Dansberry v. Mercy Health , 2022 Ohio 360 ( 2022 )


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  • [Cite as Dansberry v. Mercy Health, 
    2022-Ohio-360
    .]
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
    HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO
    WANDA C. DANSBERRY,                                   :   APPEAL NO. C-210304
    TRIAL NO. A-2001336
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                          :
    :     O P I N I O N.
    VS.
    :
    MERCY HEALTH – WEST PARK,                             :
    MERCY    FRANCISAN   SENIOR                           :
    HEALTH AND HOUSING SERVICES,
    INC.,                                                 :
    TRANSPORT DRIVER BRYAN DOE,                           :
    :
    JOHN DOE TRANSPORT COMPANY,
    :
    and
    :
    OHIO DEPARTMENT OF MEDICAID,
    :
    Defendants-Appellees.                            :
    Civil Appeal From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas
    Judgment Appealed From Is: Reversed and Cause Remanded
    Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: February 9, 2022
    Blake R. Maislin, LLC, and Thomas J. Dall, Jr., for Plaintiff-Appellant,
    Rendigs, Fry, Kiely, & Dennis, LLP, Jeffrey M. Hines and W. Jonathon Sweeten, and
    Dave Yost, Ohio Attorney General, and Joseph M. McCandlish, Assistant Attorney
    General for Defendants-Appellees.
    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    BERGERON, Judge.
    {¶1}   Discovery is designed to facilitate the search for truth by forcing both
    parties to put their cards on the table; it is not meant to be a shell-game for
    obfuscation and obstruction. After plaintiff-appellant Wanda Dansberry suffered
    injury while being transferred between medical facilities and brought suit,
    defendant-appellee Mercy Health-West Park (“Mercy”) stymied all of her efforts to
    discover the identity of the individual transporting her on the day in question (and
    who allegedly caused her injury). Mercy offered inconsistent and evasive discovery
    responses, and even avoided compliance with its discovery obligations in the face of
    an order granting a motion to compel. The trial court nevertheless granted summary
    judgment in Mercy’s favor and denied Ms. Dansberry additional time to obtain
    answers to her discovery requests, but in so doing, the trial court relied on a key
    factual premise that Mercy now admits is inaccurate. Because Ms. Dansberry is
    entitled to additional time to conduct discovery—as well as to actual responsive
    answers from Mercy—we reverse the trial court’s denial of her Civ.R. 56(F) motion
    and remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    {¶2}   In August 2018, Ms. Dansberry underwent a hip replacement surgery
    that required a subsequent long-term stay at defendant-appellee Mercy’s assisted
    living and rehab facility. Prior to the hip replacement, Ms. Dansberry required
    regular foot care at a wound care clinic for pressure sores she developed on her left
    foot as a result of diabetes. While residing at Mercy during recovery from the hip
    replacement, Mercy had Ms. Dansberry transported to her regularly-scheduled
    appointments at the wound care clinic. During one of these trips to visit her foot
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    doctor, Ms. Dansberry’s left foot got caught on something, possibly a wheel on her
    wheelchair, and she suffered a broken bone and a sliced Achilles tendon.         The
    individual transporting Ms. Dansberry at the time, and the alleged cause of her
    injury, is presently unknown but Ms. Dansberry recalled he had the name “Bryan” on
    his shirt, and he had driven her before. She also provided a physical description of
    “Bryan.”
    {¶3}   Almost two years later, Ms. Dansberry sued Mercy, the unknown
    transport driver, the unknown transport company, and the Ohio Department of
    Medicaid for negligence; negligent hiring, training, and retention; negligent
    supervision; and respondeat superior. Mercy countered that Ms. Dansberry’s claim
    sounded in medical negligence under R.C. 2305.113, not ordinary negligence, and
    that Mercy should be granted summary judgment because the one-year statute of
    limitations had expired. It is possible that Mercy may well be correct on that point.
