Estate of Cummings Ex Rel. Montoya v. United States , 651 F. App'x 822 ( 2016 )


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  •                                                                           FILED
    United States Court of Appeals
    Tenth Circuit
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                  June 7, 2016
    Elisabeth A. Shumaker
    TENTH CIRCUIT                     Clerk of Court
    ESTATE OF VERA CUMMINGS, by
    and through Personal Representative
    Elicia Montoya,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.                                                      No. 15-2044
    (D.C. No. 1:12-CV-00081-WJ-GBW)
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA;                                (D.N.M.)
    MOUNTAIN VIEW REGIONAL
    MEDICAL CENTER,
    Defendants - Appellees.
    ORDER AND JUDGMENT *
    Before KELLY, MATHESON, and McHUGH, Circuit Judges.
    The Estate of Vera Cummings, by and through personal representative
    Elicia Montoya, brought this action in state court for medical negligence and
    wrongful death against three doctors (Mark Leatherwood, M.D., Raquel Neeley,
    M.D., and Enrique R. Martinez, M.D.) and Mountain View Regional Medical
    Center, a private, for-profit hospital in Las Cruces, New Mexico. Substituting
    *
    This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the
    doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited,
    however, for its persuasive value consistent with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th
    Cir. R. 32.1.
    itself for the defendant doctors, the government removed the case to federal court,
    where the district court granted summary judgment to the private hospital after a
    discovery dispute. Then, determining the doctors were federal actors triggering
    the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2401(b), 2671–74,
    the court dismissed the remaining claims against the government for lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction. We exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and
    we affirm the district court’s dismissal of the claims against the government, but
    vacate its rulings against Mountain View with instructions to the district court to
    remand the case to state court.
    Background
    On January 28, 2008, Ms. Cummings was admitted to the emergency
    department at Mountain View when she suddenly became dizzy and confused.
    After being treated by doctors for about 10 days, she was released to another local
    health care facility where her daughter worked as nurse. Four days later, on
    February 10, 2008, she died.
    In January 2011, nearly three years after her death, Ms. Cummings’s estate
    sued the doctors and Mountain View for medical negligence and wrongful death
    in New Mexico state court, alleging the doctors improperly medicated her and
    failed to feed or hydrate her. In April 2011, the doctors’ insurance carrier
    informed the estate that the government may consider the doctors to be federal
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    actors. See Aplt. Br. at 8. The estate then notified the appropriate federal agency
    by filing a standard notice form (an SF 95).
    In January 2012, the government certified that the doctors were federal
    employees at the federally funded Ben Archer Health Clinic in Hatch, New
    Mexico, and when they treated Ms. Cummings at Mountain View, they were
    acting within the scope of their federal employment. The government removed
    the case to federal court and substituted itself for the defendant doctors. The
    estate challenged the removal and lost. Over the next three years, the court issued
    three separate orders that are the foundation for this appeal.
    A. The court holds that the doctors were acting within the scope of
    their federal employment
    In 2012, the government filed a motion to dismiss, or in the alternative a
    motion for summary judgment, arguing that the estate failed to comply with the
    FTCA, which applied because the doctors were acting within the scope of their
    federal employment when they treated Ms. Cummings. In response, the estate
    disputed that the doctors were federal actors for purposes of the suit and
    maintained that the FTCA did not apply. After allowing for written discovery,
    the court found that the doctors were acting within the scope of their federal
    employment when they treated Ms. Cummings at Mountain View, and thus, the
    FTCA was the estate’s only path to recovery. The court ordered additional
    briefing on whether the estate had complied with the FTCA in pursuing its claims
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    against the government.
    B. The court grants summary judgment to Mountain View in part
    based upon a failure to timely designate an expert
    After a discovery deadline extension, the magistrate judge provided that the
    estate had to designate its experts and provide reports by May 1, 2014. Because
    of an oversight by its counsel, the estate failed to do so. On June 1, Mountain
    View designated its experts, provided reports, and moved for summary judgment
    on all claims. The estate responded with an unsworn report from an expert and
    asked the court to defer a ruling on the motion for summary judgment. After
    briefing closed, the estate obtained a contested extension to designate an expert
    by August 1, 2014, which it did. Meanwhile, the case was reassigned and the
    newly assigned district judge granted summary judgment after sua sponte
    overruling the magistrate’s grant of an extension. The district court denied
    reconsideration of the matter.
