Jan N. OGLETREE, M.D. and Heart Hospital of Austin, Petitioners, v. Nancy Kay MATTHEWS and Luann Matthews, Respondents.
No. 06-0502.
Supreme Court of Texas.
Decided Nov. 30, 2007.
Argued April 10, 2007.
Terri S. Harris, Patricia Sue Allen, Ewbank & Byrom, P.C., Richard Charles Geisler, Missy K. Atwood, Maria Cantu Hexsel, Germer Gertz Beaman & Brown, LLP, Austin, TX, for Petitioners.
Charles J. Young, Richey & Young, Austin, TX, Robert T. Hardcastle, Woodland Park, CO, for Respondents.
Chief Justice JEFFERSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Civil Practice and Remedies Code requires a health care liability claimant to serve expert reports on providers within 120 days after filing suit. If the claimant does not serve the report within 120 days, the trial court must grant the affected party‘s motion to dismiss the claim, and the failure to do so is subject to interlocutory appeal. If, however, the claimant‘s report is timely but deficient, the trial
I
Factual and Procedural Background
Eighty-four-year-old John Burke Matthews was admitted to Heart Hospital of Austin on September 27, 2002. Several days into his hospitalization, Dr. Jan Ogletree, a urologist, performed a urinary catheterization procedure on Mr. Matthews. Dr. Ogletree is alleged to have inserted the catheter negligently, causing Mr. Matthews to suffer traumatic bruising, bladder perforation, and acute renal failure. Mr. Matthews died on October 7, 2002.
Plaintiffs Nancy Kay Matthews and Luann Matthews brought a health care liability claim against Dr. Ogletree and Heart Hospital of Austin complaining of Mr. Matthews‘s medical care. Pursuant to
In my opinion (but I would have to defer to a urologist on this) given the inability of the nursing staff to pass the Foley catheter into the bladder and the necessity for the urologist to utilize a stiff metallic “wire” to traverse the urethra, such manipulation and catheterization should have been performed under fluoroscopic guidance. Had that been done the perforation might well have been avoided but certainly could have diagnosed [sic] at the outset, with the likelihood of a smaller tear having resulted. If not recognized in a timely manner, such a tear could lead to long-term problems, including bladder (or, if a urethral tear, urethral) dysfunction, infection, etc. It is apparent that a cystogram was performed shortly after the catheterization, although the exact timetable is unclear; nor do I have records to determine whether or not the response of the physician to the tear was appropriate. (Of course, those might be best reviewed by a urologist.)
The nurses’ reports were directed primarily to the care provided by the nursing staff at the hospital, although they outlined various alleged failures by Dr. Ogletree to adhere to the standard of care as well.
Dr. Ogletree timely objected to the sufficiency of the expert reports and moved to dismiss the case. Dr. Ogletree asserted that a radiologist was incapable of opining on a urologist‘s standard of care and that no curriculum vitae was attached to the expert report as the statute requires.
The hospital did not object to the reports within the statutory twenty-one day period, but moved to dismiss nonetheless.
The trial court found that the radiologist‘s report was deficient, denied Dr. Ogletree‘s motion to dismiss, and granted the plaintiffs a thirty day extension to cure deficiencies. See
The court of appeals held that it lacked jurisdiction over Dr. Ogletree‘s appeal because the trial court‘s denial of his motion to dismiss was coupled with the grant of an extension to cure the deficient reports. 212 S.W.3d 331, 334-335. The court reasoned that Dr. Ogletree could not sever the denial of the motion to dismiss from the grant of the extension and concluded that permitting an appeal to the denial would negate the statutory language prohibiting an appeal from an order granting an extension. Id. As to the hospital, the court of appeals held that the hospital waived its objections to any deficiencies in the report and affirmed the trial court‘s order denying the motion to dismiss. Id. at 336. We granted the petitions for re
II
Discussion
In 2003, the Legislature amended the statutes governing health care liability claims. Act of June 2, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S. ch. 204, § 10.01, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 847, 864. As amended,
A
Deficient Reports
Dr. Ogletree argues that as a radiologist, Dr. Karsh may not opine on a urologist‘s standard of care and, therefore, no report was served that met the statutory definition of an “expert report.” See
That is not how the Legislature drafted the statute, however. As the court of appeals noted, the predecessor statute allowed a discretionary thirty day extension for good cause and a mandatory thirty day “grace period” upon a showing that the failure to file a conforming report was due to accident or mistake and was not intentional or due to conscious indifference. 212 S.W.3d at 333 n. 4 (citing former TEX. REV.CIV. STAT. art. 4590i, § 13.01). The 2003 amendments, on the other hand, created a statute-of-limitations-type deadline within which expert reports must be served. If no report is served within the 120 day deadline provided by
But while the 2003 amendments were intended to decrease claims, they do not mandate dismissal for deficient, but curable, reports. See
This prohibition is both logical and practical. If Dr. Ogletree‘s position were correct, a defendant would be entitled to immediately appeal a trial court‘s order denying dismissal any time a report failed to meet strict statutory guidelines, even though the statute permits a plaintiff to cure defects of that nature. We decline to read section 74.351 so narrowly. If a defendant could immediately (and prematurely) appeal, the court of appeals would address the report‘s sufficiency while its deficiencies were presumably being cured at the trial court level, an illogical and wasteful result. Moreover, because the Legislature authorized a single, thirty day extension for deficient reports, health care providers face only a minimal delay before a report‘s sufficiency may again be challenged and the case dismissed, if warranted.
