Lead Opinion
OPINION
Opinion by
Twenty-four-year-old Juameka Cynarra Ross died after undergoing a splenectomy at Paris Regional Medical Center. Michael A. Zanchi, M.D.,
Zanchi Was a Party to the Laivsuit When Timely Served with the Expert Report
A trial court’s ruling on a motion to dismiss under Section 74.351(b) is reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Tex. Civ. Prao. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.351(b) (West 2011); Am. Transitional Care Ctrs. of Tex., Inc. v. Palacios,
Zanchi contends the trial court erred by denying his motion to dismiss Lane’s suit because Lane did not timely serve Zanchi with an expert report, as required by Section 74.351 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. See
Here, because Lane filed his lawsuit April 21, 2010, he was required to serve one or more expert reports on Zanchi or Zanchi’s attorney by August 19, 2010, the 120th day after the filing of the original petition. Lane asserts that he timely served his expert report on Zanchi August 19, 2010, via certified mail, return receipt requested. It is undisputed that, at that time, Zanchi had not yet been served with process and that he was not served with process until September 16, 2010. Zanchi, therefore, contends that Lane did not serve his expert report on a “party” before the expiration of the 120-day period, as required. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.351(a). Zanchi maintains that the trial court was therefore required, upon motion, to dismiss the suit. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.351(b)(2).
In support of his position, Zanchi points to the language of the statute, which provides that a claimant must serve on each “party or the party’s attorney” one or more expert reports no later than the 120th day after the original petition was filed. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.351(b)(2). The term “party” is not defined in Section 74.351 or Chapter 74 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. “Any legal term or word of art used in this chapter, not otherwise defined in this chapter, shall have such meaning as is consistent with the common law.” Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.001(b) (West 2011). The question then, of whether Zanchi was a party to the lawsuit when the expert report was served, hinges on the meaning of “party” under the common law. We conclude that, under the common law and under the statutory scheme, one is a “party” if so named in a pleading, whether or not yet served.
Zanchi contends that, under the common law, to be a party, one must generally “be named in the pleadings and ... be served, accept or waive service, or make an appearance.” Yilmaz,
On appeal, the First Court of Appeals ruled that Yilmaz was not a party to the lawsuit at the time the expert report was served and, thus, that the motion to dismiss should have been granted. In defining a party as one who must “be named in the pleadings and ... be served, accept or waive service, or make an appearance,” Yilmaz relied on Ex parte Bowers,
Our reading of Mapco does not support that proposition. In Mapco, the Texas Supreme Court ruled that a judgment may not be entered against a party not before the trial court. In that case, the Carters sued Mapco Underground Storage of Texas, Inc., and Texasgulf, Inc. Even though a related corporation, Mapco, Inc., was not named in the pleadings and was not served with process, a judgment was entered against it. In reversing that judgment, the court stated, “In no case shall judgment be rendered against any defendant unless upon service, or acceptance or waiver of process, or upon an appearance.” Mapco, Inc.,
While Mapco recognizes the well defined concept that a party cannot be subjected to the jurisdiction of the court when that party has not been served with process, or has otherwise accepted or waived service, it did not undertake to define the term “party.” Indeed, a person has no duty to participate in proceedings if the person has not been properly served, even if the person later becomes aware of the proceedings. Ross v. Nat’l Ctr. for the Employment of the Disabled,
Where a health care provider, and prospective defendant, is served with an expert report before suit is even filed against the provider, he or she is not a “party,” but becomes one when a claim is asserted against him or her in a suit. Poland v. Ott,
Not many years ago, the Texas Supreme Court affirmed that a “party who becomes aware of the proceedings without proper service of process has no duty to participate in them,” thus tacitly recognizing that one can be a “party” to a legal proceeding even though not served with process. Caldwell v. Barnes,
The Texas Rules of Civil Procedure generally refer to those named in pleadings as “parties” regardless of whether they have been served with process. The most prominent examples are connected to the pleading that initiates a lawsuit. The plaintiffs petition must list the “parties,” thus, in every case, requiring that the designation as parties precedes those parties being served with process. Tex.R. Civ. P. 79. The Civil Case Information Sheet promulgated under Rule 78a also directs the plaintiff to complete it with the names of the “parties” named as defendants, certainly contemplating that the defendants are considered parties before being served with process. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 78a. There are other examples.