    C. The court dismisses the claims against the government for lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction
    In November 2014, the estate and the government filed cross motions for
    summary judgment. The estate claimed that the government failed to offer any
    evidence to rebut its expert report that alleged the doctors did not adhere to
    applicable standards of care; the government argued that report was untimely, and
    therefore inadmissible, so the estate failed to carry its burden of proof. A month
    later, the government filed another motion to dismiss, arguing the court lacked
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    jurisdiction because the estate’s claims were untimely filed under the FTCA. In
    February 2015, the district court dismissed the estate’s claims against the
    government sua sponte for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
    Discussion
    On appeal, the estate challenges three of the district court’s rulings: (1) the
    FTCA applies because the doctors were working within the scope of their federal
    employment when they treated Ms. Cummings at Mountain View; (2) the estate
    failed to exhaust administrative remedies under the FTCA; and (3) Mountain
    View is entitled to summary judgment. To prevail against the government, the
    estate must show either that the doctors were not acting within the scope of their
    federal employment when they treated Ms. Cummings or that the estate satisfied
    the FTCA’s requirements. To prevail against Mountain View, the estate must
    show that disputed, material facts preclude summary judgment or that federal
    jurisdiction over these state claims never existed.
    We review the district court’s determinations de novo. Radil v. Sanborn
    W. Camps, Inc., 
    384 F.3d 1220
    , 1224 (10th Cir. 2004) (de novo review for
    dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction); Richman v. Straley, 
    48 F.3d 1139
    , 1145 (10th Cir. 1995) (de novo review for certification that employees were
    acting within the scope of their federal employment). We apply the same
    summary judgment standard as the district court, specifically, Fed. R. Civ. P.
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    56(a), to determine whether “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact
    and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    A. The doctors are federal actors for purposes of this suit
    The estate first argues that the defendant doctors were not acting within the
    scope of their federal employment when they treated Ms. Cummings at Mountain
    View, the private hospital. Although federal employees, 1 the doctors treated her
    at the private hospital where they occasionally staffed the emergency department
    for extra pay. After examining the doctors’ responsibilities for Ben Archer (the
    federal clinic) and the private hospital, the district court held that the doctors
    were federal actors for purposes of this lawsuit. We agree.
    Some explanation of the structure of the federal clinic and the private
    hospital is necessary first. The federal clinic employs all three defendant doctors
    and requires them to care for their patients at the clinic and at local hospitals. II
    Aplt. App. 645 (“The physician will provide health care within and outside the
    clinic for clinic patients and in emergencies for the general public.”). To
    facilitate this requirement, the clinic ensures that a rotating doctor is available on
    nights and weekends (the clinic call schedule) to attend to hospitalized patients,
    see 
    id. at 668,
    and requires that all clinic doctors have admitting privileges at a
    1
    The parties agree that at the time of Ms. Cummings’s death, the
    defendant doctors were employed by Ben Archer Health Clinic (the federal
    clinic), and the clinic and its employees acting within the scope of their federal
    employment can only be sued according to the parameters of the FTCA. See 42
    U.S.C. § 233(a), (g)(1)(A) (emphasis added).
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    local hospital, see 
    id. at 654.
    The doctors with admitting privileges at Mountain
    View must also adhere to the private hospital’s conditions, including staffing the
    emergency department at the private hospital on certain nights and weekends (the
    city call schedule). 
    Id. at 668–69.
    While on the city call schedule, they admit
    patients who arrive at the emergency departments to the private hospital. Once
    admitted, the patients’ regular medical providers will assume their care, and if
    patients lack a primary care doctor, then the admitting physician will continue
    their treatment at the private hospital. 
    Id. Clinic doctors
    with admitting
    privileges at Mountain View must participate in both call schedules, and they are
    paid differently depending on which call schedule is in effect. 
    Id. When working
    on the clinic call schedule, the doctors receive a percentage of the fee earned
    when clinic patients are treated at local hospitals, including Mountain View; the
    doctors on their city call schedule receive a flat fee. 
    Id. Examining the
    doctors’ duties under both systems, there is only one way a
    clinic doctor with admitting privileges at the private hospital would assume
    responsibility for Ms. Cummings’s care outside the scope of his regular, federal
    employment. The clinic doctor would have to: (1) be working on the city call
    schedule and, (2) admit a patient without a primary care provider. Neither
    occurred here. On January 28, 2008, when Ms. Cummings was admitted, no
    clinic doctor was staffing the emergency room for the private hospital. 
