F IL E D
United States Court of Appeals
Tenth Circuit
U N IT E D ST A T E S C O U R T O F A PP E A L S
June 4, 2007
FO R T H E T E N T H C IR C U IT
Elisabeth A. Shumaker
Clerk of Court
D A RLA BR OC K,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v. No. 06-3181
(D.C. No. 05-CV-1123-M LB)
JUANITA GATZ, ARN P; (D . Kan.)
LADONNA REGIER, M .D.,
Defendants-Appellees.
O R D E R A N D JU D G M E N T *
Before L U C E R O , Circuit Judge, B R O R B Y , Senior Circuit Judge, and
M cC O N N E L L , Circuit Judge.
Plaintiff-appellant Darla Brock appeals from the order of the district court
granting summary judgment in favor of defendants-appellees on her medical
malpractice claim against them. M s. Brock alleged that Dr. Reiger and Advanced
Registered Nurse Practitioner (A RNP) G atz failed to properly diagnose her w ith
*
After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined
unanimously that oral argument would not materially assist the determination of
this appeal. See Fed. R. App. P. 34(a)(2); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is
therefore ordered submitted without oral argument. This order and judgment is
not binding precedent, except under the doctrines of law of the case, res judicata,
and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value
consistent w ith Fed. R. App. P. 32.1 and 10th Cir. R. 32.1.
skin cancer. The district court held that M s. Brock’s claim was barred by Kansas’
statute of limitations for medical malpractice claims and granted summary
judgment to defendants-appellees. Because we hold that summary judgment was
not proper as a matter of law, we reverse.
I.
A grant of summary judgment by the district court is reviewed
de novo. Sim m s v. O klahoma, 165 F.3d 1321, 1326 (10th Cir.1999).
Summary judgment is appropriate “if the pleadings, depositions,
answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the
affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any
material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a
matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). W hen determining whether
judgment as a matter of law is appropriate, “we view the evidence
and draw reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable
to the nonmoving party.” Simms, 165 F.3d at 1326. This court also
review s district court determinations of state law de novo. Salve
Regina College v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 238 . . . (1991); M ares v.
ConAgra Poultry Co., 971 F.2d 492, 495 (10th Cir.1992).
Bradley v. Val-M ejias, 379 F.3d 892, 896-97 (10th Cir. 2004).
II.
M s. Brock was seen by ARNP G atz on July 24, 2001. She had made the
medical appointment after she had noticed some lesions that had appeared on her
body, including a brown irregularly shaped lesion on her thigh. 1 M s. Brock was
moving to Vermont the week of the appointment and wanted to have the lesions
1
The irregularity is also referred to as a “mole” at various points in the
record. W e shall refer to it as a “lesion” simply for ease of use.
-2-
looked at before she left. ARNP G atz asked M s. Brock if she wanted to have the
lesion treated with cryotherapy or wait to seek treatment in Vermont. M s. Brock
testified that ARNP G atz told her: “we can freeze it off, and then if it comes
back, that is when you should be concerned.” Aplee. Supp. App. at 65.
M s. Brock elected to treat the lesion with cryotherapy. No biopsy of the lesion
was performed. 2
M s. Brock noticed no change to the site of the previous lesion until either
January or February of 2003 when she had noticed that the lesion had reappeared.
Since ARNP G atz had told her to seek further treatment upon such an occurrence,
she arranged for an appointment with dermatologist Dr. Edward Benjamin on
February 4, 2003. M s. Brock testified that she told Dr. Benjamin that a lesion
that had been previously removed had reappeared, that he examined the area:
“[a]nd he said your doctor in Kansas should never freeze those off without doing
a biopsy, but this one is fine. And [i]f I remove it, your insurance won’t pay for
it.” Aplt. App. at 31. Dr. Benjamin did, however, remove a lesion from
M s. Brock’s back that he found concerning. A subsequent biopsy revealed that
the lesion from her back was not cancerous.
2
Dr. Reiger did not examine M s. Brock but she was ARNP G atz’s supervisor
and signed M s. Brock’s medical chart.