The term “party” is defined by Black’s Law Dictionary as “One by or against whom a lawsuit is brought <a party to the lawsuit>.” Blaok’s Law DICTIONARY 1231, 1232 (9th ed. 2009). A “party” is “one of the litigants in a legal proceeding; a plaintiff or a defendant in a suit.”
There are also legitimate practical and policy reasons that support a rule that, for these purposes, one should be recognized as a party when named in a lawsuit, even before being served with process.
The 120-day statutorily decreed period, within which an expert report must be served, starts when suit is filed, that is, when the “parties” are named, not from when they are served. Tex. Civ. Prao. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.351(a). Recognizing persons named in a pleading as parties at that time thus fits better with the overall structure of the statute and with the general sense of what a “party” is, i.e., a person named in the style of a pleading, not the redefinition of a “party” as becoming one only when served.
The arguments in this case have revealed two competing problem scenarios, both of which arise from the unstated, but not-always-correct, legislative assumption that service of process will have been accomplished before the 120-day expert-report deadline.
The first problem scenario is set up if one does not become a party until served with process and if service of process is not accomplished by the end of the 120-day deadline. If such is the case, as is suggested by Zanchi here, the suit must be dismissed for lack of service of the required expert report. That is a draconian result, based on an interpretation of the statute that is not clearly dictated by the statute’s language and is based on dicta of doubtful derivation, as is shown above.
The alternative problem scenario arises if, as Lane suggests, one becomes a party when suit is filed or when the party is first named in a pleading, but service of process is delayed beyond the 120-day expert-report deadline. In such case, the parties are not faced with the draconian result of the first scenario, but with what is certainly a less extreme problem. Based on the statute, the defendant could have a possible deadline to object to the expert report before he or she is even obliged to answer the lawsuit.
The first scenario results in the loss of a claim. The second scenario results in a much less severe situation. Faced with the second scenario, it could be said that, since the party has not yet been served with process in the suit, there is no obligation to respond in any way until that occurs. But, even if a party who has been served with an expert report, but who has not yet been served with process, decides that, out of an abundance of caution, he or she will object to the report within the time period specified by the statute, that burden or harm is significantly less than on the claimant in the first scenario. The second scenario may be seen as an anomaly that may suggest further legislative action, but that relatively minor anomaly should not dictate that one is not a party until served, and thus automatically require a dismissal of a claim when service of process has not been accomplished within 120 days after filing suit. That might be seen as throwing the baby out with the bath water.
The purpose of the expert report requirement is to provide a shield, a mechanism to weed out frivolous suits and not require medical defendants to spend a lot of time and money defending a frivolous case, or at least to keep that period short,
In this case, Zanchi was interested in the subject matter in issue — he was named in Lane’s original petition as a defendant alleged to have committed acts of medical negligence allegedly resulting in the death of Ross. As such, Zanchi had the right to make a defense, participate in the proceedings, and appeal from any judgment rendered against him. Zanchi became a party to the underlying lawsuit when he was named in Lane’s original petition filed with the district clerk.
It is undisputed that the expert report was to be served on or before August 19, 2010. The record indicates that Lane’s attorney mailed the expert report and curriculum vitae (CV) of Jeffrey Wagner, M.D., via certified mail, return receipt requested, to Zanchi at Paris Regional Medical Center on August 19, 2010. The green card indicates these documents were signed for by Chuey Potter at Paris Regional Medical Center. Zanchi contends that Lane failed to demonstrate that Potter had the authority to accept service on Zanchi’s behalf. Even so, Zanchi does not deny having received Wagner’s report. Certainly, if Zanchi never received the report, such statement would have been clearly and unequivocally articulated in briefing filed on his behalf. This was not done.
In Goforth v. Bradshaw,
In this case, Zanchi complains of a failure to prove Potter was authorized to accept service on his behalf. Because actual notice was accomplished, and no harm resulted from any alleged failure of authority on Potter’s part to sign for the report, we find that service here was in compliance with Rule 21a. Zanchi contends, though, that harm resulted from the fact that the expert report was served prior to service of the lawsuit. He maintains that his rights under Section 74.351(a) of the stat
Because Zanchi was served with the expert report before being served with process, he had no duty to participate in the proceedings. See Caldwell,
We affirm the order of the trial court.
