James T. Horejs, James Harris, and Robert Horejs, as Co-Administrators of the Estate of Laura A. Shaner v. Albert Milford, D.O. ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                     FILED
    Feb 21 2019, 2:44 pm
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    IN THE
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Supreme Court Case No. 19S-CT-97
    James T. Horejs, James Harris, and Robert Horejs, as Co-
    Administrators of the Estate of Laura A. Shaner, Deceased
    Appellants (Plaintiffs below),
    –v–
    Albert Milford, D.O., St. Margaret Mercy Healthcare
    Centers, Inc., and TRC-Indiana LLC d/b/a
    Comprehensive Renal Care-Munster d/b/a DaVita, Inc.
    Appellees (Defendants below).
    Argued: October 25, 2018 | Decided: February 21, 2019
    Appeal from the Lake Superior Court
    No. 45D11-0711-CT-195
    The Honorable Diane Kavadias Schneider, Judge
    On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals
    No. 45A03-1709-CT-2173
    Opinion by Justice David
    Chief Justice Rush and Justices Massa, Slaughter, and Goff concur.
    David, Justice.
    On occasion, a case arises that demonstrates the enduring importance
    of drafting a will. This is one such case. The present dispute arises out of
    a wrongful death suit initiated by David Shaner after his wife Laura’s
    death due to complications with the administration of dialysis treatments.
    David sought two categories of damages contemplated by Indiana’s
    wrongful death statute: damages related to medical, hospital, funeral, and
    burial expenses and additional damages including loss of consortium, lost
    earnings and wages, and loss of additional employment benefits. During
    litigation, David died intestate, leaving no immediately ascertainable
    heirs. Defendants, Dr. Albert Milford, St. Margaret Mercy Healthcare
    Centers, Inc., and TRC-Indiana, LLC, moved for partial summary
    judgment on David’s claim for damages related to loss of consortium,
    arguing any damages in excess of medical, hospital, funeral, and burial
    expenses would be punitive in nature because David left no heirs. The
    trial court granted the Defendant’s motion and the Court of Appeals
    affirmed.
    We grant transfer today to reverse the trial court’s grant of partial
    summary judgment and hold that the wrongful death and survival
    statutes enable David’s claim to survive regardless of the existence of an
    heir. Because we are not convinced the proper party is maintaining
    David’s claim, however, we also instruct the trial court to determine
    whether there is a proper party to continue the action as contemplated by
    the relevant statutes.
    Facts and Procedural History
    In late 2005, Laura Shaner underwent surgery performed by Defendant
    Albert Milford, D.O. (“Milford”) at St. Margaret Mercy Healthcare Center
    (“St. Margaret”) in Dyer, Indiana, for the repair of an abdominal hernia.
    Unfortunately, complications arose after the surgery, which necessitated
    Laura’s dialysis treatments at TRC–Indiana, LLC d/b/a Comprehensive
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019     Page 2 of 11
    Renal Care–Munster d/b/a DaVita, Inc. (“TRC”). Laura died on January 4,
    2006, after problems from administration of the dialysis and was survived
    by her husband David Shaner.
    David, individually and as Administrator of the Estate of Laura A.
    Shaner, brought suit against Milford, St. Margaret, and TRC, asserting
    Defendants were liable in negligence for Laura’s death. David sought two
    categories of damages resulting from the wrongful death of Laura: “final–
    expense damages” including medical, hospital, funeral, and burial
    expenses, and “survivor damages” for the loss of consortium, including
    the loss of Laura’s earnings and wages, and her services, love, affection,
    companionship, society, support, and protection. 1 While these claims
    were pending, David died intestate on October 30, 2015, leaving no
    known surviving heirs. David’s estate escheated to the State of Indiana.
    In 2016, Laura’s father, James T. Horejs, was appointed successor
    administrator of Laura’s Estate, and Laura’s brothers, Robert Horejs and
    James Harris, were appointed as co-administrators (collectively “Horejs”).
    These co-administrators continued to claim both final–expense and
    survivor damages flowing from the wrongful death claim. TRC, joined by
    St. Margaret and Milford, moved for partial summary judgment on the
    survivor damages claim, arguing that, because of David’s death, there was
    no evidence to support a claim for loss of consortium damages. Because
    David left no will, had no dependents or next of kin, and there was no
    evidence available to calculate damages for a loss of consortium claim, the
    trial court granted Defendants’ motion for partial summary judgment.
    The trial court also concluded that the co-administrators lacked standing
    to continue this claim on behalf of the Estate of David Shaner.
