Plaintiffs Christine and Michael Shugart appeal from the entry of summary judgments in favor of defendants Linda Warren, M.D., and The Regents of the University of California (Regents). We conclude the trial court correctly entered judgment in favor of the Regents because plaintiffs' opposition papers failed to raise a triable issue of fact, and we therefore affirm as to the Regents. However, we reverse the summary judgment in favor of Dr. Warren, finding plaintiffs' expert declaration was admissible and raised triable issues as to Dr. Warren's alleged medical negligence.
Christine Shugart (hereafter Christine)
Dr. Warren recommended two surgical procedures to address Christine's symptoms. On August 22, 2007, Christine was admitted to Mercy Southwest Hospital in Bakersfield, and Dr. Warren performed a transvaginal tape placement and a posterior vaginal repair. Following surgery, Christine's vital signs were stable and she was transferred to the recovery room. As Christine started to wake from the anesthesia, a nurse noted heavy vaginal bleeding. Christine was returned to the operating room to determine the source of the bleeding. Dr. Warren located some "oozing" in one incision and placed additional sutures. Christine was then taken back to the recovery room in stable condition. The next day, she was released from the hospital with directions to return in two weeks for a postoperative visit.
The first postoperative visit was on September 5, 2007. Christine was experiencing a brownish discharge. Dr. Warren examined Christine, had her
On October 3, 2007, Christine went to Dr. Warren's office, complaining of continuing problems, although she was continent. During the vaginal examination, Dr. Warren noted some of the blue mesh/tape was protruding from the incision site. She prescribed a vaginal cream to assist in the healing process and told Christine to return in four weeks. Christine returned to Dr. Warren in early November, complaining that her symptoms were getting worse. During the pelvic examination, Dr. Warren noted there was "mesh protruding from the vaginal mucosa on the right and midline." Dr. Warren referred Christine to Dr. Shlomo Raz, a urologist employed by the Regents at the UCLA Medical Center in Westwood. After the referral in November 2007, Christine received no further treatment from Dr. Warren.
Christine's first visit with Dr. Raz was on November 28, 2007. Dr. Raz, along with Dr. Adriana Smith, examined Christine and consulted with her about her condition, including the incontinence symptoms and the apparent erosion of the transvaginal tape surgically placed by Dr. Warren. Over the course of two days in January 2008, Christine underwent a full patient evaluation and testing. Dr. Raz advised of his recommendations for how to proceed with Christine's treatment, including additional surgical procedures. Christine agreed, and Dr. Raz, assisted by Dr. Smith, performed the procedures on March 24, 2008.
Christine returned to the UCLA Medical Center for postoperative followup on May 13, 2008. She believed her recovery had been going "well," she had been feeling "wonderful," had not had any leakage and had been able to urinate and defecate without incident. During this visit, Dr. Ja Hong Kim, who was employed by the Regents, performed a pelvic examination on Christine, who experienced pain during the exam. Later that day, Christine felt sick to her stomach and noticed a brownish vaginal discharge, which continued for approximately two days. Christine began to experience incontinence problems again, so she made an appointment to see Dr. Raz.
In November 2008, plaintiffs sued Dr. Warren, Dr. Kim and the Regents. The operative first amended complaint alleged medical negligence on behalf of Christine against all three named defendants, as well as unidentified Doe defendants.
In November 2009, Dr. Warren and the Regents filed motions for summary judgment. Dr. Warren's motion was based on the grounds there were no triable issues of fact on two elements of Christine's claim of negligence, i.e., breach of duty and causation. The motion was supported by two declarations from Dr. Warren, copies of the pertinent medical records, and the expert declaration of Dr. Bertha H. Chen. Dr. Chen opined that the care and treatment provided by Dr. Warren, both as to the surgeries and the postoperative care, met the standard of care and were not the cause of any of Christine's claimed injuries.