Concurring Opinion by Justice CARTER.
Dissenting Opinion by Justice MOSELEY.
Notes
. Michael A. Zanchi, M.D., P.A., and Paris Regional Anesthesia, P.A., were named defendants with Zanchi. The three Zanchi defendants are hereinafter collectively referred to as Zanchi.
. In 2007, Ross was diagnosed with a condition known as idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) and was informed that she would have to undergo a splenectomy as part of the treatment for this condition. Ross was
. The trial court issued an order dated September 7, 2010, authorizing substituted service on Zanchi. The trial court specifically found that Lane's previous attempts to serve Zanchi were unsuccessful. Zanchi was ultimately served with process personally while the process server was proceeding to execute substituted service.
. Wagner’s report concludes that Zanchi improperly placed the endotracheal tube in the right main-stem bronchus and failed to reposition the tube during surgery.
. The expert report was mailed to Zanchi at Paris Regional Medical Center. The return receipt or green card was signed by Chuey Potter. While Zanchi does not admit that he received this report, neither does he deny having received it.
. Lane contends service of the expert report in this instance is sufficient because he exercised due diligence in serving Zanchi with process. Because the "party” issue is dispos-itive and because inherent uncertainties surround the due diligence analysis, we do not reach this issue.
. "[A] trial court has no discretion in determining what the law is, which law governs, or how to apply the law.” Univ. of Tex. Health Sci. Ctr. at Houston v. Gutierrez,
. Our sister courts in Fort Worth, Austin, and Corpus Christi have used the definition of "party" as one who has been served with process, waived service of process, or made an appearance. See Dingler v. Tucker,
. The court clerk is to keep a record of the "names of the parties to the suit,” without any suggestion that a name not be registered as a party unless he or she has been served with citation. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 25, 26. A judge must disqualify from a case if a "party” is related to the judge. Tex.R. Civ. P. 18b. There is no suggestion that the judge should wait to recuse until his or her relative is served with process.
. Consistent with this definition are definitions found in online legal sources. A "party” is a "person or entity who is the plaintiff or defendant in a lawsuit.” www.legal-dictionary.org. "Party with reference to an action means a person who is described in the court of record as plaintiff or defendant. Thus, it means a person by or against whom a legal suit is'brought.” www.USLegal.com. A "party” is
one of the participants in a lawsuit or other legal proceeding who has an interest in the outcome. Parties include plaintiff (person filing suit), defendant (person sued or charged with a crime), petitioner (files a petition asking for a court ruling), respondent (usually in opposition to a petition or an appeal), cross-complainant (a defendant who sues someone else in the same lawsuit), or cross-defendant (a person sued by a cross-complainant)....
http://dictionaiy.law.com.
. Our determination that Zanchi was a party to the lawsuit when named in a petition duly filed with the clerk of record does not diverge from the substantive holdings in Mapco (judgment shall not be rendered against any defendant unless upon service, or acceptance or waiver of process, or upon an appearance), Ross (trial court is without jurisdiction to enter or enforce judgment against party who had neither been served nor appeared), and Caldwell (party who becomes aware of the proceedings without proper service of process has no duty to participate in them). Our holding does not suggest that a person or entity that has merely been sued, but not served with process, has any duty to participate in the proceedings; certainly, Zanchi had no duty to participate in the proceedings until such time as he was properly served with process.
. Out of an abundance of caution, Zanchi may wish to do so within twenty-one days after issuance of this opinion. But we offer no opinion on this particular issue.
. At the dismissal hearing, counsel for Lane stated, "I think we put in our response that we certainly would not object to them having their opportunity at that point to make their objections. We’re not trying to play games here.”
