On August 31, 1994, this сase came before the Court on the Winchester Medical Center’s Plea of the Statute of Limitations and Motion for Summary Judgment. The parties appeared by their counsel Laurie A. Amell, Esquire, for the Plaintiff, and Carolyn J. Airing, Esquire, for the Defendant Winchester Medical Center. Upon consideration of the oral argument of the parties and their memoranda of authorities, the Court has made the following decision to grant the Medical Center’s Motion for Summary Judgment based on the Plea of the Statute of Limitations, because the continuing care exception to the statute of limitations does not apply to hospitals.
I. Statement of Material Facts
The fоllowing facts are established in this case by the parties’ admissions.
This is a medical malpractice action arising out of the alleged failure of the Defendants to evaluate, diagnose and treat Plaintiff’s subacute bacterial endocarditis.
The Winchester Medical Center is a full service hospital located in Winchester, Virginia, and on December 11-12, 1990, the Plaintiff received treatment at the Medical Center for symptoms related to her subacute bacterial endocarditis. The Plaintiff’s right of action against the hospital is
Dr. Holden was an emergency room physician, whom the hospital employed as an independent contractor. The Court has previously sustained Dr. Holden’s plea of the statute of limitations.
When the Plaintiff was discharged on Decembеr 12, 1990, she received two pages of written instructions which advised her to call the Medical Center’s emergency department if her condition worsened and referred her to a local orthopedic surgeon. She did not call the emergency department, and no follow up appointment at the Medicаl Center was scheduled.
In February 1991, the Plaintiff was diagnosed with subacute bacterial endocarditis by Dr. Kujala, a physician outside the Medical Center. Plaintiff was treated at the Medical Center for this condition on the following dates: February 26 through March 11, 1991, and March 22 through March 26, 1991. On March 22, 1991, at the Medical Center, the Plaintiff suffered a stroke and received out-patient medical care and rehabilitative treatment at the Medical Center from June 1991 through May 1992. All of this treatment was at the direction of her treating physicians, who are not employed by the Medical Center. The Plaintiff claims that the stroke was caused by the failure to properly treat her endocarditis.
On June 29, 1992, Plaintiff on her own went to the Winchester Medical Center emergency room for conditions associated with residuals of her stroke.
On April 9, 1993, the Plaintiff, on her own was seen by the Medical Center’s Director of Rehabilative Services, for conditions she claims are related to her strоke.
The Plaintiff claims that her treatment at the Medical Center from February 26, 1991, through April 9, 1993, was continuing care for the same condition, so that her cause of action against the Medical Center accrued on April 9, 1993, because of the continuing care doctrine.
On November 25,1992, the claimant served a notice of claim under the Virginia Medical Malpractice Act, and on February 12, 1993, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court notified the parties of his determination to designate a panel. The medical malpractice panel was rescinded on July 8, 1993.
Plaintiff filed her Motion for Judgment on August 30, 1993.
On July 1,1993, amendments to the Medical Malpractice Act, including modifications of Virginia Code § 8.01-581.2 and the repeal of Virginia
II. Conclusions of Law
1. Summary Judgment
Summary Judgment is appropriate if there is no material fact genuinely in disputе. Supreme Court Rule 3:18; Carson v. LeBlanc,
[T]he issue of fact must be “genuine.” When the moving party has carried its burden under Rule 56(c), its opponent must do more than simply show that there is some metаphysical doubt as to the material facts .... In the language of the Rule, the nonmoving party must come forward with “specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” Where the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the nonmoving party, there is no “genuine issue for trial.”
As the Supreme Court observed in Virginia and Maryland R.R. Co. v. White,
It is the jury, not the court, which is the fact-finding body. It weighs the contradictory evidence and inferences, judges the credibility of witnesses, receives expert instructions, and draws the ultimate conclusion as to the facts. The very essence of its function is to select from among conflicting inferences and conclusions that which it сonsiders most reasonable .... That conclusion, whether it relates to negligence, causation or any other factual matter, cannot be ignored. Courts are not free to reweigh the evidence and set aside the jury verdict merely because the jury could have drawn different inferences or conclusions or because judges feel that other results are more reasonable (emphasis added).
2. Statute of Limitations
Pursuant to Virginia Code § 8.01-243(a) “Every action for personal injuries, whatever the theory of recovery ... shall be brought within two years after the cause of action accrues.” In the context of the physician-patient relationship, there is an additional principle governing the determination of the accrual of the Plaintiff’s cause of action for purposes of the application of the statute of limitations which is pertinent to this case. If there existed a physician-patient relationship where the patiеnt was treated for the same or related ailments for a continuous and uninterrupted course of treatment, then the Plaintiff may wait until the end of that treatment by his physician before being required to file an action for medical malpractice which occurred during that treatment. Grubbs v. Rawls,
For the continuing treatment rule to apply, the following elements are required: (1) There must be a continuous course of treatment with the defendant health care provider and (2) The treatment must be for the same or related ailments.
In Keller v. Denny,
The reasons which supported the application of the continuing treatment rule to the relationship of physician and patient apply with equal force to the relationship of attorney and client. Accordingly, we hold that when malprаctice is claimed to have occurred during the representation of a client by an attorney with respect to a particular undertaking or transaction, the breach of*340 contract or duty occurs and the statute of limitations begins to run when the attorney's services rendered in connection with that particular undertaking or transaction have terminated, notwithstanding the continuation of a general attorney-client relationship, and irrespective of the attorney’s work on other undertakings or transactions for the same client (emphasis added).
This case turns on the first prong of the test, whether there was a continuous course of treatment with the health care provider.
3. Enterprise Liability of the Hospital
The Winchester Medical Center is clearly a “health care provider” within the meaning of the Virginia Medical Malpractice Act. Virginia Code § 8.01-581.1. However, the Supreme Court has not ruled on the question of whether treatment by a hospital is subject to the continuing treatment exception to the application of the Statute of Limitations, but in this era of health maintenance organizations and the enterprise practice of medicine, it is not surprising that this is now an issue. See generally, Annotation, Liability of Hospital or Sanitarium for Negligence of Physician or Surgeon,
In Stuart Circle v, Curry,
[A] hospital is not responsible for the acts of an attending physician, whether a member of its staff or an outsider, except where by contract it has assumed responsibility. This is based on the ground that such physician is an independent contractor and alone is responsible for the exercise of professional skill and judgment, subject to no control by the hospital in the execution thereof.
When the patient enters a hospital, he is admitted by a physician for a prescribed, discrete course of treatment, and when that course of treatment is concluded, the patient is discharged, and the hospital’s services are applied to other patients. In James v. Jane,
Courts in other jurisdictions have determined that the cause of action for alleged malpractice against a hospital accrues when the patient is treated at the hospital, and that, when discharged, the continuing treatment exception to the statute of limitations does not apply to subsequent admissions at the hospital, even where the Plaintiff’s attending physician may be the same. Meier v. Huntington Hosp.,
The Winchester Medical Center is nоt a health maintenance organization providing health care services to the plaintiff. See generally, Virginia
III. Decision
For the foregoing reasons, it is adjudged and ordered that the Defendant Winchester Medical Center, Inc.’s Motion for Summary Judgment is granted because the Statute of Limitations has run on the Plaintiff’s right of action against the Medical Center.
