Lopez-de-Robinson v. United States ( 1997 )


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    [Not For Publication] United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 96-1702

    MARIA M. LOPEZ-DE ROBINSON,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant, Appellee.


    ____________________
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

    [Hon. Jaime Pieras, Jr., U.S. District Judge] ___________________
    ____________________

    Before
    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Lynch, Circuit Judge. _____________ ____________________

    Raul Barrera Morales with whom Jesus Hernandez Sanchez and ______________________ _________________________
    Hernandez Sanchez Law Firm were on brief, for appellant. __________________________

    Fidel A. Sevillano Del Rio, Assistant United States Attorney, _____________________________
    with whom Guillermo Gil, United States Attorney, was on brief for ______________
    appellee.


    ____________________

    MAY 13, 1997
    ____________________






















    Per Curiam. Plaintiff, a widow, appeals from the Per Curiam. __________

    district court's award of $50 thousand under the Federal Tort

    Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. 2671 et seq., to compensate

    her for pain and suffering due to the failure of the Veterans

    Administration Hospital in San Juan to admit her ill husband

    a few days prior to his death. She seeks additional damages,

    arguing that several of the district court's factual findings

    are clearly erroneous. She takes particular issue with the

    court's finding that prompt hospitalization would not have

    saved her husband's life. She also argues that the court

    erred in concluding that her late husband's estate was not

    entitled to any recovery because it was not properly a party

    to the suit.

    I

    We recite the facts as found by the district court

    after the three-day bench trial. In May 1989, Vance Robinson,

    a 64-year-old veteran, visited Dr. Luis Marrero, who ordered

    laboratory tests. The tests suggested that Robinson had

    liver cancer.

    On Friday, July 7, 1989, Robinson went to the VA

    Hospital in San Juan complaining of a host of symptoms,

    including a grossly enlarged abdomen (ascites) and acute

    stomach pains. The intake physician, Dr. Sylvia Fuertes,

    diagnosed Robinson as having ascites and an occult neoplasm,

    but did not note the ascites on his medical record. She did



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    not believe that Robinson's case was an emergency, but she

    recommended that he be admitted immediately as an elective

    admission. There were no available beds, however, and so she

    told Robinson to return on Monday.

    Robinson went to the admissions office of the

    hospital on Monday at 9:00 a.m. He was not re-examined. He

    waited there all day, but was told there were no beds

    available. The same thing happened on Tuesday. That evening,

    Robinson was taken to the emergency room at San Pablo

    Hospital, where he was admitted as a patient. The diagnosis

    was ascites, suspected liver cancer, anemia and hepato-renal

    syndrome. A CT scan revealed an enlarged liver due to

    lesions suggestive of metastatic cancer.

    On July 18, Robinson discharged himself from the

    hospital. He died the next day. No biopsy was ever

    performed to confirm the diagnosis of suspected liver cancer,

    and no autopsy was performed at the time of death. Liver

    cancer was listed as the cause of death on the death

    certificate.

    Robinson's widow, the plaintiff here, filed an

    administrative claim in her name against the United States

    with the Department of Veterans Affairs. The claim was

    denied, and she filed a complaint in federal court within six

    months.





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    Over two years after Robinson's death, plaintiff

    had the body exhumed so that Dr. Yocasta Brugel could prepare

    a forensic report. Dr. Brugel indicated that she found no

    evidence of liver cancer and that Robinson had died of

    myocarditis, a rare heart ailment which seldom leads to

    death. The autopsy was admitted into evidence without

    objection. However, Dr. Brugel did not appear at trial to

    testify. The district court found that either the autopsy

    report was totally unreliable, or, in the alternative, that

    the autopsy had been performed on someone other than

    Robinson. The court also found that the slides of the liver

    on which the report was based were not those of Robinson's

    liver.

    The district court concluded that the hospital's

    failure to admit Robinson on Friday evening did not violate

    acceptable medical standards. However, it found that

    Robinson should have been re-examined when he returned to the

    hospital on Monday, to ensure that his condition had not

    deteriorated to emergency status, and concluded that this

    omission did violate acceptable medical standards and caused

    pain and suffering to Robinson and his wife. The court also

    found that admitting Robinson to the hospital on Friday,

    Monday or Tuesday would not have saved his life but would

    have permitted palliative treatment to ease his pain and

    suffering.



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    The court awarded plaintiff $50 thousand for her

    pain and suffering as she watched her husband's condition

    deteriorate during the three days before he was finally

    admitted to a hospital. The district court also indicated

    that it would have awarded an additional $50 thousand for

    Robinson's pain and suffering if his estate had been named as

    a plaintiff.

