Allyson Soocey, P.r. & Estate Of Steven Daryl Soocey v. Chi Franciscan ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                                                 Filed
    Washington State
    Court of Appeals
    Division Two
    October 20, 2020
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    ALLYSON SOOCEY, personal representative                             No. 53389-8-II
    of the Estate of Steven Daryl Soocey; and
    ESTATE OF STEVEN DARYL SOOCEY,
    Appellant,
    v.
    CHI FRANCISCAN; ST. JOSEPH                                    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    HOSPITAL,
    Respondent.
    GLASGOW, J.—Allyson Soocey alleged that her husband, Steven Daryl Soocey, died as the
    result of negligent health care provided by CHI Franciscan. The alleged negligence occurred on
    November 4, 2015, and Daryl died 10 days later on November 14, 2015. On November 13, 2018,
    Soocey brought a wrongful death claim against CHI Franciscan based on the death of her husband.
    The trial court granted summary judgment to CHI Franciscan and dismissed the case as barred by
    the three-year statute of limitations for claims based on medical negligence because Soocey
    brought suit more than three years after the alleged negligence occurred.
    Soocey appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in applying the medical negligence statute
    of limitations, which measures from the date of the negligent act, rather than the general torts
    catchall statute of limitations, which measures from the date of death in wrongful death claims.
    She argues that Fast v. Kennewick Public Hospital District, 
    187 Wash. 2d 27
    , 
    384 P.3d 232
    (2016),
    which held that wrongful death claims based on negligent health care are subject to the medical
    negligence statute of limitations, does not apply in this case. Instead, she argues, this court should
    No. 53389-8-II
    apply previous Court of Appeals decisions that determined that all wrongful death claims are
    governed by the general torts statute of limitations.
    Applying Fast, which explicitly held that wrongful death claims based on negligent health
    care are governed by the medical negligence statute of limitations, not the general torts statute of
    limitations, we conclude that Soocey’s claim is barred because it was filed more than three years
    after the date of the alleged medical negligence. We affirm.
    FACTS
    The relevant underlying facts are not in dispute. In September 2015, CHI Franciscan
    doctors discovered that Daryl had a large brain tumor. The doctors recommended surgery and
    informed Daryl of the many risks associated with surgery, including that it could cause him to have
    difficulty swallowing. Daryl agreed to the surgery.
    After the surgery, Daryl had difficulty swallowing, although this was an expected side
    effect of the surgery. He was discharged from the hospital but returned a few days later after
    becoming weak and falling at home. Soocey told the doctors that Daryl had developed chest
    congestion and a serious cough. The doctors put Daryl on oxygen and put him in the primary care
    unit to treat him for acute respiratory failure and pneumonia.
    On November 4, 2015, Daryl developed shortness of breath and became unresponsive.
    Although he was resuscitated, he never regained consciousness. He died on November 14, 2015.
    On November 13, 2018, Soocey filed a claim for wrongful death under RCW 4.20.010,
    claiming that Daryl’s death was the result of the medical negligence of CHI Franciscan. The
    complaint alleged that CHI Franciscan nurses responded negligently when Daryl became short of
    breath while in the hospital on November 4, 2015, and their negligence caused his death. Soocey
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    No. 53389-8-II
    later filed an amended complaint including claims for medical negligence under chapter 7.70 RCW
    on behalf of Daryl’s estate.
    CHI Franciscan moved for summary judgment, arguing that Soocey’s claim was barred by
    the three-year statute of limitations for medical negligence claims because she filed the claim more
    than three years after the date of the alleged negligence. The trial court granted summary judgment
    and dismissed the case. Soocey appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Soocey argues that the trial court erred in applying the three-year limitations period from
    the date of the alleged negligence, November 4, 2015, rather than from the date of her husband’s
    death, November 14, 2015. We disagree. The Washington Supreme Court has determined that the
    medical negligence statute of limitations applies to all wrongful death claims based on medical
    negligence. 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 40
    . Under Fast, Soocey’s claim is barred by the medical negligence
    statute of limitations.