    Unfortunately, Mercy refuses to this day to answer the critical question: Who is the
    unknown transport driver, believed to be named Bryan, and for whom does he work?
    {¶4}   During her deposition, Ms. Dansberry described the person
    transporting her as “first name Bryan, ponytail, white guy, 5’8” or 5’9”, thin.” She
    indicated that Bryan was not wearing a uniform, just jeans and a name tag on his
    shirt. She could not recall whether the name tag was separate from his shirt or sewn
    onto the shirt. When asked if she observed a logo or anything with his name tag that
    indicated who Bryan worked for, Ms. Dansberry responded, “I don’t remember.”
    {¶5}   As is appropriate, Ms. Dansberry attempted to ascertain this person’s
    identity through discovery. In her first set of interrogatories, Ms. Dansberry asked
    Mercy to provide the name, job title, last known address, and cell phone number of
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    the individual and entity transporting her on the day of her injury.              Mercy
    complained that the interrogatory was vague, ambiguous, confusing, assumed facts
    not in evidence, and did not provide sufficient information to allow Mercy to
    formulate a reasonable response. Those objections strike us as inappropriate in light
    of the clarity of Ms. Dansberry’s question—we certainly see nothing “vague,”
    “ambiguous,” or “confusing” in asking who allegedly caused her injury.               Ms.
    Dansberry was simply trying to get to the bottom of an issue critical to the
    disposition of her lawsuit, which is the very reason we have discovery.
    {¶6}   After     reciting   those   objections,   Mercy     cryptically   offered:
    “[d]efendants do not believe that there was a third party involved in the
    transportation.” But if Bryan didn’t work for a third-party, that meant he worked for
    Mercy, and Mercy surely should have been able to provide Ms. Dansberry with the
    information she sought.        But it didn’t.     Although Ms. Dansberry (perhaps
    anticipating discovery obstructionism) asked the same essential question in a
    number of different ways along with a variety of other questions designed to
    understand Bryan’s training, background, etc., Mercy responded in Kafkaesque
    fashion, offering a blizzard of objections, pointing back to other non-answers, and
    essentially refusing to answer the basic question at the heart of this case.
    {¶7}   Undeterred, Ms. Dansberry went back to the drawing board and tried
    again, submitting a second set of interrogatories and requests, trying to frame the
    question in non-objectionable ways that would elicit a direct answer.             Email
    correspondence between the parties detail counsel’s growing frustration trying to
    procure an answer to the seemingly simple question of who drove her and pushed
    the wheelchair.    To that end, Ms. Dansberry attached a third discovery request
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    whittled down to only one interrogatory and one request for documents: identify the
    people authorized to transport patients to and from medical appointments during
    August 2018, and provide their employment files. Both the second and third sets of
    interrogatories went unanswered. In opposition to Mercy’s motion for summary
    judgment, Ms. Dansberry noted that a slew of her discovery requests remained
    outstanding or flat-out ignored, rendering summary judgment inappropriate.
    Almost a year after filing her complaint, Ms. Dansberry sat no closer to divining the
    name and employment status of the person who transported her and allegedly
    caused her injury.