-3-
In February 2004, M s. Brock decided to have the lesion removed even if
insurance would not pay for it. She saw Dr. Sharon Christie, another
dermatologist, to have the lesion removed. Dr. Christie asked M s. Brock why she
waited so long to have the lesion examined. Dr. Christie performed a biopsy on
the lesion and M s. Brock was notified on April 6, 2004, that she had melanoma.
M s. Brock filed her complaint against ARNP G atz and Dr. Reiger on April 28,
2005. The district court subsequently granted defendants-appellees summary
judgment. The parties agreed that M s. Brock was required by Kansas law to bring
her action within two years of the date that the action accrued. But they disagreed
on the date the action accrued under K ansas Statutes Annotated § 60-513(c).
Under that statute:
A cause of action arising out of the rendering of or the failure to
render professional services by a health care provider shall be
deemed to have accrued at the time of the occurrence of the act
giving rise to the cause of action, unless the fact of injury is not
reasonably ascertainable until some time after the initial act, then the
period of limitation shall not commence until the fact of injury
becomes reasonably ascertainable to the injured party, but in no event
shall such an action be commenced more than four years beyond the
time of the act giving rise to the cause of action.
The district court ruled that M s. Brock’s action accrued at the time of her
appointment with Dr. Benjamin because “the fact of injury” in her case was
“reasonably ascertainable” following that appointment.
-4-
III.
M s. Brock argues that the district court erred in granting summary
judgment because, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to her, “the
fact of injury” in her case was not “reasonably ascertainable” until her
appointment with Dr. Christie. “Here [M s. Brock] is asserting state law claims
and it is undisputed that the Kansas law of the forum controls.” Bradley,
379 F.3d at 897.
The Kansas Supreme Court has held that “the term ‘reasonably
ascertainable’ as applied in K.S.A. 60-513 . . . (c), suggests an objective standard
based upon an examination of the surrounding circumstances” and that “the
objective knowledge of the injury, not the extent of the injury, triggers the statute
both in medical and nonmedical malpractice cases.” P.W.P. v. L.S., 969 P.2d 896,
901-02 (K an. 1998).
In Davidson v. Denning, a Kansas wrongful death case, the Kansas
Supreme Court held that “‘[r]easonably ascertainable’ does not mean ‘actual
knowledge.’” 914 P.2d 936, 948 (Kan. 1996). The court held that “[i]nherent in
‘to ascertain’ is ‘to investigate,’” id. at 946, and that “[t]he phrase ‘reasonably
ascertainable’ means that a plaintiff has the obligation to reasonably investigate
available sources that contain the facts of the death and its wrongful causation,”
-5-
id. at 948. The Kansas Supreme Court held in P.W.P. that this language from
Davidson “is applicable to medical malpractice actions.” 969 P.2d at 901.
In Roe v. Diefendorf, the Kansas Supreme Court considered when a “fact of
injury becomes reasonably ascertainable to the injured party” under § 60-513 in a
tort action. 689 P.2d 855, 858 (Kan. 1984). The court held: “The statute of
limitations starts to run in a tort action at the time a negligent act causes injury if
both the [negligent] act and the resulting injury are reasonably ascertainable by
the injured person.” Id. at 859. Similarly, this court has previously held that
“Kansas’ ‘fact of injury’ standard postpones the running of the limitations period
until the time the plaintiff is able to determine that her injury may be caused by
some act of the defendant.” Bradley, 379 F.3d at 898 (internal quotation marks
omitted).
In Roe, the Kansas Supreme Court distinguished its ruling in the case of
Hecht v. First National Bank & Trust Co., 490 P.2d 649 (Kan. 1971), from
previous cases ruling that it was knowledge of the fact of injury and not the extent
of injury that was important to a statute of limitations determination. In Hecht,
the plaintiff was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease and was treated by defendant
doctors with radiation. Following radiation treatment in January and February of
1966 the skin on plaintiff’s legs turned red and she complained of pain in her
-6-
ankles. The plaintiff was told by the defendants on M arch 2, 1966, that her skin
reaction was subsiding and was told on M arch 11 that it was slowly healing.
