802 N.E.2d 723 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2003
{¶ 3} The defendants ordered and conducted a chorionic villus sampling (CVS) test that was the recognized and accepted test to determine the genetic makeup of a fetus by sampling fetal cells. The test result indicated that the fetus was probably a female with the same balanced chromosome translocation as the mother. If, however, the test had incorrectly sampled Mrs. Schirmer's own tissue rather than the tissue of the fetus, the results of the CVS would not have accurately determined the genetic makeup of the fetus. The Schirmers alleged *644 that the defendants were negligent in not taking the further steps necessary to validate the CVS test results.
{¶ 4} On September 9, 1997, Mrs. Schirmer gave birth to a son, Matthew. Matthew, who is not party to this action, inherited a partial trisomy of chromosome 22 from his mother and is profoundly mentally and physically disabled. He requires round-the-clock care.
{¶ 5} The Schirmers brought suit, claiming that because of the negligent medical advice and testing of the defendants, they were precluded from making an informed decision about whether to proceed with the pregnancy and a delivery that would result in a severely disabled child. They sought damages for (1) the costs related to the pregnancy; (2) economic, consequential losses — the costs of raising and supporting the disabled child; and (3) non-economic consequential losses — the emotional and physical injuries resulting from the added burden of raising and supporting the disabled child.
{¶ 7} Afterwards, each defendant filed a motion for partial summary judgment on the scope of damages only, seeking a ruling by the trial court that the Schirmers were limited to damages only for pregnancy-related costs.
{¶ 8} The Schirmers subsequently urged, pursuant to Civ.R. 56(F), that the trial court should postpone its ruling on factual determinations regarding the damages issue. They argued that although the defendants' motions were styled as motions for partial summary judgment, they had not raised factual disputes, but, instead, had maintained only that Ohio law did not recognize the consequential damages that they were seeking. They argued that the defendants' motions were more properly considered as motions to dismiss made pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6). The trial court agreed to postpone factual determinations in connection with the pending partial motions for summary judgment, stating that "the Court will rule on the legal question of what element of damages may be sought in a wrongful birth case."
{¶ 9} On December 19, 2002, the trial court journalized an entry in which it recorded various stipulations by the parties and entered judgment. First, the *645 Schirmers consented not to seek damages for the pregnancy-related costs. Second, all parties consented to the trial court "treating the pending motions for partial summary judgment as motions to dismiss the remaining elements of Plaintiffs' case for failure to state a cognizable claim." Third, the parties stipulated that the trial court's ruling on the pending motions "shall constitute a ruling on questions of law pertaining to the scope of recoverable damages in a `wrongful birth' action." The trial court then held that the Schirmers could bring a wrongful-birth action, but that Ohio law permitted recovery only for the pregnancy-related costs, and not for either economic or non-economic consequential damages. Since the Schirmers had voluntarily agreed not to seek pregnancy-related damages, the trial court dismissed the complaint.
{¶ 10} A party may move for partial summary judgment. Civ.R. 56(C) and (D) envision a situation where summary judgment is not rendered upon the whole case or for all the relief asked, and where a trial may be necessary on the remaining controverted facts. See Holeski v. Lawrence
(1993),
{¶ 11} But there is no provision in the Civil Rules for converting motions for partial summary judgment into motions to dismiss, even by agreement of the parties. A trial court's ruling on summary judgment must be addressed to the evidence properly before it. See Civ.R. 56(C) and (E).
{¶ 12} When, however, a court dismisses a complaint pursuant to Civ.R. 12(B)(6), it makes no factual findings beyond its legal conclusion that the complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. The court does not assume the role of fact finder. See State exrel. Drake v. Athens Cty. Bd. of Elections (1988),
{¶ 15} The Schirmers' claim is distinguishable from two other prenatal torts: (1) wrongful life, and (2) wrongful pregnancy. In a wrongful-life claim, the child contends that negligent genetic testing or sterilization resulted in a birth defect or in birth. On grounds of public policy, the Ohio Supreme Court has rejected this claim in Hesterv. Dwivedi,
{¶ 16} Ohio has recognized a claim for wrongful pregnancy where parents sue "for proximate damages arising from the birth of a child subsequent to a doctor's failure to properly perform a sterilization procedure." See Johnson v. Univ. Hospitals of Cleveland,
{¶ 17} In the syllabus paragraph, however, the court again focused on causation, noting that the child's birth defect was not reasonably foreseeable by the physician who had negligently performed the sterilization procedure on the mother, and thus the physician's negligence had not proximately caused the damages associated with the birth defect. See id. at syllabus; see, also, Simmons v. Hertzman
(1994),
{¶ 18} In the more than twenty years since Bowman v. Davis was released, neither the Ohio Supreme Court nor the General Assembly has addressed the viability of the Schirmers' wrongful-birth claim. SeeSimmerer v. Dabbas,
{¶ 19} At least five states have enacted legislation to prohibit recovery in a wrongful-birth negligence suit. See Statutory Remedies for Judicial Torts: The Need For Wrongful Birth Legislation (2001), 69 U.Cin.L.Rev. 1023, 1024; see, e.g., Mo.Stat.Ann. 188.130. Maine, however, has taken action to permit wrongful-birth suits. While declaring that "the birth of a normal, healthy child does not constitute a legally recognizable injury and that it is contrary to public policy to award damages for the birth or rearing of a healthy child," and denying non-economic damages, the Maine legislature permits the recovery of "[d]amages for the birth of an unhealthy child born as the result of professional negligence," including "damages associated with the disease, defect or handicap suffered by the child." Me.Rev.Stat.Ann., Title 24, Section 2931; see, also, Braun and Rabar, Recent Developments In Medicine And Law (2001), 36 Tort and Ins. L.J. 463, 503. *648
{¶ 20} In Flanagan v. Williams,
{¶ 21} Ultimately, labeling the Schirmers' claim as "wrongful birth" adds nothing to the analysis, and it wrongly implies that the courts have created a new tort. In Hester, the Ohio Supreme Court noted, "While these types of cases are commonly labeled `wrongful life,' `wrongful pregnancy,' `wrongful birth,' or `wrongful living' actions, they are not governed by statutory law as are wrongful death actions. They remain, at their core, medical negligence actions, and are determined by application of common-law tort principles."
