Lorenzo Sanchez, Sr. v. Old Pueblo Anesthesia, Pc ( 2008 )


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  •                                                                     FILED BY CLERK
    MAY 30 2008
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS                      COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF ARIZONA                           DIVISION TWO
    DIVISION TWO
    LORENZO SANCHEZ, SR., and                     )
    BERTHA SANCHEZ, husband and wife,             )
    )
    Plaintiffs/Appellants,     )       2 CA-CV 2007-0131
    )       DEPARTMENT B
    v.                         )
    )       OPINION
    OLD PUEBLO ANESTHESIA, P.C., an               )
    Arizona corporation, and DANIEL F.            )
    HUGHES, M.D., and BARBARA                     )
    HUGHES, husband and wife,                     )
    )
    Defendants/Appellees.       )
    )
    APPEAL FROM THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PIMA COUNTY
    Cause No. C20062115
    Honorable John F. Kelly, Judge
    AFFIRMED IN PART
    REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED
    Aboud & Aboud, P.C.
    By Michael J. Aboud                                                           Tucson
    Attorneys for Plaintiffs/Appellants
    Smith Law Group
    By Christopher J. Smith and E. Hardy Smith                                   Tucson
    Attorneys for Defendants/Appellees
    E C K E R S T R O M, Presiding Judge.
    ¶1             Appellants Lorenzo and Bertha Sanchez appeal from the trial court’s dismissal
    of their complaint against Daniel Hughes, M.D., and Old Pueblo Anesthesia, P.C., for the
    Sanchezes’ failure to obtain a preliminary expert opinion affidavit from an anesthesiologist
    to support their claim. They argue that, because their claim is based on res ipsa loquitur, the
    relevant statutes, A.R.S. §§ 12-2603 and 12-2604, do not require them to engage an expert
    in the specialty of each physician they allege may have been negligent. The Sanchezes also
    argue the trial court should have given them leave to obtain the affidavit of an anesthesiology
    expert, rather than dismissing their complaint. Although we agree with the court that
    plaintiffs must comply with the requirements of § 12-2604 even when relying on the doctrine
    of res ipsa loquitur, we disagree that a dismissal with prejudice was the appropriate remedy
    for the plaintiff’s failure to abide by that statute.1 Accordingly, we reverse and remand the
    case to the trial court.
    ¶2             When reviewing the trial court’s grant of a motion to dismiss, we accept the
    facts alleged in the complaint as true, and we view those facts in the light most favorable to
    the complainant, here the Sanchezes. See Johnson v. McDonald, 
    197 Ariz. 155
    , ¶ 2, 
    3 P.3d 1075
    , 1077 (App. 1999). According to the complaint, Dr. James Levi, an orthopedic
    surgeon, performed knee surgery on Lorenzo Sanchez on April 28, 2004. Hughes, a board-
    1
    Old Pueblo moved for dismissal with prejudice, and the court granted the motion
    without specifying whether the dismissal was with or without prejudice. We therefore
    presume it was with prejudice. See Ariz. R. Civ. P. 41(b) (unless court specifies, dismissal
    is “adjudication upon the merits”); Torres v. Kennecott Copper Corp., 
    15 Ariz. App. 272
    ,
    274, 
    488 P.2d 477
    , 479 (1971) (dismissal with prejudice is judgment on merits).
    2
    certified anesthesiologist, administered anesthesia. Lorenzo now has severe and permanent
    nerve damage to his leg.
    ¶3            The Sanchezes filed a complaint against Old Pueblo, Hughes, Levi, and Tucson
    Orthopaedic Institute for medical malpractice. The complaint alleged that, although the
    Sanchezes were “not in a position to prove the particular circumstances or conduct which
    caused [the] damage,” the nerve damage to Lorenzo’s leg would not have occurred unless
    Hughes, Levi, or both had been negligent. Old Pueblo moved to dismiss the complaint on
    the ground that the Sanchezes had failed to certify whether expert opinion testimony was
    necessary pursuant to § 12-2603(A). The Sanchezes responded by submitting an affidavit,
    certifying that the “applicability of [res ipsa loquitur] must and will be established by expert
    testimony.” The Sanchezes also avowed they would timely provide a preliminary expert
    opinion affidavit confirming their claims pursuant to § 12-2603(B). The court denied Old
    Pueblo’s motion to dismiss at that time.