The plaintiff got a second opinion of her condition from a different
physician, Dr. Lilly, on M arch 12, 1966. The plaintiff testified that at that time
“the top was off the treatment area, it was open, raw and draining.” Id. at 652
(internal quotation marks omitted). Dr. Lilly “testified [at trial] that his
impression was ‘that there had been a radiation reaction with breakdown’” and he
“confirmed the opinion given by defendants after their examination [the previous
day] that the area was healing.” Id.
The plaintiff in Hecht continued to see the defendant doctors following her
M arch 12, 1966, appointment with Dr. Lilly and they continued to tell her that the
area of the reaction was healing. It appeared from the record that the first time
the defendant physicians suspected any permanent damage was July 22, 1966, and
that plaintiff was not told until December of 1966 that the ulcer in her groin area
would require surgical repair.
As in this case, a two-year statute of limitation was at issue in Hecht. But a
previous version of § 60-513 provided that:
The cause of action in this section shall not be deemed to have
accrued until the act giving rise to the cause of action first causes
substantial injury, or, if the fact of injury is not reasonably
ascertainable until some time after the initial act, then the period of
limitation shall not commence until the fact of injury becomes
reasonably ascertainable to the injured party, but in no event shall the
-7-
period be extended more than ten (10) years beyond the time of the
act giving rise to the cause of action.
Id. at 654 (quoting Kan. Stat. Ann. § 60-513 (1970 Supp.)). The defendants
argued that the plaintiff had actual knowledge of “a substantial or real burn
injury” in February of 1966, but that in any event “she either was or should have
been made so aware by her consultation with Dr. Lilly on M arch 12, 1966, one
day more than two years preceding the filing of her petition.” Id. at 653.
The K ansas Supreme Court overturned the trial court’s grant of summary
judgment to defendants. It stated: “It is true that plaintiff knew she had an
unhealed sore on M arch 12, when she saw Dr. Lilly, but both Dr. Lilly and [the
defendant doctor who saw the plaintiff on M arch 11] described the condition then
as slowly healing and [determined] that the conservative treatment which plaintiff
was then undergoing would likely result in a complete healing.” Id. at 654-55.
The Kansas Supreme Court therefore held:
W e do not believe that plaintiff’s knowledge of her condition from
her own observation, and that acquired from her physicians, is
sufficient to justify a determination, as a matter of law, that she knew
or could have reasonably ascertained on M arch 13, 1966, that she had
suffered substantial injury caused by the alleged negligent treatment
of defendants.
Id. at 655 (emphasis added).
The Kansas Supreme Court also recognized that–other than the ten-year
statute of repose incorporated in the previous version of § 60-513(b)–the statute
-8-
codified what “essentially what has been identified as the ‘discovery rule.’” Id. at
657. The court then quoted with approval the following definition of the
“discovery rule” from a M ichigan Supreme Court case:
Simply and clearly stated the discovery rule is: The limitation statute
or statutes in malpractice cases do not start to run until the date of
discovery, or the date when, by the exercise of reasonable care,
plaintiff should have discovered the wrongful act.
Id. at 657 (quoting Johnson v. Caldwell, 123 N.W .2d 785, 791 (M ich. 1963),
superseded by statute).
In Cleveland v. Wong, the plaintiff underwent a surgical procedure know n
as a “transurethral resection prostate (TUR).” 701 P.2d 1301, 1304 (K an. 1985).
The plaintiff was informed by the doctor that he w ould experience temporary
incontinence and impotence following surgery. The surgery was completed on
M ay 19, 1978, and, in the fall of 1979 after continued incontinence and
impotence, the plaintiff contacted a urological surgeon for a second opinion. That
surgeon told the plaintiff that his incontinence and impotence was permanent.
The plaintiff then sued the doctor who performed the surgery.
