ROBERT SOLINGER, M.D.; ET AL. V. MELANIE PEARSON, ET AL.
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,Suprrutr Cfaurf of
2007-SC-000389-DG
AND
2008-SC-000133-DG
ROBERT SOLINGER, M .D. ;
CHRISTOPHER JOHNSRUDE, M.D . ;
MICHAEL RECTO, M .D . ; AND
PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY ASSOCIATES,
P.S .C.
V.
ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
CASE NO . 2006-CA-000585
JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT NO . 05-CI-002182
MELANIE PEARSON AND
NORTON HOSPITAL, INC .
AND
APPELLEES/CROSS-APPELLANTS
2007-SC-000414-DG
AND
2008-SC-000134-DG
NORTON HOSPITAL, INC .
V.
APPELLANTS/ CROSS-APPELLE
APPELLANT/ CROSS-APPELLEE
ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS
CASE NO . 2006-CA-000585
JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT NO . 05-CI-002182
MELANIE PEARSON
APPELLEE/CROSS-APPELLANT
MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT
AFFIRMING
This Court is again presented with the question of when a trial court may
grant summary judgment against a plaintiff who fails to identify any expert
witnesses in a medical malpractice action. Faced with this same issue in
Blankenship v. Collier, --- S .W .3d --- (Ky. 2009), this Court held that because
Collier, the plaintiff, had acknowledged the need for expert testimony for more
than a year and because it was clearly unreasonable on the record before the
trial court to conclude that he did not need expert testimony in his medical
malpractice action, the trial court properly granted the defendants' motions for
summary judgment after Collier continually failed to identify any expert
witnesses . Here, Melanie Pearson also did not dispute the need for expert
witnesses in her medical malpractice action, and given the nature of her
claims, it would have been unreasonable for her to do so. Nonetheless, on the
particular facts of this case, this Court finds that the trial court acted
prematurely in taking up the defendants' summary judgment motions for
ruling without first determining the status of Pearson's efforts to fund the
unnamed experts she claimed would support her case. Therefore, the Court of
Appeals' opinion reversing the trial court's grant of summary judgment is
affirmed on different grounds .
RELEVANT FACTS
On March 7, 2005, Melanie Pearson, proceeding pro se, filed a medical
malpractice action against Dr. Solinger, Dr. Johnsrude, Dr . Recto, Pediatric
Cardiology Associates, and Norton Hospital (the defendants) . In her complaint,
Pearson explained that she had been receiving treatment from the defendants
for several years for her numerous heart-related medical conditions . Pearson
alleged that in May 2003, her heart defects reached a severe and dangerous
state, but that the defendants failed to take the appropriate action, causing her
to develop dilatation of her heart, left atrium and left ventricle, and a chronic
pleural effusion of her left lower lung. In addition, Pearson alleged that she
developed atrial fibrillation as a result of the defendants' inaction, and on
February 18, 2004, had to be admitted to Norton Hospital for emergency
treatment. Pearson claimed that while being treated for this atrial fibrillation,
the physician-defendants prescribed Coumadin, an anticoagulation drug, in an
excessive dose, which caused her to develop a cerebral aneurysm; to suffer
from damage to her heart, lungs, brain, and central nervous system; and to
experience emotional distress.
In response to Pearson's complaint, the physicians and Norton Hospital
filed separate motions to dismiss based on Pearson's failure to comply with the
statute of limitations . After the trial court denied the defendants' motions to
dismiss, the defendants served requests for admissions and a set of
interrogatories, asking that Pearson disclose the name of any anticipated
expert who would support Pearson's claim that her physicians deviated from
the proper standard of care. I On April 25, 2005, Pearson filed a motion with
Norton Hospital served its first set of interrogatories on March 22, 2005, while the
physicians served theirs on April 20, 2005.
the court requesting that she be given a twenty-day extension from April 25 till
May 15, 2005, to respond to the defendants' discovery requests, which the trial
court granted . On May 16, 2005, Pearson filed another request for an
extension to respond. Before the trial court ruled on Pearson's second motion
for an extension, the defendants filed separate motions for summary judgment,
Norton Hospital filing its motion on May 20, 2005, and the physicians filing
their motion on May 23, 2005 .
The physicians argued that they were entitled to summary judgment
because Pearson's failure to respond to their request for admissions
constituted a judicial admission that they never deviated from the appropriate
medical standard of care . In Norton Hospital's motion for summary judgment,
in addition to presenting the judicial admission argument, Norton also
contended that because Pearson had failed to produce an expert witness as
required by law, she could not establish that the hospital had deviated from the
accepted standard of care . Neither of the defendants' summary judgment
motions acknowledged that Pearson had filed a motion for an extension of time
to respond to their requests for admissions and interrogatories . Subsequently,
on June 6, 2005, the trial court granted Pearson's motion for an extension of
time, giving her until June 30, 2005 to submit her response to the defendants'
discovery requests .
