ANNETTE SZYDEL AND KEVIN SZYDEL, INDIVIDUALLY, AND AS HUSBAND AND WIFE, APPELLANTS, v. BARRY MARKMAN, M.D., RESPONDENT.
No. 42663
Supreme Court of Nevada
August 11, 2005
Rehearing denied September 9, 2005; En banc reconsideration denied October 26, 2005
117 P.3d 200
CONCLUSION
The Legislature has expressly enumerated supermajority voting requirements when it has intended to do so. Therefore, when the Legislature has not specified a supermajority voting requirement, its silence reflects an intent to permit the imposition of only a simple majority vote. As no statutes or other examples of legislative intent expressly indicate otherwise, we conclude that
ROSE and GIBBONS, JJ., concur.
Murdock & Associates, Chtd., and Robert E. Murdock, Las Vegas, for Appellants.
John H. Cotton & Associates, Ltd., and Anthony J. D‘Olio and Mara E. Fortin, Las Vegas, for Respondent.
ΟΡΙΝΙΟΝ
By the Court, ROSE, J.:
In this appeal, we сonsider whether a medical malpractice action filed under Nevada‘s res ipsa loquitur statute,
FACTS
On June 22, 2001, respondent Dr. Barry Markman performed a bilateral mastoрexy, or breast lift, operation on appellant Annette Szydel. After Dr. Markman completed the procedure on the right breast, the nursing staff conducted an equipment count and in
Dr. Markman conducted a thorough search of Szydel‘s left breast but was unable to locate the missing needle. Following an initial search of the operating field and operating room, an x-ray was taken to see if the missing needle was located within the wound or had adhered to Szydel‘s body. Following the hospital‘s standard procedure in such situations, the hospitаl staff relocated Szydel to the recovery room to facilitate a thorough search of the operative suite and the surgical drapes. Dr. Markman informed Szydel of the missing needle and explained that, if necessary, she would be taken back into the operating room to remove the needle.
The standard x-ray did not indicate the presence of a foreign object. The search of the operative suite and Szydel‘s surgical drapes also failed to locate the missing needle. Dr. Markman then took Szydel to the fluoroscopy1 suite to rule out any possibility that the needle was left inside Szydel‘s body. The results of the fluoroscopy showed that the needle was located in the middle of Szydel‘s right breast, indicating that the initial equipment count performed after the procedure on her right breast was incorrect. Szydel was taken back to the operative suite, аnd the needle was removed.
At the time of Szydel‘s surgery, a Nevada statute required that medical malpractice claims be submitted to a medical-legal screening panel before proceeding in district court. In June 2002, the Governor called a special session of Nevada‘s Legislature to “address a perceived medical malpractice insurance crisis” in Nevada.2 During the special session, the Legislature enacted various measures intended to reform the way medical malpractice claims are handled, including completely eliminating the requirement for prescreening of medical malpractice cases by the medical-legal screening panel and requiring medical malpractice actions to be accompanied by an expert‘s affidavit.3 However, the changes passed during the special session were not effective until October 1, 2002. As a result, claimants who filed a case with the panel before the effective date could elect to opt out of the new statutory scheme and continue under the prior prescreening statutes.4
Szydel never corrected the procedural problems with her complaint, and the panel dismissed her claim without prejudice on January 9, 2003. Six months later, on June 6, 2003, Szydel and her husband filed a malpractice сomplaint in district court. Szydel‘s complaint alleged that in performing the mastopexy operation, Dr. Markman left a surgical needle inside Szydel‘s breast and, under Nevada‘s res ipsa loquitur statute, there is a rebuttable presumption of negligence. Dr. Markman moved to dismiss for failure to comply with
After giving Szydel additional time to obtain an expert‘s affidavit, the district court dismissed Szydel‘s complaint without prejudice for her failure to comply with
DISCUSSION
Standard of review and applicable law
Szydel argues that the expert witness affidavit requirement of
When two statutes are clear and unambiguous but conflict with each other when applied to a specific factual situation, an ambiguity is created and we will attempt to reconcile the statutes.10 In doing so, we will attempt to read the statutory provisions in harmony, provided that this interpretation does not violate legislative intent.11