    {¶8}    Ms. Dansberry filed a motion to compel along with a Civ.R. 56(F)
    request for additional time to respond to the motion for summary judgment, asking
    the court to force Mercy to follow through on what can only be construed as basic
    discovery obligations: Provide full answers to the first set of interrogatories. Provide
    any answer to the second set of interrogatories. And the third. Make the charge
    nurse on duty that day available for deposition. Designate a corporate representative
    and make that person available for deposition. Disclose the name of the person
    pushing the wheelchair when Ms. Dansberry was injured (presumably named Bryan,
    and who may or may not be a Mercy employee) and provide their contact
    information.    The trial court, recognizing that the identity and employment
    affiliation of the individual who placed Ms. Dansberry in the van was necessary to
    resolve the motion for summary judgment, ordered Mercy to disclose who
    transported Ms. Dansberry at the time of the injury and to answer the second and
    third interrogatories.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    {¶9}    At this point, under compulsion of a court order, one might have
    expected that Ms. Dansberry would finally receive the answers she sought. Instead,
    the same pattern continued.      For the second interrogatory, in response to the
    straightforward query of who transported Ms. Dansberry to Mercy Hospital on
    August 2, 2018, Mercy responded “unknown.” In response to whether the person
    was an employee of Mercy, Mercy asserted it did not believe so (seemingly
    contradicting its answer in the first set of interrogatories indicating that Mercy did
    not believe a third-party was involved) and directed Ms. Dansberry back to the
    previous “unknown” answer.        Mercy’s obtuse and circular responses make it
    impossible to ascertain any substantive insights at all, leaving everything to the
    imagination. What exactly is “unknown” to Mercy? Is the individual in question
    himself unknown to Mercy?        Or does Mercy know who the person is, just not
    whether he is an employee? If Mercy believes neither a third-party nor a Mercy
    employee transported Ms. Dansberry, what other possibilities exist? And why did
    Mercy initially believe that a third-party did not transport Ms. Dansberry, but now
    seems to conclude that it did?
    {¶10} For the third interrogatory, and despite its previous claims that the
    question was vague, ambiguous, and confusing, Mercy brought to light for the first
    time the names of 16 people authorized to transport patients during the month of
    August 2018.    While that represented progress, Mercy declined to provide any
    information on any of these individuals, including one person named Bryan. While
    we do not know whether this individual actually transported Ms. Dansberry at the
    time of her injury, it sure seems like a promising place to start in the absence of any
    other information from Mercy. Still flummoxed, Ms. Dansberry renewed her Civ.R.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    56(F) request for additional time to perform the due diligence Mercy refused to do—
    depose all 16 people authorized to drive that month and figure out who drove Ms.
    Dansberry.
    {¶11} At the very least, Ms. Dansberry posited, she should be allowed to
    depose the person listed by Mercy named “Bryan Henderson” in light of her belief
    that the person’s first name was Bryan. The trial court denied Ms. Dansberry’s
    request for a continuance to conduct additional discovery, and it granted summary
    judgment in favor of Mercy. In its decision, the trial court noted that although the
    exact identity of the person who transported Ms. Dansberry was unknown, it was
    “clearly a Mercy employee.” Ms. Dansberry brings three assignments of error on
    appeal. In her first assignment of error, Ms. Dansberry contends that the trial court
    erred in refusing her request for additional time to conduct discovery. We agree.
    II.
    {¶12} Ms. Dansberry’s first assignment of error argues that the trial court
    erred by denying her Civ.R. 56(F) motion for additional time to depose the witnesses
    identified as the potential transport driver. “Under Civ.R. 56(F), a party opposing a
    motion for summary judgment may move for a continuance where that party needs
    more time to conduct discovery.” Taft, Stettinius, & Hollister, LLP v. Calabrese,
    
    2016-Ohio-4713
    , 
    69 N.E.3d 72
    , ¶ 28 (1st Dist.). “ ‘The decision to allow additional
    time under Civ.R. 56(F) falls within the trial court’s sound discretion.’ ” Bank of Am.
    NA v. Omega Design/Build Group, LLC, 1st Dist. Hamilton No. C-100018, 2011-
    Ohio-1650, ¶ 40.     “Such discretion, however, is not without limits. Although
    unusual, appellate courts will reverse a discovery order when the trial court has
    erroneously denied or limited discovery.” Mauzy v. Kelly Servs., 
    75 Ohio St.3d 578
    ,
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    592, 
    664 N.E.2d 1272
     (1996). This case is exactly the sort of situation that Civ.R.
    56(F) is designed to address. Despite Ms. Dansberry’s diligence (and despite court
    orders) Mercy succeeded in hiding critical facts necessary not only to assist Ms.