On June 13, 2005, Pearson requested a seven-day extension to respond
to the defendants' motions for summary judgment, which the trial court
granted. On June 20, 2005, Pearson filed her response to the defendants'
motions, arguing primarily that summary judgment was improper because she
was not yet required to respond to the defendants' discovery requests given the
trial court's extension of her deadline to June 30, 2005. Regarding Norton's
allegation that Pearson had no expert witnesses, Pearson requested "that the
defendants' motion not be ruled on and that this matter be continued until the
Plaintiff has an opportunity to conduct fact discovery and obtain Affidavits or
Depositions from her expert witnesses ." Pearson also stated that "[m]oreover,
contrary to the defendants' speculation that the plaintiff cannot support her
claim with expert medical testimony, the plaintiff has retained a medical expert
which (sic) supports her contentions in this matter, is attempting to obtain
additional medical experts and will be relying upon the medical records from
Defendant Norton Hospital . . . ." The trial court did not enter a ruling on the
defendants' motions for summary judgment following Pearson's response . On
July 7, 2005, Pearson submitted her response to the defendants' discovery
requests .
On July 27, 2005, the trial court entered a civil jury trial order, setting
the trial for April 25, 2006 (a date approximately fourteen months after the
filing of the complaint), and requiring Pearson- to identify her expert witnesses
by October l, 2005 . During the next several months, the parties continued to
engage in discovery and in taking depositions . They appeared for a status
conference on September 6, 2005 and the trial court informed Pearson that if
her health problems prevented her from attending any future court appearance
she should call and advise the court. The video record reflects the trial judge
assuring Pearson that "nothing would happen" in her absence .
On October 1, 2005, Pearson filed a motion requesting that the court
extend her expert disclosure deadline by sixty days. Pearson explained that
she suffered from financial hardship and that she would be unable to obtain
the funds needed to secure expert witnesses and their reports until the end of
October or early November. On October 11, 2005, the trial court granted
Pearson's request and gave her to December l, 2005, to disclose her experts .
On December 7, 2005, having received no expert disclosure from Pearson,
Norton Hospital filed 'a motion requesting that the court rule on its prior motion
for summary judgment, relying on its prior memorandum and on the fact that
Pearson still had not disclosed any expert witnesses and had not requested
another extension of time from the court.
On December 9, 2005, the trial court conducted its previously scheduled
status conference. As Pearson subsequently explained in a February 20, 2006
affidavit, she had planned on attending the status conference and requesting
an additional enlargement of time to disclose her hired expert witnesses
because she had still been unable to obtain the necessary funds to retain
them. However, on the morning of December 9, 2005, Pearson was
hospitalized with severe chest pain. Pearson's fiancée called the trial court at
approximately 8 :25 a.m . that morning and informed the clerk that Pearson
The physician-defendants also filed a separate motion on December 12, 2005,
requesting that the trial court rule on its prior motion for summary judgment .
would be unable to attend the status conference because of her hospitalization
and requested that the court grant Pearson a continuance. Pearson contends
that the clerk advised her fiancée that the court would notify Pearson of a
future date once it had been determined .
At 8 :34 a .m . on December 9, 2005, the trial court began its status
conference by acknowledging that Pearson was in the hospital and would be
unable to attend the proceeding. Because of Pearson's absence, counsel for the
defendant-physicians also did not attend the status conference, leaving only
the trial judge and counsel for Norton Hospital. After noting Pearson's
absence, the trial judge stated that she had received Norton Hospital's motion
requesting that the court rule on its previously filed motion for summary
judgment. The trial judge confirmed that this motion was based on Pearson's
"inability to comply with the expert disclosure deadline which has been passed
once ." After clarifying that the summary judgment motion was originally filed
in late spring, the trial court informed Norton Hospital that it would enter a
ruling on the motion within the week "not because Ms. Pearson is not here . .
but because it's appropriate for the court to rule on it ." This status conference
lasted approximately two minutes.
Three days later, on December 12, 2005, the trial court entered its order
granting the defendants' motions for summary judgment . The trial court held
that Pearson would be
unable to sustain her burden of proof against any of
the Defendants without competent expert testimony.
Plaintiff has not complied with the Trial Order as she
has not identified any experts, nor supplied CR 26.02
information . As such, there are no genuine issues of
material fact and Defendants are entitled to judgment
as a matter of law.
