Pamela Barrier, etc. v. JFK Medical Center Limited Partnership, etc., Palm Beach Emergency Medical Associates, P.L., etc., Jason Sevald, M.D., Armor Correctional Health Services, Inc., etc., Tanya Beaumont, L.P.N., Shara Davis, L.P.N., Patricia Salmon, L.P.N., Garry J. Beauzile, M.D., and Pierre Dorsainvil, M.D.
DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
FOURTH DISTRICT
PAMELA BARRIER, as Guardian of the Person and Property of CHAD A.
BARRIER,
Appellant,
v.
JFK MEDICAL CENTER LIMITED PARTNERSHIP, d/b/a JFK
MEDICAL CENTER, PALM BEACH EMERGENCY MEDICAL
ASSOCIATES, P.L., a limited liability corporation, JASON SEVALD,
M.D., ARMOR CORRECTIONAL HEALTH SERVICES, INC., a Florida
corporation, TANYA BEAUMONT, L.P.N., SHARA DAVIS, L.P.N.,
PATRICIA SALMON, L.P.N., GARRY J. BEAUZILE, M.D., and PIERRE
DORSAINVIL, M.D.,
Appellees.
No. 4D13-3041
[June 17, 2015]
Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
Beach County; Jack S. Cox, Judge; L.T. Case No.
502012CA022822XXXXMB.
Howard S. Grossman and Michael J. Ferrin of Grossman Attorneys at
Law, Boca Raton, and Joel S. Perwin of Joel S. Perwin, P.A., Miami, for
appellant.
Dinah Stein, Mark Hicks, Jedidiah Vander Klok, and Erik Bartenhagen
of Hicks, Porter, Ebenfeld & Stein, P.A., Miami, and Howard Citron of
Billing, Cochran, Lyles, Mauro & Ramsey, P.A., West Palm Beach, for
appellee JFK Medical Center Limited Partnership.
Debra Potter Klauber, James S. Haliczer and Renee L. Brant of Haliczer,
Pettis & Schwamm, Fort Lauderdale, for appellees Jason Sevald, M.D. and
Palm Beach Emergency Medical Associates, P.L.
Christopher J. Bailey and Elizabeth Russo of Russo Appellate Firm,
P.A., Miami, and Michaud, Mittelmark, Marowitz & Asrani, PLCC, Boca
Raton, for appellees Armor Correctional Health Services, Inc., Tanya
Beaumont, L.P.N., Shara Davis, L.P.N., Patricia Salmon, L.P.N., Garry J.
Beauzile, M.D. and Pierre Dorsainvil, M.D.
WARNER, J.
Appellant Pamela Barrier, as guardian of her incapacitated son Chad
Barrier, filed a medical malpractice claim on his behalf. The trial court
granted summary judgment for the defendants based on the statute of
limitations. It determined that the statute ran from the time appellant was
appointed emergency temporary guardian and had knowledge of the
possibility of medical malpractice. We hold that the knowledge of
appellant, if any, of possible malpractice, may not be imputed to her son
until he is determined to be incapacitated and she is appointed permanent
guardian of his property. We thus reverse.
In February 2010, Chad was transported to JFK Medical Center (“the
Hospital”) from a substance abuse treatment facility based on reports that
he had attempted to commit suicide by taking an overdose of Xanax. He
was discharged from the Hospital less than ten hours later. About nine
hours after his discharge, the same substance abuse treatment facility
called 911 to report that Chad had reported there in a lethargic state and
eventually become unresponsive. Chad was returned to the Hospital,
where an Atlantis Police Department officer discovered drugs in his
possession. He was discharged from the Hospital within two hours of his
arrival, into the custody of the Atlantis Police Department. Later that same
day, at the Palm Beach County Main Detention Center, Chad suffered
cardiac arrest as a result of the drug overdose. He went into a coma from
which he has not emerged.
Appellant petitioned to be appointed emergency temporary guardian
(“ETG”) of Chad’s person and property. She alleged Chad had not regained
consciousness after suffering cardiac arrest and was “in need of an
emergency guardian to make medical decisions for him, to handle his
insurance claims and to otherwise manage his medical and financial
affairs.” On April 13, 2010, the probate court appointed her ETG and
issued letters of guardianship granting her
[A]ll powers and duties given to a plenary guardian of the
person and property, including but not limited to authority to
consent to medical treatment for the ward and to demand,
obtain, review and release to others the medical records of the
ward.
The letters of guardianship provided that her authority expired in sixty
days. On May 19, 2010, before the temporary guardianship expired, Chad
was determined to be incompetent, and appellant was appointed Chad’s
plenary guardian of his person and property.
2
On July 19, 2012, after having received the ninety-day extension of the
statute of limitations under section 766.104(2), Florida Statutes, appellant
served notices of intent to initiate litigation for medical malpractice on
appellees. She followed up by filing a complaint for medical negligence,
alleging that both the Hospital and the medical personnel at the jail
(“Armor defendants”) were negligent in their care and treatment of Chad,
leading to his cardiac arrest and incapacity. The defendants all answered
and alleged that the statute of limitations had run on the causes of action.
