Sharon Newton and Brian Newton v. Mercy Clinic East Communities d/b/a Mercy Clinic OB/GYN, and Christina Kay Meddows-Jackson, M.D. ( 2020 )


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  •              SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI
    en banc
    SHARON NEWTON AND                                 )       Opinion issued March 31, 2020
    BRIAN NEWTON,                                     )
    )
    Appellants,          )
    )
    v.                                                )      No. SC97687
    )
    MERCY CLINIC EAST COMMUNITIES                     )
    D/B/A MERCY CLINIC OB/GYN, AND                    )
    CHRISTINA KAY MEDDOWS-JACKSON,                    )
    M.D.,                                             )
    )
    Respondents.         )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF ST. LOUIS COUNTY
    The Honorable Stanley J. Wallach, Judge
    Sharon and Brian Newton (collectively, “the Newtons”) appeal the judgment of
    the circuit court sustaining a motion for summary judgment in favor of Mercy Clinic East
    Communities d/b/a Mercy Clinic OB/GYN (“Mercy Clinic”) and Christina Kay
    Meddows-Jackson, M.D. (“Dr. Meddows-Jackson”). The Newtons argue the circuit
    court erred in granting summary judgment because genuine issues of material fact existed
    as to whether their medical malpractice action was timely because the continuing care
    doctrine applied to toll the two-year statute of limitations. This Court has jurisdiction
    under article V, section 10 of the Missouri Constitution. Because the uncontested facts
    before the circuit court in the motion for summary judgment show that the Newtons’
    medical malpractice action was time-barred, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    Background
    The Newtons brought this medical malpractice action against Mercy Clinic and
    Dr. Meddows-Jackson, alleging Dr. Meddows-Jackson provided negligent post-operative
    care to Sharon Newton following an ovarian cyst removal procedure. The timeline of
    this case begins July 5, 2012, when Ms. Newton presented to Dr. Meddows-Jackson with
    an ovarian cyst.
    On July 10, 2012, Dr. Meddows-Jackson surgically removed Ms. Newton’s cyst.
    She then saw Ms. Newton three separate times between July 16, 2012, and August 1,
    2012, for post-operative care. During that time, Ms. Newton developed an infection. As
    a result, Dr. Meddows-Jackson admitted Ms. Newton to the hospital and a specialist
    began treating Ms. Newton’s infection. After this hospitalization, Dr. Meddows-Jackson
    saw Ms. Newton on September 11, 2012, for a follow-up appointment, at which time
    Ms. Newton was cleared to return to work. On February 5, 2013, Dr. Meddows-Jackson
    saw Ms. Newton again for a post-operation evaluation. Finally, Ms. Newton saw a
    different Mercy Clinic doctor, Dr. McBride, on June 18, 2013, for treatment.
    After the appointment on February 5, 2013, Ms. Newton did not see
    Dr. Meddows-Jackson again until January 29, 2015, when Ms. Newton presented for a
    general gynecological exam. At this January 2015 appointment, Ms. Newton explained
    she was having difficulty conceiving, which prompted Dr. Meddows-Jackson to order
    diagnostic testing. The testing revealed Ms. Newton’s fallopian tubes were damaged. To
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    treat this damage, Ms. Newton underwent a procedure by another physician.
    Dr. Meddows-Jackson last saw Ms. Newton on June 9, 2015, for general gynecological
    care.
    The Newtons then filed this suit on June 1, 2016. In the Newtons’ petition, they
    allege Mercy Clinic and Dr. Meddows-Jackson were negligent between approximately
    July 16, 2012, and August 1, 2012, during Ms. Newton’s post-operative care. They also
    claim that, as a result of this alleged negligence, the post-operative infection resulted in
    Ms. Newton’s infertility and related complications, which were treated by
    Dr. Meddows-Jackson and Mercy Clinic doctors until 2015.
    After raising the statute of limitations as an affirmative defense in their answer,
    Mercy Clinic and Dr. Meddows-Jackson filed a motion for summary judgment in the
    circuit court. Mercy Clinic and Dr. Meddows-Jackson argued the Newtons’ claim was
    time-barred because, even assuming the continuing care tolling doctrine applied, it did
    not toll the statute of limitations until June 1, 2014, which would be necessary to make
    the Newtons’ suit timely. The circuit court sustained the motion for summary judgment.
    The Newtons appeal.
