Lead Opinion
This is a medical malpractice action in which summary judgment was awarded to defendant physician on the ground that the statute of limitation expired before plaintiff filed suit.
Because plaintiff’s leg had been fractured in an automobile accident, defendant, an orthopedic surgeon, performed a surgical procedure known as open reduction, internal fixation, right lateral tibial plateau, upon plaintiff on May 29, 1985. In performing the procedure, defendant inserted a 16 mm. threaded screw and washer in plaintiff’s leg. This device was inserted to hold bone fragments in a fixed position during the healing process.
Thereafter, on December 8, 1986, defendant performed a second
Because the pain in her leg continued, plaintiff went to a second physician and learned that the washer was still in her leg. Subsequently, on July 8, 1987, the washer was excised by the second physician.
Over one year later, on December 1, 1988, plaintiff brought this medical malpractice action. Defendant answered, asserting, inter alia, a statute of limitation defense. Thereafter, defendant moved for summary judgment asserting the action was barred by the one-year limitation statute pertaining to a “foreign object.” See OCGA § 9-3-72.
In support of his summary judgment motion, defendant submitted an affidavit wherein he deposed, in part: “At the time of the May 29, 1985, surgery, the screw inserted with the washer in place constituted a ‘fixation device.’ The screw actually holds in a fixed position the bone or the pieces of the bone fragments, and the purpose of the washer is to keep the screw from being drilled or working itself too far into the bone. The washer is external to the bone although the screw is inserted through or into the bone holding the bone pieces together in a fixed position. After the fracture of the plaintiff . . . healed, on December 8, 1986, I performed a surgical operation that involved: (1) arthroscopic exam of the right knee, (2) lateral retinacular release of the right knee, and (3) removal of the screw in the right proximal tibial. As part of that surgery, I removed the screw in the right proximal tibial, but decided, exercising the degree of care and skill exercised in the medical profession in general under the same or similar circumstances, not to perform the additional surgical exploration and dissection needed for the removal of the washer. I reasonably made a medical judgment during surgery that the presence of the washer, which was no longer acting as a fixation device after the screw was removed and was no longer putting any pressure on the knee, should not cause plaintiff any problem, and there were advantages to not doing the additional surgical exploration and dissection necessary to remove the washer. . . .”
The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment and plaintiff appealed. Held:
OCGA § 9-3-72 provides: “The limitations of Code Section 9-3-71 shall not apply where a foreign object has been left in a patient’s body, but in such a case an action shall be brought within one year after the negligent or wrongful act or omission is discovered. For the purposes of this Code section, the term ‘foreign object’ shall not include a chemical compound, fixation device, or prosthetic aid or device.” Interpreting this Code section, the Supreme Court of Georgia ruled that “in a foreign object claim, the patient has one year following discovery of the foreign object to bring his complaint, no matter
In Ivey v. Scoggins,
In the case sub judice, unlike the defendant in Ivey v. Scoggins,
Judgment reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Plaintiff’s claim is that it was negligent to leave the washer in her leg when the surgeon took the screw out. It is undisputed that screw and washer constituted a fixation device. Plaintiffs position is that the washer should also have been removed at the same time because it was no longer functioning as a fixation device, when the screw was removed, and it was no longer needed for that or any other purpose; it ceased performing a beneficial purpose in her leg and instead was detrimental. She had it surgically removed. Defendant agrees with all except the allegation that due care required the washer’s removal.
Since there is no dispute that the object introduced into plaintiff’s leg ceased functioning as part of a fixation device at the time the negligent act is alleged to have occurred, it became a “foreign object” as that term is contemplated in the law, and OCGA § 9-3-72 applies.
The medical opinion of the patient’s expert that the washer was a fixation device even after removal of the screw does not squeeze into the exception to the “Foreign objects left in the body” provision of the Code, as the very foundation gist of her claim is that it became a foreign object, legally speaking; without proving that it was such and that care meeting medical standards required its removal, she could not prevail. The defense that it was not a “foreign object” in the sense that it indisputedly had to be removed, such as in Ringewald v. Crawford W. Long Mem. Hosp.,
Action against the doctor who left it must be filed within one year of the time the patient discovered its presence when the claim is that due medical care required its absence. This follows from the rationale employed in Balbey v. Banks,
Plaintiff discovered the washer had been left in her leg not later than the date of its removal on July 8, 1987. The action filed December 1, 1988, was beyond the time provided by law. OCGA § 9-3-72. The fact that the one-year limit expired before the otherwise applicable two-year limit of OCGA § 9-3-71 does not change the result. Ringewald, supra.
I am authorized to state that Presiding Judge Deen and Presiding Judge Banke join in this dissent.