On December 14, 2005, Pearson filed a letter with the court explaining that her
hospitalization had prevented her from attending the status conference and
that her case should not be dismissed for lack of expert testimony. Pearson
asserted that the defendants could not have suffered prejudice from her being
only a couple of weeks late in disclosing her experts, that the court had only
extended her expert disclosure deadline once, and that "a case that is set for
trial in late April 2006 . . . can tolerate a delay caused by financial hardship [as
opposed to a delay caused by a] disregard for the Court's Orders or the Civil
Rules ." Although Pearson did not explicitly ask for a time extension in this
letter, she did state that "the Court has inherent authority to enlarge the time
period for Plaintiff's expert disclosure pursuant to [a] proper request made by
Plaintiff." Pearson's letter did not mention the trial court's order entered two
days earlier granting summary judgment for the defendants, apparently
because she was unaware of its existence .
On December 22, 2005, Pearson filed a pro se motion to vacate the trial
court's grant of summary judgment . Pearson argued that genuine issues of
material fact still existed in her case and that the trial court erred by failing to
reschedule the December 9, 2005 status conference, which she was unable to
attend ; setting discovery deadlines that were inconsistent with Jefferson Rule
of Practice 7.07 ; failing to hold a hearing on the defendants' renewed summary
judgment motions ; and finding that the defendants had met their burden
under the summary judgment standard. Shortly after filing this motion,
Pearson hired an attorney, and on January 17, 2006, requested leave from the
trial court to file her expert witness disclosures . The defendants filed
responses to Pearson's motion to vacate, and Pearson submitted a reply. After
the trial court held a hearing on this motion, it entered an order denying
Pearson's motion to vacate on February 24, 2006 . The trial court held that at
the time Pearson filed her motion to vacate, no material issues of fact existed
because she had no expert witnesses who could support her claim of medical
malpractice . The court also noted that Pearson's recent motion to file an expert
witness disclosure was submitted "some 36 days after final judgment was
entered" and was irrelevant to her current motion to vacate .
Pearson appealed the trial court's grant of summary judgment to the
Kentucky Court of Appeals . Although the Court of Appeals agreed that
Pearson's medical malpractice action was not a res ipsa loquitur case and that
she was required to produce expert witnesses to sustain her burden of proof,
the court concluded that the trial court abused its discretion by prematurely
granting summary judgment . The Court of Appeals noted that Pearson had not
ignored the trial court's orders or refused to obtain an expert . Rather, she had
attempted "to secure experts but was impeded by her illnesses,
hospitalizations, and lack of funds ." Ultimately, the Court of Appeals found
that because the defendants "did not aver it was impossible for Pearson to
obtain expert testimony," they failed to establish the non-existence of a genuine
issue of material fact and were not entitled to summary judgment . The Court
of Appeals also criticized the trial court for using a summary judgment motion
as a "sanctioning" tool to punish Pearson for failing to meet its disclosure
deadline .
This Court granted the physicians' and Norton Hospital's petitions for
discretionary review . Subsequently, this Court also granted Pearson's crossmotions for discretionary review, which raised the following issues : whether,
for summary judgment purposes, the drug manufacturer's package inserts for
Coumadin provided the applicable standard of care without the need for expert
testimony ; whether Norton Hospital had a duty to track Pearson's drug
interactions ; whether Norton Hospital and the physicians failed to warn
Pearson of the risk of cerebral bleeding in violation of Kentucky's Informed
Consent Statute, KRS 304.40-320; whether Pearson's failure to disclose expert
witnesses was properly raised as a ground for entry of summary judgment ; and
whether Pearson was given an adequate opportunity to be heard on the
defendants' renewed summary judgment motions due to the trial court's failure
to reschedule the December
9th
status conference. Having considered the
record in this case, this Court finds that the trial court acted prematurely in
deciding to rule on the defendants' summary judgment motions without first
either rescheduling the status conference or otherwise notifying Pearson of its
decision to rule on the defendants' pending motions. Because the case is being
remanded, several of Pearson's cross-motion issues are now moot and will not
be addressed .
ANALYSIS
On appeal, Norton Hospital and the physician-defendants argue that the
Court of Appeals erred in applying a summary judgment standard that
required them to demonstrate that it was impossible for Pearson to obtain an
expert witness, and in concluding that the trial court improperly used a
summary judgment as a sanction for Pearson's failure to meet a court deadline .
The defendants also contend that the trial court did not err in finding that
Pearson could not sustain her burden of proof without expert testimony and in
granting their motions for summary judgment . Although this Court agrees
with the defendants that the Court of Appeals applied the wrong summary
judgment standard and that the trial court did not use the summary judgment
as a sanction, we nonetheless find that the trial court acted prematurely and
abused its discretion in deciding to rule on the defendants' summary judgment
motions at a time when it had not rescheduled the status conference or
informed Pearson of its intention to enter a ruling .
