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FABE, Chief Justice.
A husband and wife brought malpractice claims against a doctor and physician assistant based on medical treatment the husband received from the Department of Corrections while in prison. The case was stayed during the couple's bankruptcy proceeding, but after the bankruptcy discharge and the lifting of the automatic stay, the superior court granted summary judgment to the defendants on several independent grounds. The couple appeals, arguing that the superior court should not have considered a summary judgment motion filed after the deadline set by the pretrial order and that the bankruptcy case robbed the superior court of jurisdiction over the malpractice claims. We affirm the judgment of the superior court.
This case is before us for the third time.
Superior Court Judge Richard Savell granted summary judgment to DeRamus and Pomeroy after the Hymeses failed to provide expert testimony in response to the defendants' summary judgment motion. In Hymes I, however, we reversed and remanded the case, concluding that the superior court should have granted a continuance to allow the Hymeses more time to find a qualified medical expert.
In December 2008, while their appeal in Hymes II was pending, the Hymeses filed a joint petition for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which the bankruptcy court dismissed. The Hymeses filed a second bankruptcy petition in October 2012, after the remand in Hymes II. Neither petition listed the Hymeses' malpractice claims among their assets; rather, each petition asserted that the Hymeses had no "contingent and unliquidated claims" or any "[o]ther personal property" besides what was listed.
Proceedings on the Hymeses' claims in superior court were automatically stayed by the bankruptcy filing;
Following notice that the bankruptcy stay had been lifted, the Hymeses' malpractice case, now assigned to Superior Court Judge Bethany Harbison, was put back on track in the superior court. In May Pomeroy filed a motion for summary judgment on the basis of judicial estoppel, arguing that the Hymeses should be estopped from pursuing their malpractice claim because they failed to disclose it as an asset during the bankruptcy proceedings.
In early June the superior court held an evidentiary hearing and oral argument on the exhaustion of administrative remedies defense. Later that month the court heard oral argument on the defendants' motions for summary judgment based on judicial estoppel and the Hymeses' continued lack of qualified expert medical testimony. The Hymeses objected to consideration of the judicial estoppel motion, arguing that it had been filed long past the January 2013 deadline for dispositive motions. But the superior court rejected the timeliness objection, reasoning that the facts supporting judicial estoppel — i.e., the Hymeses' failure to disclose the malpractice case in their petition — did not even exist until the Hymeses filed for bankruptcy, and that when they filed for bankruptcy the automatic stay went into effect, preventing the defendants from filing their motion until the stay was lifted.
The superior court granted the defendants' motions for summary judgment on all three independent grounds, drafting a separate decision for each one: judicial estoppel, failure to exhaust administrative remedies, and failure to support their malpractice claims with the opinion of an expert medical witness. In granting the motion on judicial estoppel, the superior court rejected the Hymeses' arguments that it lacked jurisdiction and that their lawsuit was not an "asset" as defined under the bankruptcy code. With regard to the exhaustion of remedies, the superior court concluded that "[Donald] Hymes[] chose not to avail himself of the prisoner grievance process for reasons other than his concerns about retaliation and/or a lack of meaningful access." Finally, on the subject of expert testimony, the superior court found that the Hymeses had again failed to show that their psychiatry expert was board-certified despite being informed repeatedly of that requirement; and although they had a second medical expert, her affidavit failed to establish that the Hymeses' alleged harm was caused by any breach of care by Dr. DeRamus or Pomeroy. Following these orders the Hymeses filed a number of motions for reconsideration or clarification, but all were denied.
On this appeal the Hymeses do not attack the merits of any of the three summary judgment rulings. Rather, they argue that: (1) the superior court abused its discretion by accepting and considering motions and supplementary filings that were untimely under the pretrial scheduling order; and (2) the superior court lacked jurisdiction over their malpractice claim because of their Chapter 7 bankruptcy proceeding.
We review "the superior court's decision to waive procedural rules" for abuse of discretion.
"[W]hether the superior court has subject matter jurisdiction"
The Hymeses contend that the superior court abused its discretion when it considered motions and supplemental pleadings that the defendants filed past the deadlines set in the pretrial order. Alaska Civil Rule 16(e) provides that once the pretrial order sets filing and other deadlines, they "shall be modified only to prevent manifest injustice," which the party seeking modification has the burden of showing.
In this case, the only dispositive motion filed after the deadline set by the pretrial order was the defendants' motion for summary judgment based on judicial estoppel.
We see no flaw in the superior court's reasoning. But in any event, the superior court granted summary judgment on two other grounds besides judicial estoppel: that the Hymeses failed to exhaust their administrative remedies and that they failed to support their malpractice claim with qualified expert testimony. TheHymeses' timeliness challenge does not encompass those two defense motions, which at the time they were granted had been pending for years due to the succession of appeals and remands.
The Hymeses contend that because of their bankruptcy proceeding, the superior court lacked jurisdiction over the malpractice claim at the time it granted summary judgment to the defendants. Their argument is without merit. First, while it is true that "[t]he United States District Courts, and by extension the United States Bankruptcy Courts, have `original and exclusive' jurisdiction over all bankruptcy cases,"
The Hymeses contend that the bankruptcy court's order lifting the stay encompassed only the United States' foreclosure action on their Fairbanks home. But while it is true that the bankruptcy court first granted the United States' motion seeking that limited relief from stay, two days later it entered the discharge order, which lifted the stay as to all other matters by operation of law.
The Hymeses also assert that the superior court failed to acknowledge that their bankruptcy case was on appeal, apparently meaning to contend that the stay remained in effect through the appellate process. But once the automatic stay expires upon discharge, an appeal does not reinstate it unless a court so orders: "[A] party must move first in the bankruptcy court for . . . a stay of a judgment, order, or decree of the bankruptcy court pending appeal."
Accordingly, there is no merit in the Hymeses' claim that the appeal of their bankruptcy discharge robbed the superior court of jurisdiction to decide their malpractice claim.
We AFFIRM the superior court's judgment.