    Dansberry’s opposition to summary judgment, but to discern whether any genuine
    issues of material fact existed. Instead, Mercy’s conduct prevented Ms. Dansberry
    from getting her case out of the starting gate.
    {¶13} The importance of the identity of the driver cannot be understated—if
    he is an employee, Mercy argues that Ms. Dansberry’s claim would be time-barred.
    R.C. 2305.113(A) (“[A]n action upon a medical, dental, optometric, or chiropractic
    claim shall be commenced within one year after the cause of action accrued.”). But if
    the unknown transport driver is not an employee, then he might not qualify as a
    medical provider per the statute. See Notario v. Am. Natl. Red Cross, S.D.Ohio No.
    2:20-cv-6034, 
    2021 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 159913
    , *5 (Aug. 24, 2021) (“The list provided
    in Ohio Revised Code § 2305.113 is exhaustive; a claim is not a medical claim if it is
    brought against a provider not enumerated in the statute.”). In that scenario, Ms.
    Dansberry may be able to avail herself of an ordinary negligence claim for relief
    subject to a two-year statute of limitations. R.C. 2305.10(A) (“[A]n action for bodily
    injury or injuring personal property shall be brought within two years after the cause
    of action accrues.”).1
    {¶14} Mercy contends this is all much ado about nothing because Ms.
    Dansberry’s claim arose out of medical diagnosis, care, or treatment. To be sure, that
    language constitutes part of the analysis of whether a medical claim exists. In
    1 We caution that we take no position on any of these scenarios since the record is not complete on
    the salient points, and thus we cannot adequately analyze whether the statute of limitations bars
    the claim.
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    Mercy’s view, Ms. Dansberry’s injury arose during necessary medical care, and that
    alone brings it within the purview of medical claims under R.C. 2305.113. That is
    plainly not Ohio law. “The term ‘medical claim’ as defined in R.C. 2305.113(E)(3)
    has two components that the statute states in the conjunctive: (1) the claim is
    asserted against one or more of the specifically enumerated medical providers and
    (2) the claim arises out of medical diagnosis, care, or treatment.” Estate of Stevic v.
    Bio-Medical Application of Ohio, Inc., 
    121 Ohio St.3d 488
    , 
    2009-Ohio-1525
    , 
    905 N.E.2d 635
    , ¶ 18. In other words, the one-year statute of limitations does not apply
    when only one portion of R.C. 2305.113(E)(3) is satisfied. Id. at ¶ 17. The identity of
    the driver goes to the very heart of the statute and Ms. Dansberry deserves time to
    obtain the (long overdue) answer.
    {¶15} The trial court denied Ms. Dansberry’s request for a continuance based
    on a number of flawed premises. To begin with, it indicated that Ms. Dansberry
    testified the individual who placed her in the van wore Mercy clothing. But that is
    not accurate. As we indicated above, Ms. Dansberry provided a detailed description
    of “Bryan,” but specifically responded that she did not know if his attire indicated his
    employer.2    Next, the trial court relied on Mercy’s statement in the first set of
    interrogatories that it “did not believe a third party was involved in Dansberry’s
    transportation.”     But Mercy later backpedaled on this (somewhat equivocal)
    2 Some of the confusion may stem from the fact that Ms. Dansberry’s daughter offered in her
    deposition that a person named Bryan would sometimes transport Ms. Dansberry while wearing a
    shirt with the Mercy West blue and green logo. But this fails to illuminate matters since the
    daughter was not present on the day in question, and her testimony suggested that when a Mercy
    West employee provided the transportation, they did so in a gray van with the blue and green
    Mercy logo, but third party providers picked up Ms. Dansberry in white and red vans. Ms.
    Dansberry testified the vehicle that transported her on the day in question was a white van
    reading “Ohio Valley.”