The Regents' motion was also based on the grounds the evidence established no triable issues on breach of duty and causation. The Regents submitted copies of the pertinent medical records, as well as discovery responses and selected deposition transcripts as supporting exhibits. The Regents' motion was further supported by the expert declaration of Dr. Arieh Bergman, who opined that the care and treatment provided by the Regents, including Dr. Kim, met the standard of care and did not cause any injury to Christine.
In opposition to each motion, plaintiffs submitted a declaration from Christine, attesting to the treatment she received and her ongoing medical
The hearings on both defense motions were scheduled for May 2010. The court issued tentative rulings granting both motions in advance of the hearings. The tentative rulings indicated the court's intent to grant the motions because the court deemed Dr. Ostergard's expert declarations to be deficient and lacking evidentiary value since they failed to refer to the materials on which Dr. Ostergard relied in forming his opinions.
At the May 10, 2010 hearing on the Regents' motion, plaintiffs, in light of the court's tentative rulings, made an oral request to continue the hearing in order to provide supplemental opposition papers to address the court's concerns. The hearing was continued to May 17, 2010, to allow plaintiffs to file a written motion for continuance on shortened notice. The court subsequently entertained argument on Dr. Warren's motion on May 14 and took it under submission. With their written motion to continue, plaintiffs submitted supplemental declarations by Dr. Ostergard containing specific citations to the previously referenced medical records, as well as copies of some of the pertinent records and deposition transcripts.
At the continued hearing, the court denied plaintiffs' written motion to continue and to submit supplemental papers, finding that plaintiffs failed to timely move for a continuance and failed to establish a proper basis for a continuance pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure, section 437c, subdivision (h). The summary judgment motions were taken under submission. On May 20, 2010, the court issued its order, granting both summary judgment motions, adopting its previously issued tentative rulings. Judgments were separately entered in favor of both defendants in June 2010. Dr. Warren and the Regents each served notice of entry of judgment. This appeal followed.
Plaintiffs contend the trial court erred in refusing to consider the expert declarations of their medical expert, Dr. Ostergard. Plaintiffs argue the court misinterpreted the holding in Garibay v. Hemmat (2008) 161 Cal.App.4th 735 [74 Cal.Rptr.3d 715] (Garibay) and erroneously determined their expert declarations lacked evidentiary value.
We independently review an order granting summary judgment. (Aguilar v. Atlantlic Richfield Co. (2001) 25 Cal.4th 826, 860 [107 Cal.Rptr.2d 841, 24 P.3d 493].) We determine whether the court's ruling was correct, not its
In granting Dr. Warren's motion, the trial court reasoned, "Dr. Ostergard has not referenced or attached what particular materials he consulted and reviewed prior to rendering his expert opinion, or separately set forth any of the medical history of Christine Shugart as relevant here, as plaintiffs have not submitted any medical records at all. Ostergard's declaration therefore, has no evidentiary value." The court relied primarily on Garibay in concluding that plaintiffs failed to raise a triable issue of fact because of the deficiencies in their expert's declaration. We disagree, as the medical records Dr. Ostergard relied on were already properly authenticated and placed before the court by the moving party—the party with the statutory initial burden of production on summary judgment. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 437c, subd. (p)(2).)
The trial court erred in finding Dr. Ostergard's expert declaration lacked foundation and was inadmissible under Garibay. In Garibay, the court reversed a summary judgment entered in favor of the defendant doctor in a medical malpractice action, finding the expert declaration in support of the doctor's motion lacked foundation. (Garibay, supra, 161 Cal.App.4th at pp. 742-743.) The Garibay court found the defendant's medical expert had not demonstrated personal knowledge of the underlying facts on which he based his opinion because his declaration "attempted to testify to facts derived from medical and hospital records which were not properly before the court." (Id. at p. 743.) The moving papers did not include authenticated copies of the medical records on which the expert based his opinion. Because of the burden of production required of a moving party on summary judgment, Garibay found the movant's burden had not been satisfied, so the motion should have been denied. (Ibid.)