    A.      Statute of Limitations for Medical Negligence Claims and Wrongful Death Claims
    Determining the applicable statute of limitations is a question of statutory interpretation
    that we review de novo. In re Marriage of Goodyear-Blackburn, 
    12 Wash. App. 2d
    798, 801-02, 
    460 P.3d 202
    (2020).
    Chapter 7.70 RCW governs all actions for damages resulting from health care. RCW
    7.70.010; 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 34
    . RCW 4.16.350 governs the statute of limitations for claims based
    on medical negligence. 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 34
    .
    Any civil action for damages for injury occurring as a result of health care . . . based
    upon alleged professional negligence shall be commenced within three years of the
    act or omission alleged to have caused the injury or condition, or one year of the
    time the patient or his or her representative discovered or reasonably should have
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    No. 53389-8-II
    discovered that the injury or condition was caused by said act or omission,
    whichever period expires later.
    RCW 4.16.350(3) (emphasis added).
    The general three-year torts statute of limitations applies to “[a]n action for . . . any other
    injury to the person or rights of another not hereinafter enumerated.” RCW 4.16.080(2). The three-
    year period under this statute of limitations applies generally to wrongful death actions and is
    measured from the date of death. Wills v. Kirkpatrick, 
    56 Wash. App. 757
    , 760, 
    785 P.2d 834
    (1990),
    abrogated by Fast, 
    187 Wash. 2d 27
    .
    In 1990, this court held in Wills that the statute of limitations for claims based on medical
    negligence did not apply to wrongful death claims because the statute referred to damages for
    injury, but not death.
    Id. at 761-62.
    The Wills court reasoned that nothing in the medical negligence
    statute suggested “that the limitation of actions for medical malpractice embraces a claim for
    wrongful death.”
    Id. at 762.
    The court held that the phrase “damages for injury” as used in the
    medical negligence statute of limitations, RCW 4.16.350(3), included only those injuries suffered
    by the patient, and excluded wrongful death claims, which compensate the decedent’s beneficiaries
    for damages incurred as a result of the death of their loved one. 
    Wills, 56 Wash. App. at 761
    ; see
    RCW 4.20.010 (providing a right of action for wrongful death). Moreover, if the medical
    malpractice statute of limitations applied, then “such a claim could be barred even before death
    triggers accrual of the right to bring the action.” 
    Wills, 56 Wash. App. at 762
    . The Wills court
    concluded that this was not what the legislature intended.
    Id. at 763.
    In 2015, Division Three followed Wills, in part because the legislature had acquiesced to
    the Wills holding for a quarter century. Fast v. Kennewick Pub. Hosp. Dist., 
    188 Wash. App. 43
    , 52-
    4
    No. 53389-8-II
    53, 
    354 P.3d 858
    (2015). In Fast, Division Three applied the general tort statute of limitations to
    the Fasts’ claim for the wrongful death of their child.
    Id. at 53.
    Then the Supreme Court reversed, concluding instead that the medical negligence statute
    of limitations in RCW 4.16.350(3), which applies to claims made under chapter 7.70 RCW, must
    apply “in cases of wrongful death resulting from negligent health care.” 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 33
    -
    34; see RCW 7.70.010. The Fast court relied on other provisions within chapter 7.70 RCW that
    mention “death” or “wrongful death” to conclude that “the legislature intended to subject wrongful
    death claims caused by medical negligence to the provisions of chapter 7.70 RCW.”
    Id. at 35-36.
    The Fast court reasoned that the general torts statute of limitations only applies to actions “‘not
    hereinafter enumerated,’” and so the more specific medical negligence statute of limitations in
    RCW 4.16.350(3) must apply in cases of medical 
    negligence. 187 Wash. 2d at 37
    (quoting RCW
    4.16.080(2)).
    B.     Statute of Limitations Applicable to Soocey’s Claim
    Soocey attempts to distinguish the Supreme Court’s decision in Fast from the facts of this
    case in several ways. Soocey argues that the Supreme Court’s decision in Fast does not apply
    outside of cases arising under RCW 4.24.010, Washington’s wrongful death of a child statute,
    because that was the statute directly at issue in Fast. Soocey reasons that her wrongful death claim
    is based on RCW 4.20.010, which the Court of Appeals analyzed in Fast, but which the Supreme
    Court did not analyze in its opinion because the Supreme Court determined that the Court of
    Appeals had analyzed the wrong statute.