    Analysis
    The Newtons claim the circuit court erred because a genuine issue of material fact
    exists over whether the continuing care tolling doctrine applied in their case and, more
    precisely, when that tolling ended. According to the Newtons, the evidence showing that
    the 2015 visits concerned consequences of the 2012 negligence in treating Ms. Newton’s
    infection is enough to create a genuine issue of material fact as to when the necessity that
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    gave rise to Dr. Meddows-Jackson’s duty of continuing care ceased and, therefore, when
    the continuing care tolling period ended. For the reasons set forth below, the Court
    rejects this argument.
    I.
    Under Missouri law, medical malpractice actions must generally be brought within
    two years of the date of the alleged act of negligence. § 516.105. 1 There are four
    circumstances under which the two-year statute of limitations may be tolled. Three of the
    exceptions are statutory: (1) when a foreign object is left in the body, (2) when there is a
    negligent failure to inform the patient of medical test results, and (3) when the person
    bringing the action is a minor younger than 18 years of age. § 516.105(1)-(3). None of
    these statutory exceptions are applicable here.
    The fourth exception, commonly referred to as the continuing care exception,
    arises out of common law and is the exception the Newtons rely on in their case. This
    Court first recognized the continuing care tolling doctrine in Thatcher v. De Tar, 
    173 S.W.2d 760
    (Mo. 1943). In that case, the Court explained the statute of limitations does
    not begin to run if the physician’s “treatment is continuing and of such nature as to
    charge the medical man with the duty of continuing care and treatment which is essential
    to recovery ….”
    Id. at 762.
    This exception is to ensure that a patient – facing the short
    statute of limitations imposed by statute – is not faced with the impossible choice of
    1
    All statutory references are to RSMo 2016 unless otherwise noted.
    4
    either disturbing a course of treatment by initiating suit against a caregiver or losing a
    viable cause of action.
    The Court addressed the Thatcher exception more thoroughly in Weiss v.
    Rojanasathit, explaining:
    The duty to attend the patient continues [and, therefore, the statute of
    limitations is tolled] so long as required unless the physician-patient
    relationship is ended by (1) the mutual consent of the parties, (2) the
    physician’s withdrawal after reasonable notice, (3) the dismissal of the
    physician by the patient, or (4) the cessation of the necessity that gave rise
    to the relationship. Absent good cause to the contrary, where the doctor
    knows or should know that a condition exists that requires further medical
    attention to prevent injurious consequences, the doctor must render such
    attention or must see to it that some other competent person does so until
    termination of the physician-patient relationship.
    
    975 S.W.2d 113
    , 119-20 (Mo. banc 1998) (internal citations omitted) (emphasis added).
    Under Weiss, a physician’s “duty to [provide continuing care for] the patient
    continues so long as required[.]”
    Id. (emphasis added).
    The fourth method set out in
    Weiss is the outer limit to which the duty of “continuing care” can extend – i.e., a
    physician’s duty to provide continuing care to the patient is “required” until the necessity
    that gave rise to the care relationship has ended.
    Id. The other
    three methods set forth in
    Weiss are simply ways in which the duty to provide continuing care can terminate prior to
    the cessation of the necessity that gave rise to that duty.
    Id. Stated differently,
    the duty
    to provide “continuing care” ends when the necessity that gave rise to that duty has ended
    unless, before the cessation of that necessity, the parties terminate that duty by jointly
    agreeing to end the relationship, the physician withdraws after reasonable notice, or the
    5
    patient dismisses the physician.
    Id. Respondents do
    not contest the validity of the
    Thatcher exception, only its application to the undisputed facts of this case.
    The parties focus much of their arguments on the last sentence from Weiss quoted
    above and argue whether the facts that Dr. Meddows-Jackson knew or should have
    known somehow impacted whether (and for how long) Dr. Meddows-Jackson owed Ms.
    Newton a duty of continuing care. This misreads Weiss and misperceives the nature of
    the continuing care tolling doctrine announced in Thatcher. The last sentence from Weiss
    quoted above does not describe how long the duty of continuing care (and, therefore, the
    tolling of the statute of limitations) lasts. As explained above, that is the function of the
    first sentence of the quoted portion from Weiss. Instead, the second sentence merely
    describes what “[t]he duty to attend the patient” entails, which is not at issue in this case.