I. A Party Moving for Summary Judgment Must Demonstrate That There
Are No Genuine Issues of Material Fact in The Record and Is Not Required
to Prove That It Would Be Impossible For the Non-Moving Party to Ever
Secure An Expert .
The Court of Appeals stated in its opinion that
It also appears that Pearson's arguments that she should have been allowed to
proceed on certain claims without experts were never timely presented to the trial
court and thus were never preserved.
[t]he doctors and Norton Hospital had the burden of
demonstrating the non-existence of a genuine issue of
material fact. See Barton, [v. Gas Service Co.], 423
S .W.2d 902 . The appellees moved for summary
judgment on Pearson's failing to make her expert
witness disclosures and did not aver it was impossible
for Pearson to obtain expert testimony .
The Court of Appeals then concluded that the defendants did not meet their
burden of demonstrating the non-existence of any genuine issue of material
fact and that the trial court entered summary judgment prematurely . Although
this Court ultimately agrees that the trial court acted prematurely in granting
this motion, we disagree that a defendant moving for summary judgment based
on a plaintiff's failure to disclose necessary medical experts needs to
demonstrate that it would be impossible for the plaintiff to obtain expert
testimony.4
This Court has held that when ruling on a summary judgment motion, a
trial court should consider "whether, from the evidence of record, facts exist
which would make it possible for the non-moving party to prevail. In the
analysis, the focus should be on what is of record rather than what might be
presented at trial." Welch v. American Pub. Co. ofKy., 3 S .W.3d 724, 730 (Ky.
1999) . In applying this rule to the facts at hand, the trial court should have
considered whether Pearson had submitted any expert witness disclosures at
the time the summary judgment motion was filed, and not whether she would
4
It is unclear how a defendant could ever state in good faith that it would be
"impossible" for the plaintiff to obtain expert testimony. Impossibility suggests that
every possible expert in the relevant field of expertise has declined, or would
decline, to offer the necessary testimony.
12
have been capable of ever obtaining an expert witness at some point prior to
trial. Thus, despite the Court of Appeals' statement, the defendants in this
case were not required to prove that it would have been impossible for Pearson
ever to obtain a medical expert . Rather, they simply needed to show that
Pearson could not meet her burden of proof without medical expert testimony
and that at the time the summary judgment motion was filed, Pearson had
completely failed to make any expert witness disclosures . Although a more
thorough discussion of summary judgments based on a failure to disclose
medical experts follows infra, this Court initially notes that the Court of
Appeals' statement regarding a defendant's burden for this type of summary
judgment is inaccurate .
II. Because The Summary Judgment Motion In This Instance Was Based
on an Actual Failure of Proof and Not Simply a Failure to Meet a Deadline,
The Defendants Had Proper Grounds On Which To File A Motion For
Summary Judgment.
Pursuant to Kentucky law, in a medical malpractice action where expert
witnesses are required, a defendant may be entitled to summary judgment if
the plaintiff fails to identify any expert witnesses within a reasonable amount of
time . See Blankenship and Caritas Health Services, Inc. v. Collier, --- S .W .3d --(Ky. January 21, 2010) ("[i]n a medical malpractice action, where a sufficient
amount of time has expired and the plaintiff has still `failed to introduce
evidence sufficient to establish the respective applicable standard of care,' then
the defendants are entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law," quoting
Green v. Owensboro Medical Health System, Inc., 231 S.W.3d 781, 784 (Ky.
App. 2007)) ; Neal v. Welker, 426 S.W .2d 476, 479-480 (Ky. 1968) (holding that
"the curtain must fall at some time upon the right of a litigant" to put forth the
most basic level of proof and that the plaintiff's bare assertion "that something
will `turn up' cannot be made basis for showing that a genuine issue as to a
material fact exists") ; Green v. Owensboro Medical Health System, Inc., 231
S .W.3d at 784 (holding that the trial court properly granted summary judgment
for the defendant doctor because the plaintiff, by not identifying any expert
witnesses, "failed to introduce evidence sufficient to establish the respective
applicable standard of care") ; Ward v. Housman, 809 S.W .2d 717, 719 (Ky.
App . 1991) (implying that summary judgment is appropriate in medical
malpractice cases where the dismissed party had no medical experts) .