    ¶4            Before the court’s pretrial discovery deadline for the disclosure of expert
    witnesses expired, 2 the Sanchezes had provided the affidavit of an orthopedic surgeon but
    not an anesthesiologist. After the disclosure deadline had expired, Old Pueblo again moved
    to dismiss the Sanchezes’ complaint for failure to comply with § 12-2604(A), which sets
    forth the necessary qualifications for expert testimony establishing the standard of care in a
    medical malpractice case.      Old Pueblo argued the orthopedic surgeon’s affidavit the
    2
    We presume the Sanchezes provided the affidavit in a timely fashion, although it
    appears in the record on appeal only as an attachment to Old Pueblo’s motion to dismiss.
    3
    Sanchezes had provided was not “qualified and admissible expert testimony against Dr.
    Hughes,” an anesthesiologist.      The court granted the motion, thereby dismissing the
    complaint against Old Pueblo,3 and this appeal followed.
    ¶5            The Sanchezes argue the trial court erred when it determined §§ 12-2603 and
    12-2604 required them to provide expert testimony from both an anesthesiologist and an
    orthopedic surgeon to establish their claim based on the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur. We
    review de novo the trial court’s interpretation and application of statutes. Energy Squared,
    Inc. v. Ariz. Dep’t of Revenue, 
    203 Ariz. 507
    , ¶ 15, 
    56 P.3d 686
    , 688 (App. 2002).
    ¶6            Under § 12-2603(A), a plaintiff who asserts a claim against a health care
    professional in a civil action must certify “whether or not expert opinion testimony is
    necessary to prove the health care professional’s standard of care or liability for the claim.”
    If the claimant certifies such expert testimony is necessary, “the claimant shall serve a
    preliminary expert opinion affidavit with the initial disclosures that are required by rule 26.1,
    Ariz[. R. Civ. P].” § 12-2603(B). In doing so, the claimant “may provide affidavits from as
    many experts as the claimant . . . deems necessary.” 
    Id. An affidavit
    must contain, at a
    minimum, four elements: the expert’s qualifications for providing an opinion on the standard
    of care, the factual basis of the claim, the acts that violated the standard of care, and the
    manner in which those acts harmed the claimant. 
    Id. The companion
    statute, § 12-2604(A),
    sets forth the minimum qualifications for an expert to provide testimony on the appropriate
    3
    Tucson Orthopaedic moved for summary judgment on different grounds that are not
    the subject of this appeal. The trial court granted the motion, and the Sanchezes have also
    separately appealed that ruling.
    4
    standard of care: the expert witness must be “licensed as a health professional” and must
    specialize in the same specialty “as the party against whom . . . the testimony is offered.”
    ¶7            In an attempt to comply with the statutes, the Sanchezes submitted the
    preliminary expert opinion affidavit of an orthopedic surgeon. In it, the surgeon stated, inter
    alia, that he believed the injury to Lorenzo’s nerves was caused during the surgery and that
    “such damage would not occur during this kind of operative procedure unless there was
    negligence either by the Surgeon or by the Anesthesiologist.” He noted a possible indication
    in Lorenzo’s medical records that the anesthesiologist, Hughes, had administered a popliteal
    block and opined that the use of such a block would fall below the standard of care for knee
    surgery. Finally, he concluded that, even if there had been a “legitimate reason” for using
    a popliteal block, it “should not have resulted in [nerve] damage.”
    ¶8            In dismissing the Sanchezes’ complaint against Old Pueblo, the court
    concluded that they had
    failed to comply with the requirements of A.R.S. § 12-2604 as
    it applies to Dr. Hughes, a board certified anesthesiologist.