Resolution of the conflict between NRS 41A.100 and NRS 41A.071
We begin with the plain meaning rule and look to the meaning of language employed in each of the statutes.12
“[A]ll a plaintiff need do to warrant an instruction under the statutory medical malpractice res ipsa loquitur rule is рresent some evidence of the existence of one or more of the factual predicates enumerated in the statute. If the trier of fact then finds that one or more of the factual predicates exist, then the presumption must be applied. This is the approach taken in Nev. J.I. 6.17.”15
In contrast,
The language of these two statutes is unambiguous. However, when read together, the statutes are in conflict because
In Palanque v. Lambert-Woolley, 774 A.2d 501 (N.J. 2001), the New Jersey Supreme Court held that New Jersey‘s statutory affidavit requirement does not apply to “common knowledge” malpractice cases where “‘jurors’ common knowledge as lay persons is sufficient to enable them, using ordinary understanding and experience, to detеrmine a defendant‘s negligence without the benefit of the specialized knowledge of experts.‘”24 The New Jersey court noted that in such a case “whether a plaintiff‘s claim meets the [required] threshold of merit can be determined on the face of the complaint.”25 The court reasoned that
requiring an affidavit of merit in such a case is not necessary to achieve the primary goal of the statute, that is, to weed out meritless malpractice lawsuits at an early stage and to prevent frivolous litigation. Indeed, recognition of the common knowledge exception allows meritorious claims to move forward without the added, and in those cases unnecessary, cost of hiring an expert to execute an affidavit when that expert will not testify at trial.26
For the same reasons, we conclude that requiring an expert affidavit in a res ipsa case under
At the same time the Legislature added
When, however, a plaintiff files a res ipsa loquitur claim in conjunction with other medical malpractice claims that do not rely on the res ipsa loquitur doctrine, those other claims are subject to the requirements of
Because we conclude that the expert affidavit requirement in
GIBBONS, J., concurs.
HARDESTY, J., dissenting:
The majority improperly compares two independent legal concepts within NRS Chapter 41A, onе a jurisdictional requirement and the other a rule of evidence, to circumvent the clear and unambiguous filing requirements that provide a district court with jurisdiction over a medical malpractice case. The affidavit requirement of
Szydel‘s malpractice action focuses on the retained foreign object provisions of
General rules of statutory construction apply in this instance. It is well-established that the language of a statute should be given its plain meaning unless, in so doing, the spirit of the act is violated.2 “Thus, when ‘a statute is clear on its face, a court may not go beyond the language of the statute in determining the legislature‘s intent.‘”3 An ambiguous statute, however, which “‘is capable of being understood in two or more senses by reasonably informed persons,‘” or one that otherwise does not speak to the issue before the court, may be examined through reason and consideration of public policy to determine the legislature‘s intent. “‘The meaning of the words used may be determined by examining the context and the spirit of the law or the causes which induced the legislature to enact it.‘”5 In addition, “when the legislature enacts a statute, this court presumes that it does so ‘with full knowledge of existing statutes relating to the same subject.‘”6 Further, “when separate statutes are potentially conflicting, [this court] attempt[s] to construe both statutes in a manner to avoid conflict and promote harmony.”7
My colleagues reach a conclusion that
The plain meaning of both statutes is not in conflict and can be harmonized.
Without applying the affidavit requirement of
The majority suggests a remedy if an expert opinion is not requirеd with the complaint filing and the res ipsa loquitor instruction is later denied. They conclude that the case must be dismissed. Nothing in the statutory structure of NRS Chapter 41A provides for such a procedure or dismissal. The better approach is to require the medical affidavit initially, even if a party does not intend to rely later on expert testimony at trial.
For these reasons, I would affirm the dismissal by the district court.