Kentucky courts have also been clear, however, that it is not appropriate for
trial courts to use a summary judgment motion for punitive reasons to
sanction parties for making untimely expert witness disclosures . Ward, 809
S.W.2d at 719 . Although this distinction is pertinent, the fact remains that
when the motion is based on an actual failure of proof due to a complete lack of
expert testimony, and not on a failure to meet a deadline due to an untimely
disclosure, summary judgment can be appropriate. Ultimately, it is within a
trial court's sound discretion to determine the point at which a plaintiff's
failure to identify the necessary expert witnesses amounts to a failure of proof .5
5
Although a trial court has the discretion to determine when a summary judgment
motion is properly before it and ready for a ruling, i. e., when a sufficient amount of
time has passed to allow the opposing party an ample opportunity to complete
discovery and respond to the motion, see Pendleton Bros. Vending, Inc. v. Com.
Finance and Admin. Cabinet, 758 S. W.2d 24, 29 (Ky. 1988), the trial court's actual
14
Here, Norton Hospital and the physicians moved for summary judgment
because Pearson's failure to identify any medical experts indicated that she
would not be able to sustain her burden of proving medical negligence . This
situation is different from the summary judgment used as a sanctioning tool in
Ward v. Housman, supra. The plaintiff in Ward disclosed her expert witness
nine months after the trial court's disclosure deadline had expired. Id. After
the plaintiff's untimely disclosure, the defendants moved to exclude the expert
because the disclosure had occurred well-after the deadline, and, in the
alternative, moved for a continuance because Ward's witness was "a surprise"
expert. Id. The trial court granted the defendant's motion to exclude, even
though the plaintiff argued that she would be unable to meet her burden of
proof without the expert witness . Id. After the court refused to reconsider its
ruling excluding the plaintiff's expert witness, it also granted the defendant
summary judgment even though there was no pending motion for summary
judgment . Id. a t 719 ("The result [the defendant] got was more than what he
asked for") .
The Kentucky Court of Appeals explained that on appeal, the central
issue was whether "it was proper for the trial court to strike indispensable
witnesses merely because plaintiffs' counsel failed to comply with the court's
schedule ." Id. The Court noted that
determination regarding whether a genuine issue of material fact exists in the
record is not discretionary and is reviewed by an appellate court under the de novo
standard. 3D Enterprises Contracting Corp. v. Louisville and Jefferson County
Metropolitan Sewer District, 174 S .W.3d 440, 445 (Ky. 2005) .
15
[t]he dismissal of the Wards' cause of action was by
summary judgment pursuant to CR 56 . In applying
CR 56 .02 the trial court necessarily concluded that
there was no genuine issue of material fact and that
Housman was entitled to judgment on the facts as a
matter of law. In reality, however, the case was
dismissed for Wards' counsel's failure to timely supply
the name of an expert witness . The dismissal by
summary judgment for this reason causes us concern .
Id. The Court of Appeals thus concluded that the trial court had entered
summary judgment against a plaintiff who had secured an expert and had
disclosed his identity, albeit in an untimely manner. It is this factual
distinction that separates Pearson's case from Ward: Pearson's case was not
dismissed for an untimely expert disclosure, but rather for a complete lack of
an expert disclosure . As we held in Blankenship v. Collier, summary judgment
motion based on a complete lack of an expert disclosure, (following the passage
of a reasonable period of time) is proper because it is based on the plaintiff's
failure of proof, not the plaintiff's inability to meet a deadline . When it is
evident that a plaintiff has had sufficient time but cannot secure any expert
witnesses to prove medical negligence, then a genuine failure of proof exists
and a defendant is justified in filing a summary judgment motion .
Upon a proper summary judgment motion from the defendant, it is
incumbent upon the trial court to ensure that the plaintiff has had a
reasonable amount of time to identify expert witnesses and to respond to the
defendant's summary judgment motion before making a ruling. What
constitutes a reasonable amount of time will vary depending upon the
complexities of the case and other factors so there is no hard-and-fast rule, but
rather a need to examine carefully the relevant circumstances in each case. If
a reasonable amount of time expires and the plaintiff has still failed to file any
expert disclosures or request an extension of time, the trial court has the
discretion to "let the curtain fall" on a plaintiff's claim by granting summary
judgment for the defendants . See Neal, 426 S .W.2d at 479-480 .
III. The Trial Court Should Have Rescheduled the Status Conference or
Notified Pearson of its Intent to Rule and Determined the Status of Her
Efforts to Fund Her Expert Witness Before Entering Summary Judgment.
In her brief before this Court, Pearson contends that the trial court
abused its discretion in taking up the defendants' summary judgment motions
and entering its ruling before the court had continued the December 911, status
conference, which Pearson could not attend due to her hospitalization .