    [They] attempt[] to show that Dr. Hughes violated the standard
    of care through the testimony of a board certified orthopedic
    surgeon. In order to make this claim, the statute requires [the
    Sanchezes] to produce the expert testimony of a board certified
    anesthesiologist. [They] may not rely on the theory [of] res ipsa
    loquitur in order to avoid the requirements of the statute in this
    case.
    ¶9            The Sanchezes maintain the trial court erred in so concluding because §§ 12-
    2603 and 12-2604 only apply to “usual” medical malpractice cases and not those involving
    5
    the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur.4 But the terms of those statutes apply globally to “claim[s]
    against a health care professional . . . asserted in a civil action” and contain no exception for
    cases asserting the theory of res ipsa loquitur. § 12-2603(A). And we presume that, if the
    legislature had intended to create such an exception, it would have done so expressly. See
    Gorney v. Meaney, 
    214 Ariz. 226
    , ¶ 9, 
    150 P.3d 799
    , 803 (App. 2007) (rejecting argument
    that legislature intended to except informed-consent claims from § 12-2603 because it had
    not expressly created exception); see also N.Y. C.P.L.R. 3012-a(c) (McKinney 1991)
    (creating specific exception for claims “rely[ing] solely on the doctrine of ‘res ipsa loquitur’”
    in statute requiring attorney’s affidavit of consultation with physician in medical malpractice
    cases); Manic v. Dawes, 
    213 Ariz. 252
    , ¶ 17, 
    141 P.3d 732
    , 735 (App. 2006) (“[L]egislative
    intent sufficient to overcome unambiguous statutory language must be more than implied;
    it must be clearly expressed.”). Nor have the Sanchezes directed us to any legislative history
    otherwise suggesting the legislature did not intend §§ 12-2603 or 12-2604 to apply in such
    cases.
    ¶10           The Sanchezes emphasize that, by its nature, the res ipsa doctrine does not
    require them to identify precisely what actions, falling below the standard of care, have been
    taken by each of the many health care professionals involved in Lorenzo’s operation.
    4
    In a cursory argument raised for the first time in their reply brief (to which we
    allowed Old Pueblo to file a supplemental brief in response), the Sanchezes argue §§ 12-
    2603 and 12-2604 “ha[ve] no application to this case” because they took effect after
    Lorenzo’s surgery. We disagree. Although the statutes are not expressly retroactive, they
    are clearly procedural and do not affect a vested right of the Sanchezes. Thus, they may be
    applied retroactively. See Aranda v. Indus. Comm’n, 
    198 Ariz. 467
    , ¶ 11, 
    11 P.3d 1006
    , 1009
    (2000).
    6
    Accordingly, they suggest that the requirement of §§ 12-2604(A)(1) and 12-2603(B)—that
    they provide an affidavit from an expert witness qualified in the same specialty “as the party
    against whom . . . the testimony is offered”—is unduly burdensome and extinguishes the
    benefit of proceeding on a theory of res ipsa. And, they complain that applying § 12-2604
    to res ipsa cases would require litigants to identify an expert witness for every health care
    practitioner conceivably involved in an operation.
    ¶11           But, no feature of the res ipsa doctrine gives a plaintiff license to sue,
    indiscriminately, each and every health care practitioner involved in a medical procedure; nor
    does the doctrine require a plaintiff to sue every such practitioner. Rather, “[t]he exotic-
    sounding doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is nothing more than a rule of circumstantial evidence.”
    Schneider v. City of Phoenix, 
    9 Ariz. App. 356
    , 359, 
    452 P.2d 521
    , 524 (1969). The rule
    allows a trier of fact to draw an inference of negligence when (1) the injury is “of a kind that
    ordinarily does not occur in the absence of negligence,” (2) the injury is “caused by an
    agency or instrumentality subject to the control of the defendant,” and (3) the claimant is not
    “in a position to show the particular circumstances that caused the offending agency or
    instrumentality to operate to her injury.” Lowrey v. Montgomery Kone, Inc., 
    202 Ariz. 190
    ,
    ¶ 7, 
    42 P.3d 621
    , 623 (App. 2002). Thus, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur does not relieve
    claimants of the obvious necessity of identifying which defendant or defendants controlled
    “the agency or instrumentality” causing their injuries. 
