. Similarly the “cause” means the medico-physical cause of this apparent condition in terms of actions done or not done by the respective professionals which from an operational-physical sense brought about the conditions.
. The Court states:
where the symptoms or the condition are such that the doctor in the exercise of reasonable diligence cannot reach a judgment as to the exact cause of the injury or condition and merely can conjecturе over the possible or likely causes, he is under no commanding duty to disclose a conjecture of which he is not sure. Therefore, his silence as to a possible condition or cause which he is unable to verify in the exercise of reasonable diligence does not standing alone constitute sufficient fraudulent withholding to toll the statutе of limitations.
Nardone v. Reynolds, supra,
. The Florida Court’s going on to discuss this is in no way a contradiction of the negative answers to III and IV. No. Ill ruled out the duty to disclose “possible” causes and IV ruled out possible “or likely” causes. Actually the Court’s discussion,
“The particular phrasing used in the certified question is not to restrict the Supreme Court’s consideration of the problems involved and the issues as the Supreme Court percеives them to be in its analysis of the record certified in this case. This latitude extends to the Supreme Court’s restatement of the issue or issues and the manner in which the answers are to be given, whether as a comprehensive whole or in subordinate or even contingent parts.” Martinez v. Rodriquez,394 F.2d 156 , at 159, n. 6.
To the sometimes veiled suggestion this was a gratuitous statement not neсessary to the Court’s decision, it is at least considered dicta of hurricane velocity because its Fríe-wind comes from the highest Court of the state. Delduca v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 5 Cir., 1966,
. Sheets concerned the Mississippi statute of limitations and the Court quoted from Indiana and Louisiana cases in discussing the tolling of
. Nothing we say indicates that the tolling may not be stopped at an eаrlier time when and as the patient (family) knows or reasonably should have known of the condition/cause.
. Although we leave this to the District Court in the first instance, it appears that as to the liability of the hospital, it would have no respondeat liability for breach of duty by the “independent contractor” doctors and could be held liable оnly for the actions of its employees or for its own direct failure to disclose. See Bourgeois v. Dade County, Fla., 1956,
. One consideration bearing on the decision by the trier of fact as to the duty to disclose known conditions/causes is what information was available to plaintiffs, or anyone consulted by them, in the hospital records, the knowledge of which is imputed to all рlaintiffs as a matter of law by the Florida opinion Question II.
. We emphasize that the remand for a factual determination on this limited issue does not indicate any prediction by this Court that after further consideration the District Judge will decide that fact questions for jury resolution remain as to this issue as to each defendant considered separately. At that point a summary judgment for any or all defendants may be appropriate. See Davis v. Liberty Mutual Ins. Co., 5 Cir., 1976,
If it proceeds to a trial on the limitation question, the Court suggests that any issues submitted to the jury be submitted under F.R. Civ.P. 49(a), as this will be a great benefit to the Court on review of any jury findings. See Industries, Investments & Agencies (Bahamas) Ltd. v. Panelfab Int’l Corp., 5 Cir., 1976,
. In Crummer the District Court ruled the antitrust suit barred by the Florida statute of limitations. The plaintiffs claimed fraudulent concealment and this Court remanded for a trial on that issue.
. In Hooper, which also inсluded the threshold question of whether suit was barred by the statute of limitations, we said: “Of course, proof will have to be made and the trial court should be allowed considerable flexibility in adapting procedures for the trial and determination of this threshold issue.”
. See note 7 on page 1134.
. We have arranged this table for convenience of discussion and the reader’s ease. This was not the format of the Supreme Court’s opinion but its answers are categorical. Nardone v. Reynolds, supra,