. Because we hold that Lane properly and timely served the expert report on Zanchi, a party to the lawsuit — and has therefore complied with the statute — we do not reach the issues of whether a due diligence exception exists that might forgive a lack of compliance by Lane or whether Lane would qualify for such an exception.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The Legislature has commanded that expert reports be served on a party or the party’s attorney “not later than the 120th day after the date the original petition was filed.” Tex. Civ. PraC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.351 (West 2011). Here, it is undisputed that Michael A. Zanchi, M.D., was served in accordance with Rule 21a within that time period. Those facts should end the discussion, but of course it does not; Dr. Zanchi argues that he was not a “party” and/or he was not “served.”
The first argument presented here is that this service of the expert report is not valid because Dr. Zanchi was not a “party,” even though the petition had been filed naming him as such. Chief Justice Morriss has fully explained that the case apparently relied on by some courts for that proposition, Mapco,
The dissenting opinion opines that Dr. Zanchi was not “served” with the expert report even though it was addressed and mailed to him by certified letter and received at the hospital where the alleged negligence occurred. The Legislature, while giving many mandates in this statute, failed to define the word “serve” as it relates to the expert report. This Court and many others, having no statutory guidance, have concluded compliance with Rule 21a of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure is the most logical and consistent manner that should be employed in deciding if the report was served. Goforth v. Bradshaw,
Citing no authority, the dissenting opinion posits that serving an expert report is not governed by Rule 21a unless the defendant has previously been served with citation; no other suggestion or definition is proposed, only that Rule 21a should not be used. One reason for the employment of Rule 21a is to avoid the classic “he said-she said” argument about whether the report was served or received. That Rule provides standards and makes service complete when the document is properly addressed, stamped, and sent by registered or certified mail to the last known address. Certifying that action was taken provides prima facie evidence of service, subject to presentation of evidence of non-receipt. Here, an affidavit is in the clerk’s file evidencing that the report was properly addressed and sent by certified mail to Dr. Zanchi at the Paris Regional Medical Center. A receipt showed that the document was received at the hospital, and Dr. Zanchi did not attempt to present contrary evidence. Based on this information, the report was served on Dr. Zanchi. Very simply, within 120 days from filing the original petition against Dr. Zanchi, he was served with the expert report in compliance with the statute.
The dissent argues that appellate courts have held that service of citation on one other than the addressee is defective, but the cited cases involve the service of citation, not notices. This distinction makes all the difference in the world. Citation must be served in strict accordance with
Finally, I will respond to the dissenting opinion that allowing service of the expert report before citation has been completed requires the defendant to file an objection to the expert report before having the duty to respond to the suit itself. The question seems to answer itself; if the trial court has not acquired jurisdiction of the defendant, that party is not required to do anything, including submitting an objection to the expert report. When the court does obtain jurisdiction, by the proper service of citation, just as the defendant has to answer the suit, likewise the time begins to run on filing of the objections to the report. The trial court could not require the defendant to file an objection before it acquired jurisdiction. In essence, receiving the expert report prior to service of citation places the defendant in the same position as if the citation and expert report were served simultaneously. See Stroud v. Grubb,
The Legislature determined that expert reports must be filed in order to avoid costly, unnecessary, and unmerited legal proceedings, but unfortunately, in this case, that goal has not been accomplished. Here, a thirty-one-page detailed report from a board-certified anesthesiologist was served within 120 days from the filing of the original petition. Instead of engaging in expensive and time-consuming trial and appellate litigation attempting to establish that the simple words “part/’ and “serve” have abstruse meanings, these parties should be preparing for and trying their case.
I concur with the result reached in the opinion of the Chief Justice.
. Mapco, Inc. v. Carter,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Although I concur with the majority’s scholarly determination that a person becomes a “party” to a lawsuit when he is named as such in a petition filed with a court (as opposed to when that person is served with citation), I cannot agree with some of the other determinations made to arrive at the majority conclusion. I also feel it advisable to address potentially-determinative arguments not mentioned in the majority opinion.
“Service” of Report Pursuant to Rule 21a?