    Id. Here, the
    record suggests the
    Sanchezes had little difficulty securing experts who could identify which two practitioners,
    7
    of those involved in Lorenzo’s operation, had controlled the instrumentalities potentially
    causing his injury.5
    ¶12           Moreover, Arizona law has never applied the res ipsa loquitur doctrine to
    relieve a claimant of the necessity of securing expert testimony when such testimony would
    be required to establish the prerequisites for applying the doctrine. Res ipsa loquitur is
    applicable “‘only when it is a matter of common knowledge among laymen or medical
    [experts], or both, that the injury would not ordinarily have occurred if due care had been
    exercised.’” Ward v. Mount Calvary Lutheran Church, 
    178 Ariz. 350
    , 355, 
    873 P.2d 688
    ,
    693 (App. 1994), quoting Falcher v. Saint Luke’s Hosp. Med. Ctr., 
    19 Ariz. App. 247
    , 250,
    
    506 P.2d 287
    , 290 (1973). Expert testimony that the injury would not occur in the absence
    of negligence “may be essential to the plaintiff’s case where, as . . . in some actions for
    medical malpractice, there is no fund of common knowledge which may permit laymen
    reasonably to draw the conclusion.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D cmt. d (1965).
    ¶13           In accordance with the Restatement view, Arizona courts have repeatedly held,
    in medical malpractice cases where the plaintiff is invoking the res ipsa doctrine, that expert
    testimony is necessary to establish a departure from the relevant standard of care except when
    negligence is so clearly apparent that a layman would recognize it. See, e.g., Riedisser v.
    5
    Notably, of all the health care professionals presumably in the operating room at the
    time of Lorenzo’s surgery, the Sanchezes have contended only two physicians were
    potentially negligent and have stated, through an expert witness, that each may have fallen
    below the standard of care. On appeal, the Sanchezes concede they have obtained “an
    anesthesiology expert” who has submitted an affidavit “essentially identical” to the
    orthopedic surgeon’s affidavit.
    8
    Nelson, 
    111 Ariz. 542
    , 544, 
    534 P.2d 1052
    , 1054 (1975); McWain v. Tucson Gen. Hosp., 
    137 Ariz. 356
    , 360, 
    670 P.2d 1180
    , 1184 (App. 1983); Faris v. Doctors Hosp., Inc., 
    18 Ariz. App. 264
    , 269, 
    501 P.2d 440
    , 445 (1972); see also Boyce v. Brown, 
    51 Ariz. 416
    , 420-21, 
    77 P.2d 455
    , 457 (1938) (in general medical malpractice case, departure from standard of care “must
    be established by expert medical testimony, unless the negligence is so grossly apparent that
    a layman would have no difficulty in recognizing it”); Carranza v. Tucson Med. Ctr., 
    135 Ariz. 490
    , 491-92, 
    662 P.2d 455
    , 456-57 (App. 1983) (holding no expert testimony needed
    to recover on res ipsa theory for burn on child’s leg after heart surgery).
    ¶14           Thus, long before either § 12-2603 or § 12-2604 became law, claimants
    seeking recovery on a res ipsa loquitur theory in medical malpractice cases could be required
    to marshal expert testimony to support their cause of action. And, neither statute expressly
    requires expert testimony in those res ipsa cases where none was previously required. See
    § 12-2603(A), (D), (E) (expert witness required only when counsel for claimant believes, or
    court determines, expert testimony necessary to present case against chosen defendants). The
    statutes merely impose standards for the qualifications of experts and the specificity of their
    testimony in those cases where such testimony is necessary.
