SPECTRUM HEALTHCARE RESOURCES, INC., and Michael Sims, Petitioners, v. Janice McDANIEL and Patrick McDaniel, Respondents.
No. 07-0787.
Supreme Court of Texas.
Argued Sept. 11, 2008. Decided March 12, 2010.
306 S.W.3d 249
Jeffrey C. Anderson, Jessica Leigh Lambert, Law Offices of Jeffrey C. Anderson, San Antonio, TX, for Respondents.
The Texas Medical Liability Act imposes a threshold requirement in a healthcare liability lawsuit for the plaintiff to serve an expert medical report on the defendant within 120 days of filing the claim, the purpose of which is to ensure that only meritorious lawsuits proceed by verifying, at the outset, that the plaintiff‘s allegations are medically well-founded.
I
According to the petition, Janice McDaniel‘s pelvis was broken while she was receiving physical therapy at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio, Texas. In April 2004, Janice and Patrick McDaniel (collectively, McDaniel) filed a medical malpractice lawsuit against the United States of America, Spectrum Healthcare Resources, Inc., and therapist Michael Sims in the United States District Court for the Western District of Texas. McDaniel did not, however, serve an expert medical report within 120 days as required by
In May 2005, thirteen months after filing the federal lawsuit, McDaniel refiled the lawsuit against Spectrum in state district court. The parties entered into an agreed docket control order that set deadlines for designating testifying experts and producing expert reports. The order also permitted broad discovery to proceed immediately despite the discovery limitations of chapter 74. After McDaniel failed to serve a section 74.351 expert report within 120 days of filing the state court claim, Spectrum again moved to dismiss the case. As in federal court, McDaniel responded that the parties had agreed to extend the deadline for serving expert reports, including the section 74.351 expert report, by way of the docket control order, and that McDaniel had timely complied by serving such an expert report on Spectrum before the deadline contained in the docket control order. After a hearing concerning the applicability of the docket control order to the section 74.351 deadline, the trial court granted Spectrum‘s motion to dismiss, implicitly rejecting McDaniel‘s contention that the docket control order extended the chapter 74 expert report deadline.3 Sitting en banc, a divided court of appeals reversed the trial court‘s order of dismissal, holding that the agreed docket control order unambiguously expressed the parties’ intent to replace the statutory deadlines for serving all expert reports, including those required by section 74.351. 238 S.W.3d at 795.
II
The docket control order reads as follows:
On this the 6th day of July, 2005, came to be heard, all parties to this cause of action who have agreed that the following dates of the Docket Control Order should be entered. It is, therefore, ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED as follows:
- Plaintiffs will designate all expert witnesses that they intend to call at the trial of this case, live or by deposition, and shall provide a written report and curriculum vitae of all retained experts in this case on or before January 11, 2006;
- Defendant is to designate all expert witnesses it intends to call at the trial of this case, live or by deposition, and shall provide a written report and curriculum vitae of all retained experts in this case on or before February 24, 2006;
- If the Court finds that this case is appropriate for alternate dispute resolution, mediation will be completed on or before April 6, 2006, with a mediator mutually agreeable to and selected by the parties;
- Deadline for completion of discovery in this case and for filing dispositive motions shall be on or before April 21, 2006; and
- This case is specially set for trial on May 22, 2006.
It is further ORDERED to the extent these deadlines may be in conflict with deadlines set by rule or statute, the deadlines established by this Docket Control Order shall take precedence.
It is further ORDERED that the parties shall conduct discovery as soon as practicable, notwithstanding the limiting provisions found in Chapter 74 of the Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code.
It is further, ORDERED that the above-stated deadlines shall not be changed or modified except upon written agreement of all parties or by order of this Court upon a showing of good cause.
McDaniel maintains that this docket control order contains the written agreement of the parties to extend the chapter 74 threshold expert medical report deadline. First, McDaniel says paragraph one imposes a deadline to do only two things: (1) designate testifying experts, and (2) provide written reports of all retained experts. McDaniel says that because an expert who prepares a chapter 74 medical report is a “retained expert,” the paragraph necessarily must include that species of report. Second, McDaniel argues that to the extent the new deadline for serving the expert report is in conflict with the deadline mandated in chapter 74, the docket control order specifically takes precedence over any other deadline set by rule or statute. Finally, McDaniel urges that the order expressly permits the parties to conduct discovery despite the provisions of chapter 74 that would otherwise severely limit discovery until after the expert report is served. McDaniel claims this provision makes it clear that the parties were aware of the chapter 74 limitations and requirements and agreed to waive those procedures.