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    assertion. In the second set of interrogatories, it represented that it did not believe
    the person was an employee of Mercy. Both of these answers cannot be true, and
    Mercy leaves us in the dark as to the reasons for the inconsistency. Regardless,
    Mercy cannot take inconsistent factual positions on a critical question, prevent
    discovery on the underlying reasons behind the inconsistency, and secure summary
    judgment without any real discovery scrutiny. See Disciplinary Counsel v. Stafford,
    
    128 Ohio St.3d 446
    , 
    2011-Ohio-1484
    , 
    946 N.E.2d 193
    , ¶ 56 (“Our system of discovery
    was designed to increase the likelihood that justice will be served in each case, not to
    promote principles of gamesmanship and deception in which the person who hides
    the ball most effectively wins the case.”). We should also point out that Mercy’s
    answers are further problematic because they rely on “beliefs,” rather than factual
    assertions. A party cannot simply hide behind beliefs or hopes when answering
    discovery consistent with Civ.R. 56. Cam Dev. Co. v. Huntington Natl. Bank, 10th
    Dist. Franklin No. 18AP-6, 
    2019-Ohio-1136
    , ¶ 9 (“[T]he moving party must
    affirmatively demonstrate by affidavit or other evidence allowed by Civ.R. 56(C) that
    the non-moving party has no evidence to support its claims.”).
    {¶16} Finally, the trial court noted that Mercy “identified various employees
    who were authorized to transport [Ms.] Dansberry on the date of the incident.” But
    Mercy’s response here begs more questions than it answers. Mercy declined to
    provide any type of document, employment record, or timekeeping sheet which
    might enable Ms. Dansberry to evaluate whether any of these individuals actually
    drove her on the day in question. And these individuals may well be irrelevant if
    Mercy’s second assertion (that it does not believe it employed the driver) proves
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    accurate. Providing a list of potential drivers does not absolve Mercy of further
    discovery obligations in this case.
    {¶17} We acknowledge that discovery is often complicated. A party may seek
    discovery on an issue that falls beyond the scope of the case or that seeks data that
    does not exist. In this case, however, the information in question sat at the heart of
    the case and represented information to which Mercy, as a prominent healthcare
    provider in this community, certainly should have access. At oral argument, Mercy’s
    counsel acknowledged that Mercy does not know whether the person transporting
    Ms. Dansberry was a Mercy employee (at odds with the trial court’s conclusion) and
    went so far as to indicate that the answer was “unknowable.” If the answer truly is
    “unknowable,” then Mercy should have been up front with Ms. Dansberry and the
    court on this point at the outset of the case. This case is an unfortunate illustration
    of why civil litigation costs so much and takes so long. The parties have wasted
    significant time and resources on discovery misadventures, and this case has
    consumed considerable judicial resources only to return to where the parties should
    have started almost two years ago. We accordingly sustain Ms. Dansberry’s first
    assignment of error, and we remand this matter to the trial court for further
    proceedings.
    {¶18} In her second assignment of error, Ms. Dansberry asserts the trial
    court erred in determining the individual was a Mercy employee and granting
    summary judgment in favor of Mercy.            In her third assignment of error, Ms.
    Dansberry argues the evidence presented was insufficient to determine whether this
    was a medical claim pursuant to R.C. 2305.113(E)(3). Because Ms. Dansberry should
    have received additional time to complete discovery (and responsive discovery
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    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS
    answers), the issue of summary judgment was premature and we need not get
    bogged down with the intricacies surrounding whether Ms. Dansberry’s claim
    constitutes a “medical claim” given the inchoate nature of the record. Accordingly,
    we decline to address the second and third assignments of error as moot.
    *       *       *
    {¶19} In light of the foregoing analysis, we conclude that the trial court
    abused its discretion in denying Ms. Dansberry further discovery, and the first
    assignment of error is sustained.      We decline to address the second and third
    assignments of error as moot. The trial court’s judgment is reversed and the cause is
    remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
    MYERS, P. J., and CROUSE, J., concur.
    Please note:
    The court has recorded its entry on the date of the release of this opinion.
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