{¶ 22} As this specific issue has not been addressed by the Ohio Supreme Court, the rule we write today derives from an analysis and synthesis of the language of the supreme court in related prenatal tort cases. Absent guidance by the General Assembly, our effort is to "ensure that the law keeps up with the ever-changing needs of a modern society." See Gallimore v. Children's Hosp. Med. Ctr.,
{¶ 23} As the starting point, the supreme court has held that the Schirmers' medical negligence claim, no matter what it is called, must be "decided by applying the same legal analysis employed in any medical negligence claim"; to prevail they must prove the following elements: (1) a duty running from the medical professionals to the Schirmers, (2) a breach of that duty, (3) damages suffered by the Schirmers, and (4) a proximate causal relationship between the breach of duty and the damages. See Hester v. Dwivedi,
{¶ 25} During oral argument before this court, CHMC attempted to argue that even if the Schirmers could state a claim for relief, the evidence suggested that CHMC had not breached any duty to the Schirmers and was thus not negligent. For purposes of this appeal only, that argument has been waived, as it was not raised below. CHMC's motion to dismiss and motion for partial summary judgment contested solely the damages issue.
{¶ 26} The Schirmers' complaint sufficiently alleged that all the defendants breached their duties of care. They alleged that they consulted the defendants to obtain information and medical guidance with a direct bearing on whether Helen Schirmer would carry her pregnancy to term or exercise her constitutionally guaranteed, but limited, right not to procreate and to terminate the pregnancy. See Griswold v. Connecticut
(1965),
{¶ 28} This court and the Ohio Supreme Court, in denying recovery to parents and children who have received negligent medical care, have emphasized the tenuous causal link between the negligent act or omission and the resulting harm. Simmerer v. Dabbas, syllabus; Hester v. Dwivedi,
{¶ 29} Unlike the parents in Simmerer and Simmons who, after negligently performed sterilizations, gave birth to children with congenital defects not known to be caused by the negligence, and the child in Hester, born with spina bifida after a negligent sterilization, here, the precise defect the Schirmers attempted to discover and avoid by genetic testing — Trisomy 22 — occurred. After a review of the complaint's allegations, we cannot say that the Schirmers can prove no set of facts entitling them to recovery on the issue of causation.
{¶ 31} The defendants acknowledge that, under the holdings of the Ohio Supreme Court's prenatal-tort cases, the Schirmers would be entitled to pregnancy and birth-related costs directly related to carrying a fetus to full term. See, *651
e.g., Simmerer v. Dabbas,
{¶ 32} The Schirmers do seek as their measure of damages their economic, consequential damages incurred as medical costs and the costs of raising and supporting their disabled child. The Ohio Supreme Court has disallowed these "reasonable child-rearing costs" in wrongful-pregnancy and wrongful-life cases because of the court's reluctance to adopt a measure of damages that so devalues human life.Simmerer v. Dabbas,
{¶ 33} The supreme court has not rejected those economic, consequential damages claimed by the Schirmers in an action for wrongful-birth that are over and above the costs directly related to those required to raise a normal, healthy child to adulthood. In Hester,
the majority opinion suggested that while a child born with defects after negligent medical tests could not state a claim for damages because their calculation required valuing being and non-being, the proscription would not apply to the child's mother. Albeit in dicta, the majority noted that while the child has no claim, if the medical negligence prevents the mother from acting upon genetic testing information, she "can claim to be injured in that she was deprived of the choice to avoid [the financial obligations associated with parenthood] by terminating the pregnancy." Id. (emphasis added). Justice Pfeifer dissented but approved of permitting parents injured by negligent genetic counseling to recover the financial costs of raising a child. See id. at 585,
{¶ 34} While cognizant of the three-justice majority's reluctance in Simmerer to award extraordinary damages — the consequential, economic damages of raising a disabled child over and above the ordinary child-rearing expenses for a normal child — in light of the court's discussion in Hester, we conclude that this is a proper measure of damages because of (1) the causal nexus alleged between the medical negligence and the predictable genetic defect occurring in the Schirmers' child, and (2) the absence of the need to calculate the value of non-being in *652
determining these economic, consequential damages. This determination is, likewise, consistent with the General Assembly's direction under its tort-reform legislation, which allows an award for economic damages but limits them, as a matter of policy, for emotional injury and pain and suffering. See, generally, State ex rel. Ohio Academyof Trial Lawyers v. Sheward,
{¶ 35} A claim for medical negligence brought by the parents of a child born with birth defects alleging that negligent medical advice or testing precluded them from making an informed decision about whether to conceive a potentially handicapped child or, in the event of a pregnancy, to terminate it, states a claim for relief where the extraordinary economic, consequential damages of raising a disabled child are proximately caused by the negligence. Calculating and assessing those damages does not involve the supreme court's principal concern with the difficulty in weighing life.
{¶ 36} Since the calculation of the Schirmers' last claimed measure of non-economic, consequential damages — the emotional and physical injuries to them resulting from the added burden of raising and supporting a disabled child — does require the court or jury to weigh the value of being and nonbeing, the Schirmers cannot, as a matter of law, recover for their non-economic damages.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
DOAN, P.J., and HILDEBRANDT, J., concur. *653