    ¶15           Notably, the trial court has dismissed the case before us not because the
    Sanchezes erroneously maintained that no expert testimony would be necessary to support
    their case, but rather because the specific expert provided, an orthopedic surgeon, does not
    have the qualifications required under § 12-2604 to testify about the appropriate standard of
    care applicable to the defendant, an anesthesiologist. And, we cannot fathom how the court’s
    9
    enforcement of this requirement in any way impedes use of the res ipsa doctrine when, as
    here, the need for expert testimony is undisputed.6
    ¶16            Nor have the Sanchezes explained why our state’s policy, expressed in § 12-
    2604, should be relaxed in the context of res ipsa cases. Because § 12-2604 merely sets forth
    the necessary qualifications for experts testifying to the standard of care in medical
    malpractice cases and because nothing about that requirement alters a claimant’s evidentiary
    burden, we cannot agree with the Sanchezes that application of § 12-2604 would so interfere
    with the res ipsa doctrine that the legislature could not have intended the statute to apply in
    such cases.7
    ¶17            The Sanchezes challenge the propriety of applying § 12-2604 to their case for
    another reason. They observe that, because an orthopedic surgeon is generally in charge of
    the type of operation underlying their claim, that surgeon is well-qualified to opine that “this
    kind of injury does not ordinarily occur in the absence of someone’s negligence—either . . .
    the surgeon or the anesthesiologist.” But, in the plain, unambiguous language of § 12-
    6
    During oral argument, the Sanchezes conceded that, under most circumstances, a
    claimant would eventually need to present expert testimony to demonstrate a particular health
    professional’s liability even when proceeding on a res ipsa theory.
    7
    The Sanchezes also argue that the specificity requirements set forth in § 12-2603(B)
    more dramatically interfere with the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur—a result they maintain the
    legislature could not have intended. During oral argument, the parties stated that the
    Sanchezes’ parallel case against the orthopedic surgeon had been dismissed because of their
    inability to comply with that specificity requirement. But, because the trial court did not
    dismiss their complaint against these defendants on that basis, we do not address that issue
    here. Nor do we address in this appeal whether the Sanchezes have sufficiently raised a res
    ipsa loquitur claim.
    10
    2604(A), our legislature has determined that an expert in one field may not under any
    circumstances testify as an expert on the standard of care for a specialist in another field. See
    id.; Maycock v. Asilomar Dev., Inc., 
    207 Ariz. 495
    , ¶ 24, 
    88 P.3d 565
    , 570 (App. 2004) (if
    statute’s “language is unambiguous, we give effect to the language and do not use other rules
    of statutory construction in its interpretation”). Even if the orthopedic surgeon chosen by the
    Sanchezes might have the necessary qualifications and experience to knowledgeably address
    the standard of care for anesthesiologists in the context of the specific operation performed
    here, we are not at liberty to overlook the requirements of a statute merely because we think
    those requirements might be unnecessary or cumbersome when applied to a particular case
    or class of cases.
    ¶18           The Sanchezes also argue the court erred when it dismissed their complaint for
    failure to comply with § 12-2604 because they were in compliance with Rule 26(b)(4)(D),
    Ariz. R. Civ. P., which presumptively allows only one expert per side on an issue in a
    medical malpractice case.      But the intent of Rule 26(b)(4)(D) is simply to limit the
    presentation of cumulative evidence, and its limits allow one expert for each medical issue;
    it imposes no limitation on the number of experts per case. The rule also allows liberal
    expansion of its presumptive limitation when “an issue cuts across several professional
    disciplines.” 
    Id. cmt. (Committee
    cmt. to 1991 amendment). We are therefore unpersuaded
    that Rule 26(b)(4)(D) justifies the Sanchezes’ failure to disclose an anesthesiology expert
    under the circumstances here.
    11
    ¶19            The Sanchezes finally argue the trial court erred by denying their request for
    leave to remedy their failure to provide an affidavit from an anesthesiologist “in the event
    the court disagreed with [their] interpretation of the statute.” Old Pueblo counters that the
    Sanchezes’ request was improperly presented to the trial court as “a mere sentence appended
    to the tail end of their response to the defendants’ motion to dismiss.” It therefore claims the
    argument is waived.