    Soocey argues that the Supreme Court in Fast explained that the Court of Appeals
    mistakenly analyzed RCW 4.20.010, the general wrongful death statute, instead of RCW 4.24.010,
    5
    No. 53389-8-II
    the statute addressing wrongful death of a child. Thus, Soocey asserts, the Court of Appeals’
    analysis of RCW 4.20.010 was not actually disturbed by the Supreme Court’s holding in Fast. In
    other words, Soocey claims that the Court of Appeals’ holdings in Fast and Wills are still good
    law. She points specifically to a footnote in the Supreme Court’s opinion in which the court noted
    that neither party had challenged whether the cases analyzing the general wrongful death statute,
    RCW 4.20.010, were helpful in analyzing the statute addressing the wrongful death of a child,
    RCW 4.24.010. See 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 38
    n.13.
    But the Supreme Court in Fast repeatedly used broad language to articulate its holding as
    applying generally to “cases of wrongful death resulting from negligent health care.”
    Id. at 29, 33- 34, 40.
    Throughout its analysis, the court referred broadly to wrongful death claims and did not
    limit its holding to claims based on the death of a child or to the specific facts of that case. Indeed,
    the court acknowledged the existence of other wrongful death statutes and stated that “[t]he
    repeated references to wrongful death claims in chapter 7.70 RCW strongly suggest that the statute
    of limitations for medical malpractice should apply to all cases alleging medical negligence.”
    Id. at 36
    (emphasis added). Had the Supreme Court intended to limit its holding to the wrongful death
    of a child statute, it would have used far different, more limiting language. Unlike the Supreme
    Court, which is free to limit Fast in the future, we are not permitted to ignore or overrule Fast’s
    broad holding. See, e.g., State v. Hairston, 
    133 Wash. 2d 534
    , 539, 
    946 P.2d 397
    (1997).
    Although the Supreme Court recognized in Fast that the Court of Appeals had analyzed
    the wrong statute for that case, it also noted that the Court of Appeals in both Fast and Wills did
    not engage in any statutory analysis of the “‘not hereinafter enumerated’” language of RCW
    4.16.080(2). 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 38
    . Moreover, the Supreme Court’s discussion of Wills makes
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    No. 53389-8-II
    clear that the court rejected the Wills court’s reasoning that an “injury” in medical negligence cases
    does not include wrongful death. The Supreme Court noted that Wills incongruously interpreted
    “injury” in the medical negligence statute of limitations, RCW 4.16.350(3), to not include
    wrongful death while simultaneously concluding that “injury” in the catchall statute, RCW
    4.16.080(2), did include wrongful death. 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 39
    . The Supreme Court further
    explained that “the Wills court did not acknowledge the previously mentioned provisions of
    chapter 7.70 RCW that contemplate or specifically reference wrongful death.”
    Id. Thus, although the
    Supreme Court in Fast may have analyzed the issue under a different wrongful death statute
    than the one at issue here, it is clear that it disavowed Wills: “[W]e hold that in cases of wrongful
    death resulting from negligent health care, the medical negligence statute of limitations . . . (RCW
    4.16.350(3)) applies.”
    Id. at 40.
    Soocey argues that even if this court determines that Fast is broadly applicable to all
    wrongful death claims, this court should nevertheless decline to apply Fast in this case because
    using the medical negligence statute of limitations would lead to absurd results. Specifically,
    Soocey argues that running the statute of limitations from the date of the negligent act in wrongful
    death cases, rather than from the date of the death, could lead to a situation where the wrongful
    death cause of action never materializes if the person dies more than three years after the medical
    negligence occurred. Because the wrongful death statute permits only the personal representative
    of the deceased’s estate to bring a wrongful death claim, RCW 4.20.010, such a claimant cannot
    exist to bring a claim if the three-year period expires before the death occurs.
    The Supreme Court recognized this possibility in Fast, but nevertheless held that wrongful
    death claims based on medical negligence are governed by the medical negligence statute of
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    No. 53389-8-II
    limitations. The court noted that it had reached this very result—barring a wrongful death claim
    under the statute of limitations because the underlying claim lapsed during the deceased’s life—in
    Deggs v. Asbestos Corp., 
    186 Wash. 2d 716
    , 732, 
    381 P.3d 32
    (2016). 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 39
    . The
    Supreme Court declined to go into any further depth on this issue in Fast because the concern was
    not present in that case—the death and the last negligent act had occurred virtually simultaneously.