The first concern lies with the claim by
The predecessor of Chapter 74 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code was Article 4590L This now-repealed and replaced statute, while requiring an expert report to be obtained by a health care liability claimant, used the term “furnish” when speaking of delivery of a copy of that report to the defendant. Tex.Rev.Civ. Stat. Ann. art. 4590i, § 13.01(d), repealed by Act of May 16, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 204, § 10.09, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 847, 884 (current version at Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 74.001 (West 2011)). The current statute requires that claimant “serve” a copy of the expert report on the defendant. The question then arises as to whether sending a copy of the expert report to Paris Regional Medical Center (where Zanchi served on the staff) by certified mail before he had been served with citation and before he had an obligation to respond to the suit complied with the obligation to “serve” him with a copy of the report within 120 days of the filing of the suit. This is compounded by questions of whether the certified mail receipt, signed by someone not proven to have the capacity to receive service on behalf of Zanchi, was sufficient evidence to establish a presumption that the report was served on him.
A number of intermediate appellate courts (including this Court) have determined that the term “serve” as used in the statute is tantamount to service pursuant to Rule 21a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Goforth v. Bradshaw,
Note that when the expert report was sent by certified mail to the hospital where Zanchi commonly worked, the postal receipt was signed by someone whom no one identified as being the authorized agent for Zanchi. In service of citation, the appellate courts have almost unanimously ruled that when there is service by certified mail, if the return receipt is not signed by the addressee, the service of process is defective. See Sw. Sec. Servs., Inc. v. Gamboa,
One could liken the pre-citation service of the expert report in a health care liability suit pursuant to Rule 21a prior to the time that a defendant has a duty to respond to the pre-citation service of requests for admissions. As the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure currently stand, such requests may be served on another party no later than thirty days before the end of the discovery period. Tex.R. Civ. P. 198.1. The person receiving those requests for admissions would have thirty days after receipt of the requests to re
Rule 21a service should apply only after the party is actually before the court, either by compliance with the Rules pertaining to service of citation (e.g., Rule 107, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure) or by voluntary appearance. Here, we had neither of these circumstances at the time the expert report was mailed to Zanchi at the hospital. In these circumstances, there was neither service of citation on him at some situs nor any pleading filed by Zan-chi which nailed down the proper address for the transmission of such notices (such as the office address of his attorney); the certified mail receipt was signed by some person whose relationship to Zanchi remains unidentified. Should this ploy work to establish a prima facie case that Zanchi was “served” with it? That would be the result if Rule 21a is permitted to apply under these circumstances.
Since Zanchi had not already been put in the position of being imposed with an obligation to respond to anything in the suit, Rule 21a should not apply to service of the expert report. Because Rule 21a was never intended to apply under the circumstances we have here, there was no “service” of the expert report on Zanchi within the prescribed 120-day time period prescribed by the statute, nor was it served in such a manner as to suffice to meet the statutory requirement.
I would rule that the attempt at service pursuant to Rule 21a before Zanchi had an obligation to respond was ineffective.
Due Diligence Exception?
Lane also argued that the time requirements of Section 74.351(a) of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code do not apply if he demonstrates that due diligence was pursued in unsuccessful attempts to serve Zanchi with citation. In doing so, Lane apparently relies on a discussion of the due diligence doctrine in Stockton v. Offenbach,
The problems with reliance on Stockton for the proposition that the due diligence doctrine does apply and, thus, potentially exculpates Lane from the harsh consequences of the statute are twofold: (1) although the supreme court discusses and
It is notable here that Lane made absolutely no attempt at personal service citation on Zanchi until about forty days after the suit was filed. Lane showed that the process server made unsuccessful attempts on four occasions in June to personally serve Zanchi at his home. Even though the process server was aware that Zanchi was a hospital-based physician at Paris Regional Medical Center, he attempted personal service citation only at Zanchi’s home, never attempting to serve Zanchi with citation at the hospital. Lane also showed that his attorney relied upon a paralegal’s mistaken representation that Zanchi had, in fact, been served with citation; however, there is no explanation given by Lane for inactivity in attempts to get service during the lapse of time between the last attempt by the process server to effect service on Zanchi at his home (June 21) and the paralegal’s mistaken representation that Zanchi had been served (August 10). No motion for substituted service was filed with the trial court until after the 120-day period for the service of the expert report had already expired. Personal service citation was finally served when the process server located Zanchi exiting his home when the process server was attempting to serve a substituted process. What this does not take into account is that Lane’s attorney, apparently realizing that the 120-day period for serving the expert report loomed like the messenger of death, did not send the expert report to Zanchi’s home (where all attempts at service of citation had been made), but to the hospital where he worked. The majority has found this service of the expert report was effective. Many people work during the day and would be absent from their homes. It appears oxymoronic for this Court to make a finding that service of the expert report on Zanchi pursuant to Rule 21a was effective when it was sent by certified mail addressed to him at the hospital address (this apparently having been construed by Lane as Zanchi’s “last known address” so as to comply with Rule 21a), yet fail to address the issue of due diligence when no effort was made to serve Zanchi — either by personal service or by certified mail — at the hospital address. Due diligence would have dictated that service of the citation and the expert report would have been attempted at the place of Zanchi’s employment promptly after efforts were unsuccessful at his home. As to the erroneous representation to Lane’s attorney that Zanchi had actually been personally served with citation, the error of the paralegal amounts to error by Lane’s lawyer and would not provide grist for the claim of due diligence.