    ¶20            However, we can find no support in either § 12-2603 or § 12-2604 for
    dismissing a case with prejudice merely because one party has provided a deficient
    preliminary expert opinion affidavit. To the contrary, § 12-2603 erects an orderly procedure
    by which the respective parties can litigate what expert witness testimony will be necessary
    and what experts must therefore be disclosed—and it does not contemplate dismissal with
    prejudice as a sanction for a deficient preliminary affidavit.
    ¶21            First, § 12-2603(A) and (B) require a claimant to certify whether expert
    testimony is necessary and, if so, to serve a preliminary expert opinion affidavit on opposing
    counsel. Then, if opposing counsel believes that the claimant has overlooked the need for
    certain expert testimony, opposing counsel may apply for an order directing the claimant to
    serve an expert opinion affidavit and must articulate the specific claim for which it believes
    an expert witness would be required. § 12-2603(D). If the trial court agrees and finds the
    affidavit of an appropriate expert witness is necessary, the court must first set a date for
    compliance with the statute. § 12-2603(E). Then, the court “shall dismiss the claim against
    the health care professional . . . without prejudice if the claimant . . . fails to file and serve
    12
    a preliminary expert opinion affidavit.” § 12-2603(F) (emphasis added). Apparently
    distinguishing the filing of an affidavit from its sufficiency, subsection (F) also requires that
    the court “allow any party a reasonable time to cure any [insufficient] affidavit.” 
    Id. ¶22 Here,
    whether we characterize Old Pueblo’s motion to dismiss as an
    application for further expert disclosure under § 12-2603(D) or as an allegation of
    insufficiency of the affidavit under § 12-2603(F),8 the trial court has imposed a sanction for
    the failure to comply with § 12-2603, and its companion § 12-2604, that is not contemplated
    by either statute.9 Because the Sanchezes were entitled to assume the trial court would
    choose a remedy authorized by the relevant statutes, we find their one-sentence request that
    the trial court allow them an opportunity to provide an additional affidavit sufficient to
    preserve this claim on appeal.
    ¶23           During oral argument, Old Pueblo correctly observed that it moved for
    dismissal not under § 12-2603, but rather under § 12-2604, because the Sanchezes’ disclosed
    8
    Old Pueblo could arguably have sought a dismissal without prejudice if the
    Sanchezes had “certified that an affidavit [was] necessary” and then failed to file it. A.R.S.
    § 12-2603(F). But here the Sanchezes did file an affidavit. Old Pueblo merely contends that
    the orthopedic surgeon was not qualified to render an opinion about the standard of care for
    Dr. Hughes, an anesthesiologist.
    9
    In Gorney v. Meaney, 
    214 Ariz. 226
    , ¶ 16, 
    150 P.3d 799
    , 804-05 (App. 2007), we
    affirmed the trial court’s grant of summary judgment where the plaintiff had provided an
    expert opinion affidavit failing to meet the requirements of § 12-2603(B)—an outcome
    arguably at odds with our reasoning in this case. But in Gorney, the appellant never
    contended that summary judgment was an inappropriate remedy for a violation of § 12-
    2603(B). We therefore never addressed that question. Moreover, the plaintiff there had been
    provided an opportunity to cure his affidavit and had failed to do so before his case was
    dismissed. Gorney, 
    214 Ariz. 226
    , ¶ 
    3, 150 P.3d at 801
    .
    13
    expert was not qualified to provide testimony against Old Pueblo, as required by § 12-2604.