    Id. at 669.
    The doctor in charge of the emergency department that night did call one of the
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    defendant doctors for advice, but the defendant doctor was contacted not as an
    occasional contractor at the private hospital but as Ms. Cummings’s clinic
    physician. I Aplt. App. 429, 435. Accordingly, Ms. Cummings had a primary
    care doctor when she was admitted to the private hospital. 2 She had been treated
    at the federal clinic for several years, prompting another doctor to call a clinic
    physician about her care. Because she was a patient, the clinic required a clinic
    doctor oversee her treatment at the private hospital. II Aplt. App. 668. Any
    doubts are dispelled by looking at who paid the clinic doctors for Ms.
    Cummings’s care. The federal clinic issued checks to the defendant doctors
    specifically for Ms. Cummings’s treatment at the private hospital. 
    Id. at 675–79.
    On appeal, the estate argues that the clinic doctors were not contractually
    required to provide care at local hospitals, because that requirement is contained
    in a signed job description and those descriptions are separate from the
    employment contract. Therefore, the estate claims, Ms. Cummings’s admission
    and treatment must have been under the auspices of the agreement with Mountain
    View. Aplt. Br. at 19. Contracts can, however, validly include provisions of a
    document not physically part of the contract itself, including a document that is
    not itself a contract. 17A C.J.S. Contracts § 402. The contracts here refer
    2
    On appeal, the estate argues that having been a patient in the past does
    not make Ms. Cummings a clinic patient “for the rest of her life.” Aplt. Br. at 19.
    The estate never contends Ms. Cummings terminated her care at the clinic or
    sought a new provider. Therefore, there is no reason to doubt Ms. Cummings was
    a clinic patient at the time of her death.
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    explicitly to these job descriptions (“[s]ervices shall be provided as described in
    the official description of the position,” see, e.g., II Aplt. App. 605),
    incorporating these descriptions by reference into the contract, see Holmes v.
    Colo. Coal. for Homeless Long Term Disability Plan, 
    762 F.3d 1195
    , 1210 n.13
    (10th Cir. 2014), cert. denied, 
    135 S. Ct. 1402
    (2015). Therefore, we must reject
    the estate’s argument to disregard them.
    B. The estate failed to comply with FTCA requirements
    When Congress enacted the FTCA in 1946, it permitted individuals to sue
    the government for “personal injury or death caused by the negligent or wrongful
    act or omission of any employee of the Government while acting within the scope
    of his office or employment.” 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1). This waiver of the federal
    government’s immunity, however, is narrowly construed. Lehman v. Nakshian,
    
    453 U.S. 156
    , 161 (1981) (“[T]his Court has long decided that limitations and
    conditions upon which the Government consents to be sued must be strictly
    observed and exceptions thereto are not to be implied.” (quoting Soriano v.
    United States, 
    352 U.S. 270
    , 276 (1957))). That forces plaintiffs, like the estate,
    to adhere closely to every rule and requirement of the FTCA, including the
    condition to exhaust their administrative remedies before appearing in federal
    court. 28 U.S.C. § 2675(a) (requiring claimants to “first present[] the claim to the
    appropriate Federal agency”) (emphasis added). This notice requirement is
    “jurisdictional and cannot be waived.” Bradley v. United States ex rel. Veterans
    -9-
    Admin., 
    951 F.2d 268
    , 270 (10th Cir. 1991).
    After receiving the government’s second motion to dismiss, the district
    court held sua sponte that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction because the estate
    did not comply with the FTCA requirement to present the claim to the appropriate
    federal agency before filing suit. The plaintiff estate does not dispute the timing:
    the estate sued in state court and then notified a federal agency, and after that, the
    government removed the suit to federal court. On appeal, the estate argues the
    suit’s removal to federal court satisfies the timing requirements, and if not, the
    court should use its equitable powers to waive the order of the administrative
    filing. Neither argument persuades us to deviate from the narrow limitations
    prescribed by the FTCA.
    The estate argues first that the suit’s removal to federal court should
    constitute a new filing, thus satisfying the exhaustion requirement. Federal
    jurisdiction depends on facts as they exist when the initial complaint is filed.