Indulging all reasonable inferences in support of Dr. Ostergard's testimony, his declaration adequately raises a triable issue as to whether or not Christine was unnecessarily exposed to the postoperative infection she suffered; whether the infection was aggravated by Dr. Warren's care, including the failure to timely excise the protruding mesh; and, whether the recuperation time was unnecessarily prolonged, adversely affecting Christine's overall healing and ability to timely and adequately respond to the later-performed corrective procedures. That was enough to defeat Dr. Warren's motion. (Hanson, supra, 76 Cal.App.4th at pp. 607-608; Powell, supra, 151 Cal.App.4th at pp. 129-130.)
In opposition to the Regents' motion, plaintiffs submitted a separate expert declaration by Dr. Ostergard. As explained above, the trial court erred in finding that the declarations of Dr. Ostergard did not have sufficient evidentiary foundation to justify consideration. As acknowledged by the court in its May 10, 2010 order, all of the medical records pertaining to Christine submitted with the Regents' moving papers were duly authenticated by the requisite custodian of records. Dr. Ostergard's declaration, which relied on those same medical records, should therefore have been considered in resolving the Regents' motion, since the foundational facts upon which it was based were already before the court.
However, Dr. Ostergard's opinions as to the Regents' liability are deficient in substance to show a material disputed fact. Plaintiffs' operative pleading identified only Dr. Kim as the agent of the Regents who committed medical negligence. The only material allegation concerning Dr. Raz is that his surgical procedures were performed to "very good effect." There are no allegations of wrongdoing by Dr. Raz, and the specific allegations regarding him were favorable and excluded him from the general allegation of negligence directed at unidentified Doe agents. The Regents' motion for summary judgment therefore properly rested on demonstrating there was no disputed fact as to the care and treatment provided by Dr. Kim. Plaintiffs' allegation of wrongdoing against Dr. Kim was limited to Dr. Kim's allegedly negligent vaginal examination of Christine at the May 13, 2008 postoperative visit.
The Regents presented the expert declaration of Dr. Bergman, board certified in obstetrics and gynecology and a clinical professor at USC Medical School, who offered his opinion that the care and treatment provided by the Regents were within the applicable standard of care. "Taking an updated history and performing a vaginal examination involving palpation of the operative site are essential components of follow-up evaluation after [surgery of the type performed], and are required to comply with the standard of care. The vaginal examination by Dr. Kim allowed her to assess Christine Shugart's physical status, which Dr. Kim found to be good support of urethra, moderate mobility, and no defects were noted. The performance of the vaginal examination was within the standard of care. Post[operative vaginal examinations may dislodge hematomas, which would present as brownish spotting, as described by Christine Shugart. There is no indication that Christine Shugart had acute injury from the examination."
Dr. Bergman further attested that Dr. Kim complied with the standard of care at all times and that nothing Dr. Kim or the Regents did with respect to Christine's care caused or contributed to any injury. He also explained that
Plaintiffs' citations, in their reply brief, to cases standing for the general proposition that a plaintiff need not name or join allegedly negligent agents in order to sue the responsible principal are of no assistance. Plaintiffs affirmatively alleged specific allegations favorable to Dr. Raz in their operative pleading. Those allegations excluded him from the general allegations of unspecified acts of malpractice alleged against unidentified Doe agents of the Regents. (4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Pleading, § 450, p. 584; Shusett, Inc. v. Home Sav. & Loan Assn. (1964) 231 Cal.App.2d 146, 150 [41
Finally, our conclusion would be the same even if we considered plaintiffs' supplemental expert declaration. The proffered supplemental declaration offers no additional explanation or analysis, but merely provides more specific page citations to the medical records Dr. Ostergard reviewed in forming his opinions. Summary judgment was properly entered in favor of the Regents.
The judgment dated June 14, 2010, in favor of the Regents is affirmed. The Regents shall recover their costs on appeal. The judgment dated June 23, 2010, in favor of Dr. Warren is reversed and the action is remanded for further proceedings. Plaintiffs shall recover their costs on appeal solely with respect to their appeal of the judgment entered in favor of Dr. Warren.
Bigelow, P. J., and Flier, J., concurred.