Thus, if a deficient report is served and the trial court grants a thirty day extension, that decision—even if coupled with a denial of a motion to dismiss—is not subject to appellate review. That is precisely the situation we face here. Dr. Ogletree urges that the trial court‘s denial of his motion to dismiss and the order granting an extension are severable and that he is appealing only the denial of his motion to dismiss. We disagree.
Like the court of appeals, we conclude that, when a report has been served, the actions denying the motion to dismiss and granting an extension are inseparable. 212 S.W.3d at 334. The statute plainly prohibits interlocutory appeals of orders granting extensions, and if a defendant could separate an order granting an extension from an order denying the motion to dismiss when a report has been served, section 51.014(a)(9)‘s ban on interlocutory appeals for extensions would be meaningless. We do not think the Legislature contemplated severing the order denying the motion to dismiss from the order granting the extension when it expressly provided that orders granting extensions were not appealable on an interlocutory basis.
Because a report that implicated Dr. Ogletree‘s conduct was served and the trial court granted an extension, the court of appeals could not reach the merits of the motion to dismiss. We conclude that the court of appeals correctly determined it lacked jurisdiction over Dr. Ogletree‘s appeal.
B
Waiver of Objections
Under
But the nurses’ reports served on Heart Hospital are directed explicitly to the hospital and clearly implicate its conduct. Both parties now agree that the nurses’ reports were sufficient as to the standard of care and breach of that standard at the hospital. And as the court of appeals noted, the hospital‘s motion to dismiss contested the sufficiency of those reports—the motion claimed that the reports did not explain: 1. the applicable standard of care; 2. how the hospital breached the standard of care; 3. how any breach harmed Mr. Matthews; and 4. that the nurses were not qualified to render an opinion as to causation under the statute. These objections are directed to the reports’ sufficiency, and they could have been urged within the statutory twenty-one day period, as the statute clearly requires.
III
Conclusion
No interlocutory appeal is permitted when a served expert report is found deficient and an extension of time granted. We agree with the court of appeals’ conclusion that a denial of a motion to dismiss cannot be severed from the grant of an extension when a deficient report has been served, and the court of appeals correctly determined that it lacked jurisdiction over Dr. Ogletree‘s appeal. We also agree with the court of appeals’ determination that Heart Hospital waived its objections to the plaintiffs’ expert reports. We affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.
Justice WILLETT filed a concurring opinion.
Justice WILLETT, concurring.
I agree with the Court‘s reasoning and result and write separately only to make this minor observation: the Court‘s classification of all purported expert reports as either absent or deficient may prove inapposite in rare cases—where the claimed “report” is actually no such thing—and inadvertently expand the availability of the thirty-day extension provided by
The Court today correctly disposes of the arguments presented by Ogletree and the Hospital. The expert reports filed by the Matthews, consistent with the statutory requirements, contained written opinions by medical professionals discussing the standard of care, breach, and causation applicable to the facts of the lawsuit. The Matthews’ alleged miscue, designating the wrong type of medical professionals to opine on standard of care, is the type of defect for which a trial court may grant a discretionary
Nevertheless, in discussing the statutory framework, the Court limits the universe of possible reports to two (and only two) types: absent reports, which have not been filed at all and require dismissal of the case, and deficient reports, which have been timely filed and may receive an extension. In my view, there exists a third, albeit rare, category: a document so utterly lacking that, no matter how charitably viewed, it simply cannot be deemed an “expert report” at all, even a deficient one. A document like this merits dismissal just like an absent report.
The Court recognizes that “a deficient report differs from an absent report.”7 I agree but contend that some material does not even rise to the level of a deficient report because it fails to address the statutorily mandated elements set forth in Chapter 74. Such documents constitute no expert report at all. In fact, I hesitate even to label such material a “grossly deficient report” because that description may well confer more credit than the “report” claims for itself. It may not purport to be a report at all, and its author may never have intended it as such. For example, it may (by its own terms) be provider correspondence or perhaps “medical or hospital records or other documents”8 or other health-related paperwork that, while related to the patient‘s care and condition, neglects altogether to address the rudimentary elements of an expert report; indeed, it may never and nowhere accuse anyone of doing anything wrong. Such information certainly constitutes discoverable and highly relevant information in a lawsuit,9 but any claimant passing off such material as an expert report, and any court treating it as such, evinces a complete disregard for Chapter 74‘s unambiguous statutory criteria. To be clear, I am not describing a situation where “elements of the report have been found deficient,”10 thus making the report eligible for an opportunity to cure; rather, I am describing a situation where elements of the report have not been found at all—where the plaintiff submits nothing but doctor- or provider-signed material that contains zero (or practically zero) discussion of what makes a report a report. Elements must be present to be labeled deficient; if they are nonexistent, so is the report.
I am confident that the overwhelming majority of health care liability claimants do their best to submit expert reports that comply with Chapter 74. A grossly substandard filing pitched as a bona fide report may indeed be a rare bird in Texas legal practice, but courts should be mindful of its existence.
PROVIDENCE HEALTH CENTER a/k/a Daughters of Charity Health Services of Waco and DePaul Center a/k/a Daughters of Charity Health Services of Waco, Petitioners, v. Jimmy and Carolyn DOWELL, Individually and on Behalf of the Estate of Jonathan Lance Dowell, Deceased, Respondents. James C. Pettit, D.O., Petitioner, v. Jimmy and Carolyn Dowell, Individually and on Behalf of the Estate of Jonathan Lance Dowell, Deceased, Respondents.
Nos. 05-0386, 05-0788.
Supreme Court of Texas.
May 23, 2008.
Rehearing Denied Oct. 10, 2008.