    Plaintiff appeals on several grounds. She argues

    that the district court's finding that the VA Hospital's

    failure to admit Robinson was not the cause of death is

    clearly erroneous, as was the district court's finding that

    the autopsy report was totally unreliable. She also argues

    that the court erred in refusing to award pain and suffering

    damages to the decedent's estate: she contends that under

    Puerto Rico law, when a man dies intestate (as did Robinson)

    his widow and children are his heirs. She concludes that she

    and her sons should have received the $50 thousand the

    district court indicated it would have awarded for Robinson's

    pain and suffering.

    II

    Factual Findings ________________

    We review the district court's findings of fact for

    clear error. Irving v. United States, 49 F.3d 830, 835 (1st ______ _____________

    Cir. 1995); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a). In this case, ________

    there is a significant amount of support in the record for



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    the district court's factual determinations, which therefore

    are not clearly erroneous.

    The district court's finding that the hospital's

    failure to admit Robinson was not the cause of his death is

    supported by the testimony of Dr. Figueroa, the government

    expert in cardiology. He testified that, in his opinion, at

    the time Robinson went to the VA Hospital on July 7, there

    was nothing that could have been done to prevent Robinson's

    death on the 18th; at that point the hospital could have done

    nothing more than to have made him comfortable.

    There is also evidence in support of the district

    court's conclusion that the autopsy report was not based on

    an examination of Robinson's liver. The liver from which the

    slides were taken was of normal size, while Robinson's liver

    had been enlarged. The slides of the liver showed no

    evidence of severe liver disease such as metastatic cancer.

    Instead, they indicated a fatty liver, a much less serious

    condition. However, all of the clinical data indicated that

    Robinson was suffering from severe liver disease at the time

    he died. The testimony of Dr. Marrero indicates that

    Robinson likely had severe liver disease as early as May

    1989. Dr. Ramirez, the government expert in pathology,

    testified that there was ample clinical, radiological and

    laboratory evidence that Robinson suffered from severe liver

    disease, but that there was no indication of this in the



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    autopsy slides. Furthermore, Dr. Ramirez testified that

    descriptions in the autopsy report of other organs were not

    what one would have expected given Robinson's medical

    history. For example, Robinson had dilated veins in his

    esophagus butthere wasno mention ofthis in theautopsy report.

    Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies _____________________________________

    The district court held that it could not award

    damages for Robinson's pain and suffering because his estate

    did not present a claim to the proper administrative agency

    and therefore did not exhaust its administrative remedies.

    Review of this legal conclusion is de novo. Roche v. Royal _____ _____

    Bank of Canada, 109 F.3d 820, 827 (1st Cir. 1997). ______________

    The Federal Tort Claims Act provides that "no

    action shall be instituted upon a claim against the United

    States . . . unless the claimant shall have first presented

    the claim to the appropriate Federal agency and his claim

    shall have been finally denied . . . ." 28 U.S.C. 2675(a).

    In this case the appropriate agency is the Veterans Affairs

    Department.

    The determination of when a claim is deemed

    presented is made pursuant to federal regulations, which

    require the submission of written notification of the

    incident and a claim for money damages in a specific sum. 28

    C.F.R. 14.2(a). The purpose is to encourage settlement:





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    if the agency knows exactly what the claimant seeks, there is

    more likely to be a settlement.

    Plaintiff filed an administrative claim with the

    Department of Veterans Affairs in which she identified

    herself but not her late husband's estate as claimant.1 She

    now argues that this satisfied the exhaustion requirement

    with respect to both her claims and those of the estate. A

    similar argument was rejected in Estate of Santos v. United ________________ ______

    States, 525 F. Supp. 982, 986 (D.P.R. 1981). The court there ______

    held that each person seeking personal damages under the FTCA

    must file an individual claim, and that a claim must put the

    agency on notice of who was actually pursuing the claim and

    the amount of the claim. Id.; see also Adames Mendez v. ___ ________ _____________

    United States, 652 F. Supp. 356, 358 (D.P.R. 1987), aff'd, _____________ _____

    873 F.2d 1432 (1st Cir. 1989) (tbl.); Del Valle Rivera v. _________________

    United States, 626 F. Supp. 347, 348-49 (D.P.R. 1986). _____________

    We agree. Allowing one claimant's exhaustion of

    her administrative remedies to satisfy the exhaustion

    requirement for other possible claimants would make it

    extremely difficult for the agency to know the value of the

    suit, thus making settlement less likely. Del Valle Rivera, ________________

    626 F. Supp. at 348-49.

    The decision of the district court is affirmed. ________

    ____________________

    1. The administrative claim was not included in the
    appellate record, but counsel conceded at oral argument that
    Robinson's estate was not named as a claimant.

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