Although the defendants had grounds on which to file their summary judgment
motions, we nonetheless agree with Pearson that the trial court abused its
discretion when it decided to take up and rule on the summary judgment
motion . The trial court did not reschedule the December 9 status conference
after Pearson was unable to attend due to a sudden hospitalization and did not
otherwise inform Pearson of its decision to rule promptly on the pending
motions . The morning of the status conference, Pearson informed the court
clerk of her inability to attend, as she had been previously directed to do by the
trial court, and understandably assumed, given the trial court's assurances on
September 6, 2005, that nothing of significance would happen in her case until
the status conference was rescheduled . However, it was at this status
conference, which neither Pearson nor counsel for the defendant-physicians
attended, that the trial court agreed to rule on Norton Hospital's summary
judgment motion within the week. Three days after the status conference,
before Pearson even learned that the court had announced its intention to
make a ruling, the trial court granted summary judgment for the defendants.
Given these facts and Pearson's earlier response to the motions in which she
stated that she had retained an expert witness and was working on obtaining
the funds to secure a formal expert opinion, it was incumbent upon the trial
court to give Pearson an opportunity to be heard on the status of her efforts .
In contrast, in Blankenship v. Collier, --- S .W.3d --- (Ky. 2000), the trial
court gave the plaintiff ample opportunity to respond to the defendants'
summary judgment motions, and the plaintiff was fully aware of the summary
judgment motion being considered by the trial court. In Blankenship, after the
first expert disclosure deadline expired, the trial court granted Collier, the
plaintiff, a thirty-day time extension to disclose his medical experts . Can March
14, 2008, two weeks after Collier's extended expert disclosure deadline expired
with Collier still failing to name any experts, the defendants submitted their
motions for summary judgment . Approximately four months later, on July 7,
2006, having still received no expert disclosures from Collier, the trial court
held that without medical experts, Collier could not sustain his burden of proof
and granted the defendants' summary judgment motions .
In Blankenship, Collier had four months to supplement his response to
the summary judgment motions and to explain or correct his failure to make
any expert disclosures. In Pearson's case, however, the trial court granted
summary judgment only eleven days after the extended deadline expired, five
days after Norton Hospital requested that the court enter a ruling on its
previously filed summary judgment motion and, most importantly, three days
after the court conducted a status conference that Pearson could not attend.6
On review of this case, we conclude that the trial court should not have entered
a ruling on the summary judgment motion until it either rescheduled the
status conference or otherwise informed Pearson of its intent to address the
pending motions, and then determined the status of her attempts to fund her
alleged expert. In short, she had the right to be heard on the status of her
alleged expert before the trial court ruled. Under these circumstances, the
grant of summary judgment against Pearson was premature and an abuse of
discretion .
Despite this Court's holding, we acknowledge that a trial court has
discretion to rule on motions promptly, to follow its own jury trial scheduling
orders, and to take actions to move the cases on its docket. This Court also
recognizes that the better practice in this case would have been for Pearson to
explain her failure to disclose expert witnesses to the trial court and to request
an extension of time before the December
1St
deadline expired. However,
despite these concerns, the fact remains that in light of all relevant
circumstances the trial court ruled on the summary judgment motion
prematurely without giving Pearson an adequate opportunity to be heard.
We note that the summary judgments in Blankenship were granted seventeen
months after the complaint was filed. The summary judgments in this case were
granted nine months after the filing of the complaint .
19
CONCLUSION
In medical malpractice cases where experts are required to establish the
appropriate standard of care, the plaintiff will not be able to sustain her burden
of proof without obtaining expert witnesses . In this case, although the
defendants had proper grounds for their summary judgment motions due to
Pearson's failure of proof, the trial court abused its discretion by ruling on the
defendants' summary judgment motions on December 12 without either
rescheduling the December 9 status conference or otherwise notifying Pearson
of the impending ruling and then determining the status of her attempts to
fund the expert witness which she claimed to have retained . For these
reasons, the Court of Appeals opinion is affirmed, the Jefferson Circuit Court's
grant of summary judgment is vacated, and this action is remanded for
proceedings consistent with this Opinion .
Minton, C .J . ; Abramson, and Schroder, JJ., concur. Scott and Venters,
JJ ., concur in result only . Cunningham, J ., concurs by separate opinion .
Noble, J., dissents by separate opinion .
CUNNINGHAM, J., CONCURRING: I concur with the majority and write
only to place emphasis upon the issue of the failure of the court to reschedule
the status conference before making its decision . I am very appreciative of the
hectic pace court scheduling can become and how due process violations can
be inadvertently committed when they are sometimes hidden below the surface
when managing a docket. However, it is what it is - a due process infraction .
Pearson was told that nothing would happen on the case until she was afforded
a newly scheduled hearing. No hearing was set and the motion was ruled
upon . But for this irregularity, I would have upheld the summary judgment .