Lane has failed to show facts necessary to support a due diligence claim as a matter of law.
Statutory Construction?
The third point relates to the difficulty of reconciling the statute to the procedures to be followed once one allows the service of the expert report before service of citation on the defendant.
The relevant statute reads as follows:
In a health care liability claim, a claimant shall, not later than the 120th day after the date the original petition was filed, serve on each party or the party’s attorney one or more expert reports, with a curriculum vitae of each expertlisted in the report for each physician or health care provider against whom a liability claim is asserted. The date for serving the report may be extended by written agreement of the affected parties. Each- defendant physician or health care provider whose conduct is implicated in a report must file and serve any objection to the sufficiency of the report not later than the 21st day after the date it was served, failing which all objections are waived.
Tex. Civ. PraC. & Rem.Code ANN. § 74.351 (West 2011) (emphasis added).
This sets out two critical times, one for the service of the expert report by the claimant and one for the filing of service of objections to that report by the physician or health care provider.
If one, for instance, employs the due diligence exception to stall the requirement, then the health care provider who has been served with the expert report (but who has no obligation to respond to the lawsuit) must file his objections to the expert report before he has the duty to respond to the suit itself. The answer proposed by Lane to that dilemma is to apply a “relate back” time to extend the time for filing objections to the time the defendant must file an answer to the suit in chief.
If the relate back time is used, this not only impacts the date that service of the expert report must be delivered, it also dictates that the statutory time for filing objections to the report be likewise amended. Accordingly, if a court unilaterally tampers with the statutory deadline for the service of the expert report, in a circumstance like this it must also extend the time for lodging objections to it; otherwise, the time permitted for lodging objections to the report would be nullified. Accordingly, in order to do so, the court extending deadlines must rewrite the statute in an additional cogent spot.
In Stockton, the Texas Supreme Court acknowledged that difficulty can arise because of the way the statute is written. After making that observation, however, the supreme court stated that “[t]he Legislature, however, has chosen to commence the 120-day period from the date of filing, and ‘we are not free to rewrite the statutes to reach a result we might consider more desirable, in the name of statutory construction.’” Stockton,
A court’s primary objective in construing statutes is to give effect to the Legislature’s intent. Galbraith Eng’g Consultants, Inc. v. Pochucha,
Words can be vague and may have multiple shades of meanings, even completely opposite meanings (e.g., ravel, adjure, avocation, and inure). Even though the word “filed” may have different meanings in other contexts, in the context of Section 74.351, it has only one. Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 74.351. In that context, it means the date that the suit has been instituted against the health care provider; that can only mean that the claimant has 120 days from the date that the medical provider was made a defendant in the suit to serve the expert report.
To be sure, the way the Legislature drafted this legislation presents a potentially onerous (and, possibly, even ruinous) burden on a claimant against a physician or other health care provider in dictating the time that an expert report must be
The courts of appeals are obligated to follow the determinations of the Texas Supreme Court in determining the law. See In re K.M.S.,
Due to these reasons, I would rule that the expert report was not served on Zan-chi in accord with the statute and direct the dismissal of Lane’s suit.
. The appellants here are treated as singular under the name “Zanchi” in the singular. Reference to the appellee is made as "Lane.”
. In Steffan v. Steffan,
. Omaha Healthcare Ctr., LLC v. Johnson,