The defendant doctor argued that because “plaintiff was both incontinent
and impotent immediately following th[e] surgery, the fact of injury was
reasonably ascertainable to him [at that time].” Id. at 1306. The Kansas Supreme
Court held that “while plaintiff knew that he was both incontinent and impotent
immediately after the surgery, he had no reason to suspect that those conditions
-9-
were permanent or that those conditions were the result of any negligence or
malpractice on the part of the defendant.” Id. (emphasis added). It therefore held
that “[t]he symptoms of the injury were known to the plaintiff, but the fact of
injury was not reasonably or immediately ascertainable.” Id.
Hecht and Cleveland, therefore, stand for the proposition that under Kansas
law it is not enough to start the statute of limitations running that it is reasonably
ascertainable to a party that he or she has sustained an injury. Instead it must be
reasonably ascertainable that an injury has been sustained that may have been
caused by some negligent act or omission of the defendant such that legal
recovery is possible. But the full extent of that legally recoverable injury need
not be known.
IV.
Here, the grant of summary judgment was improper. The legal injury
alleged by M s. Brock was the improper treatment of a possibly cancerous lesion
that resulted in a delayed diagnosis of skin cancer. The “fact of injury” was not
reasonably ascertainable to her at the time the lesion reappeared. ARNP G atz and
M s. Brock had specifically discussed the possibility that the lesion might return
and further treatment might be needed. Consequently, while the reappearance of
the lesion was cause for concern that M s. Brock might have skin cancer, it would
not have put M s. Brock on notice that the defendants’ previous act of freezing off
-10-
a suspicious lesion and waiting to see if it returned might have constituted
negligent medical treatment. In other words, at the time the lesion reappeared
“[t]he symptoms of the injury were known to [M s. Brock], but the fact of injury
was not reasonably or immediately ascertainable.” Cleveland, 701 P.2d at 1306.
At the appointment with D r. Benjamin, M s. Brock w as alerted for the first
time to A RNP Gatz and Dr. Reiger’s allegedly negligent treatment for the first
time (when Dr. Benjamin stated “your doctor in Kansas should never freeze
[lesions] off without doing a biopsy,” A plt. App. at 31), but was simultaneously
informed that she had not been harmed by that negligent treatment (when
Dr. Benjamin stated: “but this [lesion] is fine,” id.). Consequently, under the
evidence presented to the court in the summary judgment motion, the first time
that M s. Brock could have reasonably ascertained both that she had skin cancer
and that the diagnosis of that skin cancer might have been delayed by
defendants-appellees’ negligence was after meeting both Dr. Benjamin and
Dr. C hristie. See Bradley, 379 F.3d at 898 (“K ansas’ ‘fact of injury’ standard
postpones the running of the limitations period until the time the plaintiff is able
to determine that her injury may be caused by some act of the defendant.”)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
Defendants-appellees argue that it was unreasonable for M s. Brock to have
relied on Dr. Benjamin’s assertion that the lesion was not cancerous. Their
-11-
argument rests on a misstatement of fact in the district court’s summary judgment
order. The district court made the following findings regarding M s. Brock’s
treatment by Dr. Benjamin.
(1) Importantly, Dr. Benjamin stated that a lesion should always be
biopsied and not “burned off.” Plaintiff generally understood the
purpose and significance of a biopsy. However, and apparently in
violation of his own rule, Dr. Benjamin did not biopsy the lesion but
instead examined it visually, told plaintiff it looked “fine,” and that
the “lesion was probably benign and there was nothing to worry
about.”
Aplt. App. at 19-20 (quoting R., doc. 43 at 14, reproduced in Aplee. Supp. App.
at 103).
(2) The district court found that M s. Brock should have recognized the
inconsistency of Dr. Benjamin’s assertions, finding: “Dr. Benjamin was critical
of G atz for not biopsing the lesion in 2001 (‘a lesion should always be biopsied’)
but he did not biopsy the lesion in 2003.” Id. at 20.