NOBLE, J ., DISSENTING : I joined the majority in Blankenship v. Collier,
2010 WL 246066, --- S .W .3d --- (Ky. 2010), because I agreed that under the
facts of that case, summary judgment was appropriate. I fully agree with the
majority that there comes a point in every trial requiring an expert witness
when failure to have one allows the trial court to grant summary judgment .
"The curtain must fall at some time upon the right of a litigant to make a
showing that a genuine issue as to a material fact does exist ." Neal v. Welker,
426 S .W.2d 476, 479 (Ky. 1968) . I
believe that is what the trial court did here .
The majority correctly states the legal test to be applied, which consists
of two separate questions. The first question is whether a summary judgment
motion was properly before the trial court . This turns on whether the opposing
party had reasonable time to respond to the motion. This decision is reviewed
for an abuse of discretion. Blankenship, 2010
WL 246066,
at *1 ; see also
Pendleton Bros. Vending, Inc. v. Com. Fin. & Admin. Cabinet, 758 S .W.2d 24, 29
(Ky . 1988) .
If the court did not abuse its discretion in selecting the time to rule
on the motion, the second question is whether a genuine issue of material fact
actually existed in the record at that time . This second question is reviewed de
novo. 3D Enters. Contracting Corp. v. Louisville & Jefferson Country Metro.
Sewer Dist., 174 S .W .3d 440, 445 (Ky. 2005) .
The second question is clearly not at issue in this case . As the majority
correctly recognizes, in a medical malpractice case like this one, the plaintiff
must prove a breach of the applicable standard of care, and is thus "required
by law to put forth expert testimony ." Blankenship, 2010 WL 246066, at *9 ;
see also Perkins v. Hausladen, 828 S .W.2d 652, 655 (Ky . 1992) . At the time
the trial court ruled on the motion, however, there was no proof regarding this
necessary medical testimony. Thus, the only question we must answer is
whether the trial court abused its discretion by ruling on the motion
prematurely. Blankenship, 2010 WL 246066, at *1 . It is in answering this
question that I must dissent .
At the time the court ruled on the motion, it had been under submission
for several months . On at least five occasions, the Appellee claimed she had an
expert witness, but failed to name him: when she failed to timely answer
original discovery requests, even after two extensions of time from April 25
until June 30, 2005; when she eventually answered the discovery requests, but
after the deadline and without naming her expert; when the summary
judgment motion was first filed and she claimed in her response (after another
extension of time) that she had an expert, again without naming him; when she
failed to identify her expert after the court's Civil Jury Trial Order set a
deadline for disclosure on October 1, 2005; when she failed to disclose after an
extension of time until December l, 2005 ; and even when she filed her CR
59 .05 motion to vacate the summary judgment order based on her failure to
disclose.
The above record makes clear that when the trial court ruled on the
summary judgment motion on December 12, 2005, it relied on a well-developed
record of the Appellee's failure to disclose her expert, despite ample time to do
so . I am thus at a loss to understand how this Court can say the trial court
abused its discretion by ruling when it did . If the trial court could not. "let the
curtain fall" at this time, when could it?
The gist of the majority's holding is that the trial court should have
rescheduled the status conference or let the Appellee know that a ruling was
imminent . However, the status conference is a red herring . The fact that the
Appellee missed this conference (on December 9) is irrelevant because it cannot
change the fact that a reasonable amount of time-and a hard deadline (on
December 1)-had already passed. The trial court stated as much, noting at
the conference that it would rule on the summary judgment motion later that
week "not because [the Appellee] is not here . . . but because it's appropriate for
the court to rule on it." And regardless, the Appellee admitted in a later
affidavit that she could not retain the necessary expert at the time of the status
conference. Thus, even if she had appeared, she would have explained that
she still could not disclose the expert, despite ample time to do so . There can
be no benefit from requiring further process that could not change the court's
analysis .
And insofar as the majority's point is that the Appellee was entitled to
notice as to when the trial court would rule, she had plenty of notice. The
motion had been under submission for several months, and the trial court
explained to the Appellee on two occasions that it would rule on the motion as
a submission rather than at a hearing. The Appellee also knew that she had to
present a genuine issue of material fact, by disclosing her expert on or before
December l, 2005, or else lose on summary judgment . This was eleven days
prior to the court's ruling. The majority stresses that the Appellee "had the
right to be heard on the status of her alleged expert before the trial court
ruled." I agree, but the key here is that she already had several opportunities
to be heard: the court's last deadline had passed, just like all the ones before it,
and she failed to make her disclosure or even to move for another extension
prior to the deadline .
The majority also states that the trial court should have first "determined
the status of [the Appellee's] attempts to fund her alleged expert" before ruling.
