This is a companion case to
Watts v. Cumberland County Hosp. System,
The party moving for summary judgment must establish the lack of any triable issue by showing that no genuine issue of material fact exists and that the moving party is entitled to judg
ment as a matter of law.
Caldwell v. Deese,
Considered in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the record discloses the facts set forth herein. Plaintiff was in an automobile accident on 7 June 1974. Following the accident, she was treated in the emergency room at Cape Fear Valley Hospital and released the same day. She has continued to suffer pain since this accident and has been treated by numerous physicians in several hospitals in at least four states. Until 1979, she was consistently told that she had no discoverable organic problem that would explain her persistent back and neck pain. In 1979, Dr. Gene Coin performed a CT-scan on her back that revealed what Dr. Coin thought were residual changes from fractures in two of plaintiffs lumbar vertebrae. Dr. Coin also told plaintiff that he checked the X-rays taken of her neck immediately following the accident and that these showed fractures in that area also. Dr. Coin’s diagnosis was not confirmed by any of the other physicians who treated plaintiff and was later retracted by Dr. Coin himself in 1981 after a second CT-scan. Plaintiff consulted a new doctor in 1981 who told her that she was developing arachnoiditis, probably caused by the multiple myelograms given to plaintiff in attempts to discover an organic cause for her back pain.
Plaintiff claims that she did in fact suffer spinal fractures in the lumbar and cervical regions in the 1974 automobile accident. She alleges that the physicians who treated her at that time negligently failed
Plaintiff also claims that defendant Hall intentionally assisted her physicians in this “cover up.” She began to see defendant Hall in late 1974 in an attempt to obtain assistance in dealing with her husband’s drinking problem. As a collateral matter, she also sought help in dealing with the emotional aspects of the pain she suffered after her accident. She continued to see Hall until July 1981.
In support of her fraudulent concealment claim against defendant Hall, plaintiff has offered very little evidence even when viewed in the light most favorable to her. Hall consistently tried to persuade her to accept that her pain had an emotional rather than a pathological origin. He admittedly consulted with her physicians about her condition; plaintiff denied ever giving him permission to do so. He also told her that he had seen her “file.” 1 In later years, he attempted to dissuade her from consulting new doctors.
As we said in
Watts v. Cumberland County Hosp. System,
We believe that here, as in the companion case, the evidence “amply demonstrated that plaintiff sought and received a number of second opinions as to the source of her complaints.” Id. This history dispels any presumption that might arise from her rela tionship with defendant Hall, and plaintiff must show sufficient facts to support a claim of actual fraud.
Proof of actual fraud requires that plaintiff show the existence of five essential elements:
1) false representation or concealment of a material fact,
2) likely to deceive,
3) intended to deceive,
4) which does in fact deceive,
5) resulting in injury to plaintiff.
Ragsdale v. Kennedy,
Even taken in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the facts presented in the record are insufficient to show that defendant Hall intentionally assisted plaintiffs physicians in a fraudulent concealment of her true condition. First, as we held in
Watts v. Cumberland County Hosp. System,
there is insufficient evidence to sustain plaintiffs fraudulent concealment claim against her physicians.
Watts,
The decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed with respect to plaintiffs claim against defendant Hall for fraudulent concealment, and the case is remanded to that court for further remand to the Superior Court, Cumberland County, for reinstatement of summary judgment as to plaintiffs fraudulent concealment claim against defendant Hall.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. From context, it is clear that plaintiff meant her medical records.