Spectrum, on the other hand, argues that the docket control order is no more than a generic discovery order that cannot be reasonably construed as a written agreement to extend the date for serving the section 74.351 threshold expert medical report. Spectrum points out that the order makes no reference to chapter 74 expert reports and does not mention the 120-day deadline, such that it is not really about chapter 74 expert reports at all. Spectrum says the order is instead a fairly typical docket control order that includes matters that would ordinarily be found in such an order, like deadlines for completion of discovery and filing dispositive motions, and providing a trial setting. And also, like most docket control orders, it sets a deadline for the parties to designate their respective testifying experts and produce any reports that might have been generated by those testifying experts. Spectrum argues that the phrase “expert witnesses that they intend to call at the trial” in the first paragraph of the order defines the category of “retained experts” whose reports are to be produced, and can only mean testifying experts. Spectrum says the phrase cannot mean, as McDaniel suggests, that all retained expert reports must be produced by the stated deadline because reports of non-testifying consulting experts are not generally discoverable. Moreover, Spectrum contends that paragraph one cannot possibly include chapter 74 reports because paragraph two of the order uses identical text directing the defendant to serve its expert reports by a deadline and, of course, defendants are under no obligation to serve reports on plaintiffs under chapter 74. Lastly, Spectrum notes that McDaniel was well aware of this issue, having litigated it in federal court on a motion to dismiss, and could have avoided the same issue in state court by using explicit language.
III
We recognize, as did the court of appeals, that the statute itself does not require the express mention of section 74.351 threshold expert reports in parties’ written agreements. See
First, a section 74.351 threshold expert report has a unique purpose separate and apart from the procedural rules relating to discovery and typical expert reports. The Legislature created the threshold report requirement as a substantive hurdle for frivolous medical liability suits before litigation gets underway. See
Second, the interplay between docket control orders and the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure governing the required disclosure or protection from disclosure of certain experts and their reports demonstrates that it is extremely difficult to enter into a docket control order that would extend the section 74.351 threshold report deadline in the absence of an explicit reference to that specific deadline. See generally
Lastly, the ubiquity of agreed docket control orders militates the adoption of a simple standard for extending the threshold expert report deadline that litigants can easily meet and courts can readily apply. Agreed docket control orders are routinely used in Texas trial courts to allow parties to manage discovery, provide deadlines for dispositive motions, and set a conference or trial date, especially in medical malpractice suits. See
IV
We hold that when parties use an agreed order to extend the section 74.351 threshold expert report deadline, the order must explicitly indicate the parties’ intention to extend the deadline and reference that specific deadline. Otherwise, the agreed order is ineffective to extend the section 74.351 deadline.5 Because the agreed docket control order in this case did not explicitly reference and include the statutory threshold expert medical report deadline when extending McDaniel‘s deadline for designating testifying experts and producing expert reports, as a matter of law the order did not extend that deadline. We therefore reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and reinstate the trial court‘s judgment of dismissal.
Chief Justice JEFFERSON, joined by Justice O‘NEILL and Justice MEDINA, dissenting.
It is, therefore, ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED as follows:
- Plaintiffs will designate all expert witnesses that they intend to call at the trial ... and shall provide a written report and curriculum vitae of all retained experts in this case on or before January 11, 2006;
....
It is further ORDERED to the extent these deadlines may be in conflict with deadlines set by rule or statute, the
It is further ORDERED that the parties shall conduct discovery as soon as practicable, notwithstanding the limiting provisions found in Chapter 74 of the Texas Civil Practices and Remedies Code.
This is the order announcing the date by which McDaniel was required to serve her medical expert report, irrespective of any statutory deadline. Had she known that following the trial court‘s order would lead to dismissal of her claim, she could have taken steps to preserve her rights. Instead, having complied with the order, she now finds herself without recourse because “[a]n agreed docket control order that includes only a general discovery deadline for the production of expert reports is ineffective to extend the statute‘s specific threshold expert report requirement.” 306 S.W.3d at 250. I accept the value of the Court‘s bright-line rule, but I disagree with applying it to McDaniel‘s claim. I would apply today‘s decision prospectively, making it inapplicable to McDaniel or others who complied with trial court orders that altered the statutory deadline in healthcare liability suits. See Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson, 404 U.S. 97, 105-09 (1971);1 see also James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia, 501 U.S. 529, 536 (1991) (plurality opinion) (defining pure prospectivity); Crowe v. Bolduc, 365 F.3d 86, 93 (1st Cir. 2004) (“A court in a civil case may apply a decision purely prospectively, binding neither the parties before it nor similarly situated parties in other pending cases....“).
This approach makes sense because, before today, litigants were operating under the expectation that the only requirement for extending the Chapter 74 deadline was a “written agreement,” much like the agreed docket control order in this case. See
I would affirm the court of appeals’ judgment. Because the Court does otherwise, I respectfully dissent.