    Newman-Green, Inc. v. Alfonzo-Larrain, 
    490 U.S. 826
    , 830 (1989). As the
    district court noted, our decision in Duplan v. Harper, 
    188 F.3d 1195
    (10th Cir.
    1999), considered a similar situation—a suit was filed in state court and then
    notice of the claim was filed to the appropriate federal agency—and affirmed the
    general rule that new filings in an existing suit cannot correct the failure to
    exhaust administrative requirements. 
    Id. at 1199
    (“Allowing claimants . . . to
    cure the jurisdictional defect by filing an amended complaint would render the
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    exhaustion requirement meaningless and impose an unnecessary burden on the
    judicial system.”). We did endorse a narrow exception to this rule. The federal
    action can suffice as a new action if the court administratively closed the case, the
    plaintiff filed an amended complaint, and the government agrees to treat it as a
    new action. 
    Id. at 1200.
    None of these things happened here. The estate did not
    attempt to file an amended complaint, choosing instead to rely on the
    government’s removal to federal court. As our precedent demonstrates, this is
    clearly not enough.
    The estate then essentially argues for equitable estoppel, asking us to waive
    the administrative exhaustion requirement. Aplt. Br. at 15–16. We have held the
    requirement to exhaust is jurisdictional, see 
    Bradley, 951 F.2d at 270
    , and
    jurisdictional requirements cannot be waived. See United States v. Kwai Fun
    Wong, 
    135 S. Ct. 1625
    , 1631 (2015) (noting that when a requirement is
    jurisdictional, “a litigant’s failure to comply . . . deprives a court of all authority
    to hear a case”). The estate relies on recent precedent to question whether
    administrative exhaustion is still considered jurisdictional. Aplt. Br. at 15 (citing
    Barnes v. United States, 
    776 F.3d 1134
    (10th Cir. 2015)). This precedent,
    however, discusses whether the time to file in federal court after administrative
    exhaustion is jurisdictional, not whether administrative exhaustion itself is
    jurisdictional. 
    Barnes, 776 F.3d at 1139
    –40 (“We start by observing that the
    FTCA has both an administrative-exhaustion requirement . . . and a statute of
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    limitations” and “we ask whether . . . [the] statute of limitations may operate to
    bar an FTCA claim.”) (emphasis added). Finding no support for the argument
    that this exhaustion is not jurisdictional, we cannot overlook the requirement.
    C. The district court lacked jurisdiction over the supplemental claims
    The estate’s final argument on appeal concerns Mountain View, the other
    defendant. The district court awarded summary judgment to the private hospital
    in part based upon a failure of proof related to the expert disclosure deadline. It
    is uncontested that the district was exercising supplemental jurisdiction. Apart
    from the merits, the estate correctly argues that if the district court’s dismissal of
    the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is affirmed, the prior rulings on the
    supplemental claims must be extinguished. Aplt. Br. at 27.
    Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction that can only entertain
    certain claims. When a case is properly in federal court, however, the district
    court has supplemental jurisdiction over any claims that are “so related” to the
    jurisdiction-invoking claim “that they form part of the same case or controversy
    under Article III.” 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). If a district court dismisses the federal
    claims on the merits, it can as a matter of discretion exercise supplemental
    jurisdiction. But when a district court dismisses the federal claims for lack of
    subject matter jurisdiction, it lacks such discretion and must dismiss the
    supplemental claims without prejudice. See Estate of Harshman v. Jackson Hole
    Mountain Resort Corp., 
    379 F.3d 1161
    , 1167 (10th Cir. 2004); Scott v. Pasadena
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    Unified Sch. Dist., 
    306 F.3d 646
    , 664 (9th Cir. 2002); see also 16 Moore’s
    Federal Practice Civil § 106.66 (collecting cases). Though Mountain View argues
    that the estate has waived this issue for failure to cite authority or develop its
    argument, supplemental jurisdiction is incompatible with a Rule 12(b)(1)
    dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Musson Theatrical, Inc. v. Fed.
    Express Corp., 
    89 F.3d 1244
    , 1255 (6th Cir. 1996).
    The dismissal of the federal claims is AFFIRMED. The district court’s
    rulings on the supplemental claims are VACATED with instructions to the district
    court to remand to New Mexico state court.
    Entered for the Court
    Paul J. Kelly, Jr.
    Circuit Judge
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