    The Court of Appeals affirmed, finding that because David had no
    heirs, any survivor damages would pass to the state—a result contrary to
    1 The Court of Appeals intuitively referred to these two distinct categories of damages as
    “final-expense damages” and “survivor damages.” See Horejs v. Milford, 
    104 N.E.3d 622
    , 623
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2018). For the purposes of this opinion, we will continue to use these terms to
    describe the damages at issue in this case.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019                      Page 3 of 11
    the compensatory purpose of the wrongful-death statute. Horejs v.
    Milford, 
    104 N.E.3d 622
    , 625 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018). The court’s opinion
    closely examined this Court’s decision in Bemenderfer v. Williams, 
    745 N.E.2d 212
    (Ind. 2001), and found the holding in Bemenderfer “turned on
    the fact that an heir of the deceased statutory beneficiary would receive a
    smaller inheritance absent an award of survivor damages.” 
    Horejs, 104 N.E.3d at 624-25
    . The Court of Appeals found that allowing a claim for
    survivor damages in the instant case would only serve to punish the
    Defendants because the damages would simply pass to the State. 
    Id. at 25.
    Horejs sought transfer, which we now grant, thereby vacating the
    Court of Appeals’ opinion. Ind. App. Rule 58(A).
    Standard of Review
    We review a grant of partial summary judgment the same as in the trial
    court. Ballard v. Lewis, 
    8 N.E.3d 190
    , 193 (Ind. 2014). “[S]ummary
    judgment is appropriate only where the evidence shows that there is no
    genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    Where a challenge
    to the trial court’s summary judgment ruling presents only legal issues or
    a question of statutory interpretation, it is reviewed de novo. 
    Id. Discussion and
    Decision
    The parties in this case ask us to affirm our Court’s prior decision in
    Bemenderfer v. Williams, 
    745 N.E.2d 212
    (Ind. 2001), albeit for different
    reasons. Horejs argues Bemenderfer should be read to authorize a claim for
    survivor damages that extends beyond the death of a party regardless of
    the existence of an heir. Meanwhile, Defendants argue Bemenderfer turned
    specifically on the existence of an heir and that policy considerations
    discussed in Bemenderfer cut in their collective favor to foreclose a claim
    for survivor damages. Although we find that neither the relevant statutes
    nor Bemenderfer require an heir for this type of claim to survive the death
    of a party, we are not convinced the proper party is before the Court to
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019    Page 4 of 11
    continue David’s claim for survivor damages. Each of these issues will be
    discussed in turn.
    I. The relevant statutes do not preclude an action for
    survivor damages and Bemenderfer does not change
    that result.
    Two statutes inform the basis of our holding today: the “death from a
    wrongful act or omission” statute codified at Indiana Code section 34-23-
    1-1, and the “continuing action after death of party” statute found in
    Indiana Code section 34-9-3-1. The current versions of each statute were
    re–codified in the same piece of legislation, see 1998 Ind. Acts 39-40, 141-
    42, and neither statute has been amended since the recodification or our
    decision in Bemenderfer. As we have previously observed, “[t]he survival
    statute and the wrongful death statute must be construed together.”
    
    Bemenderfer, 745 N.E.2d at 218
    .
    Indiana’s wrongful–death statute, convoluted as it may be, lays out the
    general cause of action for when a wrongful act or omission causes the
    death of another. This provision allows the personal representative of the
    decedent to maintain an action against the alleged wrongdoer that caused
    the death “if the [decedent] might have maintained an action had he or
    she…lived.” Ind. Code § 34-23-1-1. This cause of action contemplates the
    possibility of damages, which is described as follows:
    [D]amages shall be in such an amount as may be determined
    by the court or jury, including, but not limited to, reasonable
    medical, hospital, funeral and burial expenses, and lost
    earnings of such deceased person resulting from said wrongful
    act or omission. That part of the damages which is recovered
    for reasonable medical, hospital, funeral and burial expense
    shall inure to the exclusive benefit of the decedent's estate for
    the payment thereof. The remainder of the damages, if any,
    shall, subject to the provisions of this article, inure to the
    exclusive benefit of the widow or widower, as the case may be,
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019      Page 5 of 11
    and to the dependent children, if any, or dependent next of kin,
    to be distributed in the same manner as the personal property
    of the deceased.
    
    Id. Simply put,
    any final–expense damages inure to the decedent’s estate
    for payment of reasonable medical, hospital, funeral and burial expenses,
    and any excess damages, including survivor damages, inure to the
    exclusive benefit of the widow or widower and any dependents.