(3) The district court held that:
what Dr. Benjamin did, and failed to do, bears directly on plaintiff’s
duty to reasonably investigate. . . . W hen Dr. Benjamin told her that a
lesion “always” should be biopsied, but then did not do so, it was not
reasonable for plaintiff to accept Dr. Benjamin’s statement that the
lesion was “fine.” Plaintiff had an obligation to conduct a
“reasonable investigation” in light of Dr. Benjamin’s inconsistent
medical treatment and advice.
Id.
-12-
The district court’s ruling, therefore, rested squarely on its factual finding
that Dr. Benjamin advised M s. Brock that “a lesion should always be biopsied”
but then failed to follow his own advice. Even if we agreed for the sake of
argument that the reappearance of a lesion, followed by a statement that “a lesion
should always be biopsied,” w ould have been enough to alert M s. Brock to both
possible negligence and the fact that any reasonable investigation of whether she
had skin cancer needed to include a biopsy, there was no evidence that
Dr. Benjamin actually told M s. Brock that “a lesion should always be biopsied.”
Aplt. A pp. at 19.
In the factual section of their amended memorandum in support of their
motion for summary judgment, ARNP Gatz and Dr. Reiger alleged that:
“Dr. Benjamin examined the lesion on plaintiff’s thigh and notified plaintiff that
M s. Gatz should not have treated the lesion with cryotherapy back in 2001.
Dr. Benjamin also notified plaintiff that the lesion should have been biopsied in
2001.” A plee. Supp. A pp. at 48. As support for these factual assertions, ARN P
Gatz and Dr. Reiger cite to portions of M s. Brock’s deposition. The first citation
is the one quoted above: “And he said your doctor in Kansas should never freeze
those off without doing a biopsy, but this one is fine. And if I remove it, your
insurance won’t pay for it.” Id. at 70. The second citation is from later in the
deposition when M s. Brock again testified that “[Dr. Benjamin] said, well, your
-13-
doctor in Kansas should never freeze those off without a biopsy.” Id. at 72.
In the third citation, M s. Brock merely agrees that the lesion was examined by
Dr. Benjamin and he concluded that it was probably benign and that there was
nothing to worry about. Id. at 76. In the final citation, M s. Brock again agrees
that Dr. Benjamin said that the lesion should not have been frozen off without
having a biopsy done. Id. at 76. These statements do not justify characterizing
M s. Brock’s testimony as asserting that Dr. Benjamin told her that a lesion should
always be biopsied.
The defendants-appellees also stated in the argument section of their
amended memorandum that M s. Brock saw a number of physicians between
1986 and 1992 and that the office notes from those visits revealed “that plaintiff
was counseled about: . . . c. The need to have all [unusual] lesions biopsied to
rule out malignancy, even if it is suspected that they are benign; . . .” Aplee.
Supp. App. at 53-54. The two office notes appended to the memorandum do not
support this assertion. 3
3
There is a 1992 record from a Dr. Charles Ruggles which reflects that the
doctor excised a “nevus” that he suspected was benign and it appears that a
biopsy was done at that time. Aplee. Supp. App. at 81. But it cannot be
discerned from the record that Dr. Ruggles even informed M s. Brock that he
suspected the nevus was benign; and it certainly cannot be said that the record
shows he counseled M s. Brock that all unusual lesions should be biopsied.
-14-
V.
In short, when read in the light most favorable to M s. Brock, the record
simply shows that Dr. Benjamin told M s. Brock that suspicious lesions should not
be burned off without first being biopsied, not that it was impossible to tell from
a visual examination that a lesion was not cancerous. Consequently, the evidence
was not sufficient to support the district court’s ruling that as a matter of law the
“fact of injury” was reasonably ascertainable to M s. Brock after her appointment
with Dr. Benjamin. The district court’s April 19, 2006, order granting summary
judgment to ARNP G atz and Dr. Reiger is therefore REVERSED and its judgment
of the same date in favor of A RNP Gatz and Dr. Reiger is VACATED. The case
is REM ANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this
order and judgment.
Entered for the Court
W ade Brorby
Senior Circuit Judge
-15-