    For that reason, Old Pueblo suggests that the procedural framework set forth in § 12-2603
    does not apply to its motion, and the trial court was not limited by the remedies set forth
    therein. But § 12-2604 contains no procedural framework of its own for litigating the
    required qualifications of an expert, and § 12-2603 provides clear procedural steps for parties
    who, like Old Pueblo, seek to raise a challenge to the qualifications of the expert offering an
    opinion in the preliminary affidavit. See § 12-2603(B)(1), (D) (requiring preliminary expert
    affidavit to state “[t]he expert’s qualifications to express an opinion on the health care
    professional’s standard of care or liability for the claim” and permitting opposing counsel
    who believes additional expert testimony is needed to apply for relief); see also § 12-2603(F)
    (implying opposing counsel may allege “insufficiency” of expert affidavit as part of
    application for relief). And, the carefully articulated procedure set forth in § 12-2603 would
    have little practical application if litigants could simply bypass its requirements and specified
    remedies by merely omitting reference to § 12-2603 when challenging the contents of a
    preliminary expert opinion affidavit. At least in the context of challenges to preliminary
    witness affidavits, we do not believe the legislature intended § 12-2603 to be a mere
    recommendation for how our trial courts might procedurally address such disputes.
    ¶24           Finally, Old Pueblo maintains the trial court could dismiss the case against it
    with prejudice because, once the court determined the Sanchezes’ expert lacked the
    qualifications to testify, any disclosure of a new expert witness would violate the witness-
    disclosure deadline set by the court, a separate concern not squarely addressed by § 12-2603.
    14
    Our record suggests, however, that the Sanchezes had provided their flawed preliminary
    expert affidavit in November 2006, five months before the witness-disclosure deadline.
    Nonetheless, Old Pueblo did not challenge the sufficiency of that affidavit until one month
    after the deadline had passed—insuring that the Sanchezes could not remedy the problem
    within the disclosure deadline.
    ¶25           Although the trial court has not articulated why it chose the sanction of
    dismissal with prejudice, we can identify no appropriate ground for doing so on the record
    before us.10 To the extent the trial court did so to punish the Sanchezes for submitting a
    flawed affidavit in the first instance, dismissal with prejudice was not authorized under § 12-
    2603, as discussed above. If the court sought to sanction the Sanchezes for the delay caused
    by litigation over the sufficiency of the affidavit, the record suggests Old Pueblo was
    primarily responsible for that delay. Indeed, the Sanchezes’ inability to remedy the flawed
    affidavit within the witness-disclosure deadline was caused not by the Sanchezes’ dilatory
    conduct but rather by Old Pueblo’s arguably strategic behavior in filing its challenge after
    that deadline had passed. In short, were we to conclude the trial court intended to sanction
    the Sanchezes for violating the witness-disclosure deadline, we would find the sanction it
    chose unsupported by the factual record before us. See Austin v. City of Scottsdale, 
    140 Ariz. 10
            Under different circumstances, a court might well find ample justification for
    imposing the sanction of dismissal with prejudice for a plaintiff’s failure to abide by witness
    disclosure deadlines—even when that failure arises from the plaintiff’s lack of compliance
    with § 12-2604. We merely hold that, under the particular circumstances here, where the
    Sanchezes’ inability to remedy the violation of § 12-2604 within the deadline arose from Old
    Pueblo’s approximate six-month delay in raising a challenge on that basis, such a drastic
    sanction is not supported by the record before us.
    15
    579, 581, 
    684 P.2d 151
    , 153 (1984) (sanction of dismissal “‘harsh and not to be invoked
    except under extreme circumstances’”), quoting Buchanan v. Jimenez, 
    18 Ariz. App. 298
    ,
    299, 
    501 P.2d 567
    , 568 (1972).
    ¶26           For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s conclusion that the
    Sanchezes were required to provide an affidavit in compliance with § 12-2604 as a
    prerequisite to presenting testimony regarding the appropriate standard of care for an
    anesthesiologist under the circumstances of the case.      However, we reverse its order
    dismissing the complaint with prejudice and remand the case to the trial court to address the
    Sanchezes’ failure to provide that affidavit in a manner consistent with § 12-2603.
    ____________________________________
    PETER J. ECKERSTROM, Presiding Judge
    CONCURRING:
    ____________________________________
    PHILIP E. ESPINOSA, Judge
    ____________________________________
    GARYE L. VÁSQUEZ, Judge
    16