    As applied to the present case, David Shaner brought an action under
    the wrongful–death statute against Milford, St. Margaret, and TRC for
    both final–expense and survivor damages. Had this action been frozen in
    time, both parties seem to agree that under the wrongful–death statute,
    David was entitled to pursue both final–expense and survivor damages as
    the administrator for Laura’s estate and in his individual capacity as
    Laura’s widower. David’s death before judgment, however, does not
    necessarily mean these claims abate. Rather, courts must look to Indiana’s
    survival statute to determine whether a particular type of action may
    continue.
    Indiana’s survival statute provides, “If an individual who is entitled or
    liable in a cause of action dies, the cause of action survives and may be
    brought by or against the representative of the deceased party…” Ind.
    Code § 34-9-3-1(a). The statute also instructs:
    An action under this chapter may be brought, or the court, on
    motion, may allow the action to be continued by or against the
    legal representatives or successors in interest of the deceased.
    The action is considered a continued action and accrues to the
    representatives or successors at the time the action would have
    accrued to the deceased if the deceased had survived.
    Ind. Code § 34-9-3-1(b). As this Court has previously held, “the plain
    language of the survival statute tells us that a cause of action, once
    accrued, does not abate.” 
    Bemenderfer, 745 N.E.2d at 218
    .
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019      Page 6 of 11
    Defendants in this case argue that the wrongful–death statute must be
    harmonized with the survival statute to require that an heir take up the
    claim on behalf of the decedent’s estate. Reading these statutes together,
    however, we see no indication in the text of either statute that David’s
    claim for survivor damages terminated upon his death simply because he
    had no heirs. A plain reading of the text confirms that the claim for
    survivor damages, once properly asserted, does not abate due to the death
    of the once-surviving spouse.
    This Court’s prior decision in Bemenderfer does nothing to change this
    result. Rather, the holding in that case reinforces this interpretation. The
    facts presented in that case are nearly identical to the facts of the present
    action. The wife in Bemenderfer died as a result of complications from a
    laparoscopic examination and her husband and daughter sought both
    final–expense and survivor damages under the wrongful death statute. 
    Id. at 214-15.
    During the pendency of that lawsuit, the husband died, leaving
    the couple’s daughter as the personal representative of both estates. 
    Id. at 215.
    The doctor–defendant moved for partial summary judgment,
    arguing that any damages beyond final–expense damages were foreclosed
    by the husband’s death. 
    Id. The trial
    court ultimately denied the
    defendant’s motion and the Court of Appeals affirmed. 
    Id. In examining
    the same statutes at issue in today’s decision, our Court
    specifically found that, “[t]here is no suggestion in this version of the
    [wrongful death] statute that the cause of action expires if the surviving
    spouse or beneficiary dies before the wrongful death action is prosecuted
    to its conclusion.” 
    Id. at 217.
    Furthermore, we observed that the statute
    “expressly suggests that survival of the statutory beneficiary to the
    wrongful death victim’s death, and not until judgment, is a prerequisite to
    recovering damages under the statute.” 
    Id. Simply put,
    our Court held
    that there was nothing in the survival statute that required this type of
    cause of action to abate upon the death of one of the parties. 
    Id. at 218.
    The Bemenderfer opinion also examined several policy arguments
    advanced by each party. Namely, the defendant argued that the purpose
    of the wrongful death statute was compensatory rather than punitive. 
    Id. As such,
    there should have been no award of survivor damages because
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019       Page 7 of 11
    the damages would inure to someone not contemplated by the statute. 
    Id. Conversely, the
    plaintiffs argued that cutting off an otherwise valid award
    of damages only served to benefit the tortfeasor and incentivized
    defending parties to draw out litigation in the hopes that a contemplated
    beneficiary would die before judgment. 
    Id. Ultimately, our
    Court found
    the policy concerns favored the plaintiffs because the husband lost his
    lifelong companion, was forced into a nursing home, suffered from the
    profound financial impact of the circumstances, and that the loss was
    ultimately borne by his heirs. 
    Id. The parties
    before us today make similar policy arguments and we see
    no reason to upend the basic reasoning set forth in Bemenderfer. While it is
    true there was an immediately identifiable heir in Bemenderfer, there is no
    language in that opinion that would suggest our Court read a requirement
    of a surviving heir into the otherwise facially clear wrongful death and
    survival statutes. Defendants, believing otherwise, point us to the
    following statement in the Bemenderfer opinion: “Because we conclude that
    [husband’s] damages did not abate upon his death, and because, as an heir,
    [daughter] stands to recover those damages…” 
    Id. at 219
    (emphasis added).
    Defendants interpret this language to mean that the entire opinion turned
    on the existence of an heir. But Defendants fail to quote the second part of
    that sentence, which reads, “…we do not address the Court of Appeals’
    conclusion that Dillier establishes that [daughter] may bring a separate
    action to recover her pecuniary losses.” 