    Id. Similarly here, the
    absurd result that Soocey alleges is not present in this case. Her husband
    died only 10 days after the last negligent act that allegedly caused his death, so Soocey had ample
    time to bring her claim before the statute of limitations lapsed. Furthermore, the medical
    negligence statute of limitations, RCW 4.16.350(3), provides another mechanism to prevent the
    injustice Soocey is concerned about. The Supreme Court recognized in Gunnier v. Yakima Heart
    Center, Inc., “[t]hat [the] three-year period may lapse before injury occurs.” 
    134 Wash. 2d 854
    , 864,
    
    953 P.2d 1162
    (1998). But the Gunnier court explained that “[t]his conclusion is neither absurd
    nor harsh, as a plaintiff still has the alternative limitations period of the one-year discovery rule in
    which to file suit.” Id.; see RCW 4.16.350(3). It is true that Gunnier was not a wrongful death case,
    but the reasoning would apply equally here.
    Division Three has also recently followed Fast to bar a wrongful death claim brought more
    than three years after the last date of the alleged negligence. Fechner v. Volyn, 
    3 Wash. App. 2d
    716,
    720-21, 
    418 P.3d 120
    (2018). The court recognized, “Fast made clear that all medical negligence
    claims are governed by the [medical negligence statute of limitations, RCW 4.16.350(3)], even if
    the medical negligence results in death as opposed to some other sort of harm.”
    Id. at 721.
    Soocey
    8
    No. 53389-8-II
    argues that the Fechner court recognized that Fast was intended to apply narrowly because of
    Fechner’s discussion of Justice Madsen’s concurrence.
    Soocey is correct that Justice Madsen would apply Fast narrowly, but not in the way that
    Soocey argues. Justice Madsen would not confine Fast only to wrongful death of a child cases
    under RCW 4.24.010. 
    See 187 Wash. 2d at 41-43
    (Madsen, J., concurring). Instead, Justice Madsen
    emphasized that the medical negligence statute of limitations applies only in the health care context
    and clarified that a wrongful death claim remains a distinct and separate cause of action.
    Id. The Fechner court
    relied on Justice Madsen’s concurrence to reject the plaintiff’s claim there that she
    could pursue a separate wrongful death claim against her deceased husband’s doctor that would
    be governed by the general statute of limitations. 
    3 Wash. App. 2d
    at 721. The Fechner court
    reasoned that Justice Madsen did not intend to cast doubt on whether wrongful death claims can
    fall under the medical negligence statute of limitations.
    Id. “Instead, it is
    apparent that Fast applies
    to a wrongful death claim if the claim is based on medical negligence.”
    Id. We reject Soocey’s
    arguments that we should ignore Fast and apply the discarded rule
    from Wills that an injury in medical negligence cases does not include wrongful death. The
    Supreme Court definitively and without qualification held that “in cases of wrongful death
    resulting from negligent health care, the medical negligence statute of limitations . . . (RCW
    4.16.350(3)) applies.” 
    Fast, 187 Wash. 2d at 40
    . Thus, in any wrongful death case based on an act of
    medical negligence, the three-year statute of limitations runs from the date of the negligent act or
    omission, not from the date of death.
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    No. 53389-8-II
    Here, it is undisputed that the date of alleged medical negligence was November 4, 2015.
    Soocey filed suit on November 13, 2018, more than three years later. Therefore, her claim is barred
    by the medical negligence statute of limitations, as applied by Fast. RCW 4.16.350(3).
    CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the medical negligence statute of limitations applies in this case because
    Soocey’s wrongful death claim is based on alleged medical negligence. Soocey’s claim is barred
    because it was filed more than three years after the date of the alleged medical negligence. We
    affirm.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2.06.040, it is so ordered.
    Glasgow, J.
    We concur:
    Lee, C.J.
    Maxa, J.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 53389-8

Filed Date: 10/20/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/20/2020