However, when the court granted summary judgment, the status of her
attempts was clear: she had failed, despite ample time to succeed. Indeed, this
was clear even before the status conference, as she had not complied with the
December 1 disclosure deadline . Moreover, it is not necessary, as a matter of
law, for a trial court to base its rulings on the financial condition of a party, as
the majority suggests .
Surely, it is within a trial court's discretion to consider financial hardship
in its decision . However, I cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion
by not asking at that late date why an expert witness had not yet been
identified, after so many prior opportunities and at least one prior statement
that Appellee had secured the funding for her expert . Thus I cannot say that
the court abused its discretion in ruling on the motion when it did. While
reasonable judges may have been more receptive to the Appellee's out of court
problems, I think that it was well within the trial court's discretion here,
especially in light of all the prior extensions of time the Appellee had received
and the hard deadline which had already passed . In other words, although it
would not have been an abuse of discretion to give the Appellee one more
chance to disclose, there was no abuse of discretion in finding that the prior
opportunities had created a reasonable time for her to do so . It is insufficient
to merely disagree with the discretion exercised by the judge .
Before ruling on the summary judgment motion, the trial court had to
determine that the Appellee was given reasonable time to disclose her expert
witness . The trial court did that in this case, relying on the multiple extensions
of time it gave to her, its pretrial orders requiring disclosure by a date certain,
and her complete failure to disclose her expert at any point along the way. I
cannot say that this was an abuse of discretion .
This Court just decided Blankenship, and I find no principled way to
distinguish that case from this one . The fact that this Appellee may be more
sympathetic than the one in Blankenship cannot carry the day.
It is further true that the Appellee cannot avoid summary judgment by
arguing that she could have made her case through other witnesses, such as
her treating physicians or the defendant's experts. There is nothing in the
record to indicate that her treating physicians would testify to the standard of
care required in a medical negligence case, which would result in a directed
verdict against her at the close of her proof. And, if she attempted to call the
Appellant's witnesses in her case in chief as if on cross, there is nothing
developed in the record that would indicate they would testify in her favor. The
simple fact is she had to have an expert testifying to the standard of care in her
favor, and after many opportunities to produce such an expert, she did not do
so .
Nor is there a viable argument that instead of granting summary
judgment directly because of a failure of proof in the record at the time of the
motion, the trial court should have instead considered CR 37 .02 sanctions .
One of the specific sanctions listed in the rule is that when a party has failed to
comply with an order of the court, the court may prohibit that party from
introducing such designated matters into evidence, CR 37 .02(2)(b), and that
decision must be reviewed for abuse of discretion . While this might not be fatal
in all types of cases, in a medical malpractice case which requires testimony
about the standard of care, had the trial court imposed the sanction of
disallowing the expert testimony, the result would be the same.
For all the reasons the trial court had the discretion to let "the curtain
fall" as described above, it could have alternatively decided to impose the CR
37 .02(2)(b) sanction of prohibiting the evidence. If such a decision did not
constitute an abuse of discretion, as it did not here, then the case would be
ripe for a summary judgment motion based on the very ground the trial court
ruled on in this case: failure of proof. In fact, it is arguable that this is what
the trial court did here : by upholding its deadlines after several extensions, the
court foreclosed the possibility of introducing the expert testimony, resulting in
an absence of proof that made granting summary judgment proper. Whether
the trial court entered an order stating the sanction or not, there was a failure
of proof in the record .
When the absence of the evidence at issue is fatal to prosecuting the
claim, and the court exercises its discretion to either prohibit the evidence
(under CR 37 .02(2)(b)), or to examine the state of the record at the time the
motion is decided (under CR 56), the claim fails and judgment against the
plaintiff is proper.
Consequently, I would reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and
reinstate the judgment of the trial court.
COUNSEL FOR ROBERT SOLINGER, M.D. ;
CHRISTOPHER JOHNSRUDE, M.D. ;
MICHAEL RECTO, M.D . ; AND
PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY ASSOCIATES, P.S .C . :
James Patrick Grohmann
Katherine K. Vesely
O'Bryan, Brown 8v Toner, PLLC
Suite 1500 Starks Building
455 South Fourth Avenue
Louisville, KY 40202
COUNSEL FOR NORTON HOSPITAL, INC . :
Beth Hendrickson McMasters
McMasters Keith, Inc .
200 S. 5th Street, Suite 200N
First Trust Centre
Louisville, KY 40201
Bradley R. Hume
Thompson Miller 8v Simpson PLC
600 West Main Street
Suite 500
Louisville, KY 40202
COUNSEL FOR MELANIE PEARSON :
Alan Steven Rubin
231 S. 5th Street
Suite 200
Louisville, KY 40202-3231
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