    Id. Read as
    a whole, this sentence
    is inconsequential to the overall holding and purpose of Bemenderfer,
    which was to affirm the finding that, despite the husband’s death prior to
    final judgment, his claim for survivor damages did not abate. The
    sentence simply explained why the Court’s opinion did not address a
    particular portion of the Court of Appeals analysis.
    We decline to carve out an exception to the central holding of
    Bemenderfer in today’s opinion. After all, a wrongful death action is
    “entirely a creature of statute.” Durham ex rel. Estate of Wade v. U-Haul, 
    745 N.E.2d 755
    , 758 (Ind. 2001). Because the plain language of the wrongful
    death and survival statutes require that a properly–accrued claim does not
    abate, we hold that David’s claim for survivor damages could have
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019      Page 8 of 11
    survived regardless of the existence of an heir. Therefore, summary
    judgment on this basis was inappropriate.
    II. The proper party to this claim remains unclear.
    Although we hold today that an heir was not required under the
    wrongful death and survival statutes for David’s claim to continue, we are
    not convinced that the Estate of Laura Shaner is the proper party to assert
    this claim. Defendants have hinted as much, arguing that the co–
    administrators of Laura’s estate should not be the party pursuing this
    claim. Rather, as Defendants suggest, David’s estate should have taken
    up this claim when it had the opportunity.2
    As noted above, the wrongful death statute allows a claim for damages
    beyond final–expense damages to “inure to the exclusive benefit of the
    widow or widower…to be distributed in the same manner as the personal
    property of the deceased.” Ind. Code § 34-23-1-1. As it relates to this
    provision, the survival statute allows an action to be continued “by or
    against the legal representatives or successors in interest of the deceased.”
    Ind. Code § 34-9-3-1(a). Applied to David’s claim, survivor damages were
    to inure to his exclusive benefit. The survival statute allows David’s legal
    representative or successor in interest to continue this action beyond
    David’s death. This claim “is considered a continued action and accrues to
    the representatives or successors at the time the action would have
    accrued to the deceased if the deceased had survived.” Ind. Code § 34-9-
    3-1(b). As such, the party seeking any survivor damages to which David
    was entitled must be either a legal representative or successor in interest
    to David.
    We note that the key difference between Bemenderfer and today’s
    decision is that the daughter in Bemenderfer was appointed as a personal
    representative of the husband’s estate and the wife’s 
    estate. 745 N.E.2d at 2The
    trial court’s findings of fact indicate that David Shaner’s estate escheated to the state
    after his death in late 2015.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019                         Page 9 of 11
    215. This position allowed her to continue the husband’s claim for
    survivor damages on behalf of the husband’s estate after his death. Here,
    only Laura’s estate is before our Court. We recognize that the trial court
    concluded the “[s]uccessor Co-administrators of the Estate of Laura A.
    Shaner do not have the standing to continue a claim on behalf of the Estate
    of David Shaner,” Appellant’s App. Vol. 2 at 22, and take this conclusion
    at face value. But given that David’s claim for survivor damages could
    have survived David’s death regardless of the existence of an heir, we
    instruct the trial court on remand to consider whether a proper party
    exists to continue this claim such that David’s estate would be eligible to
    be reopened. See Ind. Code § 29-1-17-14.
    Conclusion
    We hold that David’s claim for survivor damages did not abate upon
    his death and was not dependent on the existence of an heir. Therefore,
    summary judgment on this claim was inappropriate. We reverse the trial
    court’s grant of partial summary judgment and remand this matter for
    additional proceedings.
    Rush, C.J., and Massa, Slaughter, and Goff, JJ., concur.
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019   Page 10 of 11
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS
    Timothy S. Schafer
    Timothy S. Schafer, II
    Todd S. Schafer
    Schafer & Schafer
    Merrillville, Indiana
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE ALBERT MILFORD, D.O.
    Jason A. Scheele
    Edward L. Murphy
    Rothberg Logan & Warsco LLP
    Fort Wayne, Indiana
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE ST. MARGARET MERCY
    HEALTHCARE CENTERS, INC.
    Libby Yin Goodknight
    Krieg DeVault LLP
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Shannon L. Noder
    Julie Ann Rosenwinkel
    Krieg DeVault LLP
    Merrillville, Indiana
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE TRC-INDIANA LLC
    Leslie B. Pollie
    Travis W. Montgomery
    Kopka Pinkus Dolin PC
    Carmel, Indiana
    Indiana Supreme Court | Case No. 19S-CT-97 | February 21, 2019   Page 11 of 11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Supreme Court Case 19S-CT-97

Filed Date: 2/21/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024