    The sole methods for determining when the duty of continuing care (and, therefore, the
    tolling period) ends are the four events highlighted in the first sentence of the quoted
    portion of Weiss. See 
    Weiss, 975 S.W.2d at 119-20
    ; Montgomery v. S. Cty. Radiologists,
    Inc., 
    49 S.W.3d 191
    , 194 (Mo. banc 2001). And, of consequence in this case, the fourth
    method (i.e., the date on which the necessity that gave rise to the duty ended) is to be
    determined using an objective standard without inquiry into what the physician knew or
    should have known.
    II.
    Appellate review of the grant of summary judgment is essentially de novo. ITT
    Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp., 
    854 S.W.2d 371
    , 376 (Mo.
    banc 1993). “The criteria on appeal for testing the propriety of summary judgment are no
    6
    different from those which should be employed by the trial court to determine the
    propriety of sustaining the motion initially.”
    Id. This Court
    reviews the record in the
    light most favorable to the party against whom judgment was entered.
    Id. “Summary judgment
    is appropriate when the moving party has [established], on the basis of facts as
    to which there is no genuine dispute, a right to judgment as a matter of law.” Am. Fed’n
    of Teachers v. Ledbetter, 
    387 S.W.3d 360
    , 362-63 (Mo. banc 2012).
    Reviewing the record in the light most favorable to the Newtons, the circuit court
    did not err in sustaining the motion for summary judgment. Because
    Dr. Meddows-Jackson’s duty of continuing care was not terminated by any of the first
    three methods listed in Weiss, this Court’s analysis must focus on the fourth, i.e., when
    the necessity that gave rise to that duty ended. The Newtons’ claims against Mercy
    Clinic and Dr. Meddows-Jackson arise out of the alleged negligent care
    Dr. Meddows-Jackson provided between July 16, 2012, and August 1, 2012. The
    necessity that gave rise to Dr. Meddows-Jackson’s duty of continuing care to Ms.
    Newton was the surgical removal of an ovarian cyst and related post-operative care,
    including treatment of the surgical site infection. Both parties agree that the last date on
    which Dr. Meddows-Jackson treated that infection was February 5, 2013, and that the
    infection itself ended (at the latest 2) June 18, 2013.
    2
    There is some disagreement about when the surgical site infection actually ended (either in
    February 2013 or June 2013). This Court must review the facts in favor of the Newtons because
    they were the party against which summary judgment was entered. Regardless, June 2013 is
    well outside the two-year statute of limitations.
    7
    Accordingly, the uncontroverted material facts are that the necessity that gave rise
    to Dr. Meddows-Jackson’s duty of continuing care ceased when the treatment for cyst
    removal and resulting surgical site infection ended, i.e., June 18, 2013, at the latest. Any
    tolling under the continuing care tolling doctrine ended that same day, and the Newtons
    had two years from that date to file suit. Because they failed to do so, their action is
    time-barred.
    III.
    The Newtons contend the necessity that gave rise to Dr. Meddows-Jackson’s duty
    to provide continuing care to Ms. Newton continued into 2015, when Ms. Newton
    returned with an injury allegedly caused by Dr. Meddows-Jackson’s 2012 negligence.
    This not only misconstrues the appropriate test for determining the correct cessation date
    under the continuing care doctrine, as explained above, it also contravenes the
    legislature’s and this Court’s longstanding rejection of the discovery rule 3 in medical
    negligence actions.
    The two-year statute of limitations set forth in section 516.105 requires all actions
    to be brought within two years of the date of the alleged negligence, irrespective of when
    the damage is discovered. See 
    Weiss, 975 S.W.2d at 121
    . This Court has held
    “continuing or subsequently developing damages or injuries do not start the running of
    section 516.105 anew,” and the statute of limitations commences to run upon the
    3
    Under the discovery rule, the statute of limitations does not commence until discovery of the
    malpractice by the plaintiff (which is normally the discovery of an injury or damage). See
    Laughlin v. Forgrave, 
    432 S.W.2d 308
    , 313-14 (Mo. banc 1968), superseded on other grounds
    by § 516.105, RSMo Supp. 1976.
    8
    occurrence of the act of neglect, not upon the ascertainment of the damage resulting from
    the wrong.
    Id. at 119.
    If treatment for consequences resulting from medical negligence were part of the
    doctor’s duty of continuing care and served to toll the statute of limitations for so long as
    necessary to treat such consequences, then the continuing care tolling doctrine would
    simply be another name for the discredited discovery doctrine because the patient would
    not return for such treatment unless and until he or she discovered there were
    consequences necessitating treatment. The Court declines to stretch the continuing care
    tolling doctrine to that extent.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth above, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    _____________________________
    Paul C. Wilson, Judge
    All concur.
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