The Tennessee Supreme Court recently handed
down a very important medical malpractice decision in Adam
Ellithorpe v. Janet Weismark, 2015 WL 5853873 (Tenn. 2015). In this new decision, the Tennessee Supreme
Court considered whether its prior opinion of Estate of French v.
Stratford House, 333 S.W.3d 546 (Tenn. 2011) was overruled by
legislation found in the Tennessee Civil Justice Act in 2011. In the Estate of French
decision, the Tennessee Supreme Court previously ruled that claims could be
characterized as ordinary negligence as opposed to medical malpractice when the
conduct alleged is not substantially related to the rendition of medical
treatment by a medical professional.
Following that decision, the Tennessee Legislature passed the Tennessee
Civil Justice Act of 2011 which amended the definition of a “healthcare
liability action” to the following:
(1) “Health care
liability action” means any civil action, including claims against the state or
a political subdivision thereof, alleging that a health care provider or
providers have caused an injury related to the provision of, or failure to
provide, health care services to a person, regardless of the theory of
liability on which the action is based;
T.C.A. § 29-26-101(a)(1).
As a result, the question in the Ellithorpe
case was whether the new definition of a “Health care liability action”
overruled the Estate of French decision when determining if a case came
within the Health Care Liability Act. In
Ellithorpe
the Tennessee Supreme Court found that the Tennessee legislator overruled the Estate of French
decision. The Court held that “section
29-26-101 establishes a clear legislative intent that all civil actions
alleging that a covered health care provider or providers have caused an injury
related to the provision of, or failure to provide healthcare services be
subject to the pre-suit notice and certificate of good faith requirements,
regardless of any other claims, cause of action or theories of liability
alleged in the complaint.” Ellithorpe
at 7.
As a result, it is now very clear in Tennessee,
based on the current status of the law, that if a cause of action has any
relationship to a health care liability action as defined in the newly amended
statute, that the pre-suit notice requirements must be met by the plaintiff or
the case can be dismissed with prejudice.
This decision makes it very clear that plaintiff’s attorneys must be
very careful when filing a suit that in any way has any relationship to a
health care provider or any type of health care liability action. If there is any question whatsoever that the
cause of action is a health care liability action, attorneys need to err on the
side of caution and comply with the pre-suit notice statutory requirements.
From a defense perspective, any cause of
action that is filed without complying with the certificate of good faith and pre-suit
notice requirements, and has any semblance to a health care liability action,
should be defended on that basis. This
is an excellent defense in many causes of actions against health care providers
because there are still attorneys in Tennessee who file these cause of actions
inappropriately without complying with the pre-suit notice and certificate of
good faith requirements. This case
provides great ammunition for the dismissal of these cases.
Follow me on Twitter at @jasonalee for updates from the Tennessee Defense Litigation
blog.
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