They alleged that appellant would have learned of their medical negligence
on the date of the incident, because Chad was an otherwise healthy
individual, and his sudden pulmonary arrest and brain injury cannot be
considered “likely to have occurred from natural causes.” They argued
appellant’s knowledge was imputed to Chad when appellant was appointed
Chad’s ETG on April 13, 2010, thereby triggering the statute of limitations.
Appellant filed a response. She argued her appointment as ETG did
not impose a duty to file a malpractice suit, which duty arose only after
she was appointed plenary guardian on May 19, 2010. Thus, according to
appellant, the statute of limitations did not run out until August 17, 2012,
making her notices timely. Additionally, she argued there were disputes
of material fact as to whether she had sufficient notice to trigger the statute
of limitations.1
The court granted summary judgment for appellees. It found that,
upon her appointment as Chad’s ETG, appellant had a duty to investigate
a possible medical malpractice claim on his behalf. The court reasoned
that the April order appointing her ETG specifically indicated it was
imposing the duties of a plenary guardian. The court determined that
appellant’s knowledge of the injury itself was sufficient to trigger the
statute of limitations as of the date of her appointment as ETG, attributing
to her knowledge contained in the medical records. This appeal follows.
The main issue in this appeal is whether appellant’s appointment as
ETG created a legal duty towards Chad such that any knowledge of
malpractice appellant may have acquired could be imputed to her son and
thus trigger the commencement of the statute of limitations. We hold that
appellant’s knowledge, if any, of the possibility of medical negligence could
not be imputed to the ward for purposes of the running of the statute of
1 We omit any discussion of the merits of the medical malpractice claim itself, or
whether there was sufficient evidence that appellant had subjective knowledge of
the possibility of medical malpractice. Those issues are not relevant in this
appeal due to our conclusion that the statute of limitations could not commence
running prior to appellant’s appointment as plenary guardian of her son.
3
limitations during the period of her appointment as ETG. Such imputation
of knowledge could not occur until the ward was declared incompetent and
a permanent guardian of the property was appointed. Running the statute
of limitations from the date of appellant’s appointment as permanent
guardian, the notices of intent to initiate medical malpractice litigation
were timely served.
“An action for medical malpractice shall be commenced within 2 years
from the time the incident giving rise to the action occurred or within 2
years from the time the incident is discovered, or should have been
discovered with the exercise of due diligence . . . .” § 95.11(4)(b), Fla. Stat.
(2010).
In Tanner v. Hartog, 618 So. 2d 177 (Fla. 1993), our supreme court held
that, to trigger this statute, the plaintiff must have both knowledge of the
injury and “knowledge that there is a reasonable possibility that the injury
was caused by medical malpractice.” Id. at 181 (footnote omitted). Such
knowledge may not be imputed, however, to an adult who has no ability
to be consciously aware of such injury. In Arthur v. Unicare Health
Facilities, Inc., 602 So. 2d 596 (Fla. 2d DCA 1992), the Second District
reasoned that, by using the term “discovered” in section 95.11(4)(b),
Florida Statutes, “the legislature anticipated and intended an ability of
conscious awareness on the part of a victim of alleged malpractice to
trigger the statute running.” Id. at 599. Thus, where the victim was blind,
deaf, and senile, he could not “discover” the action, and notice could not
be imputed to him to commence the running of the statute of limitations.
Id.
Where the victim of the malpractice is an adult, knowledge of another
cannot be imputed to him unless that person has a legal duty, such as a
guardian’s duty, to protect the ward’s interest. For instance, in Thomas v.
Lopez, 982 So. 2d 64, 68 (Fla. 5th DCA 2008), the court held that, even if
the victim’s mother knew of malpractice, her knowledge could not be
imputed to her unconscious adult daughter prior to the mother’s
appointment as plenary guardian, because the mother had no duty to
pursue medical malpractice until her appointment.
The purpose of an emergency temporary guardianship is to protect a
person who has not as yet been declared incapacitated, where there is
imminent danger to the person’s health, safety, or property. Section
744.3031, Florida Statutes (2010), on ETGs provides:
(1) A court, prior to the appointment of a guardian but after a
petition for determination of incapacity has been filed
4
pursuant to this chapter, may appoint an emergency
temporary guardian for the person or property, or both, of
an alleged incapacitated person. The court must
specifically find that there appears to be imminent danger
that the physical or mental health or safety of the person
will be seriously impaired or that the person’s property is in
danger of being wasted, misappropriated, or lost unless
immediate action is taken. The subject of the proceeding
or any adult interested in the welfare of that person may
apply to the court in which the proceeding is pending for
the emergency appointment of a temporary guardian. The
powers and duties of the emergency temporary guardian
must be specifically enumerated by court order. . . .
(3) The authority of an emergency temporary guardian expires
90 days after the date of the appointment or when a
guardian is appointed, whichever occurs first. The
authority of the emergency temporary guardian may be
extended for an additional 90 days upon a showing that
the emergency conditions still exist.
(Emphasis added). The appointment of an ETG is thus an interim measure
for the time period between the filing of a petition to determine incapacity
and the actual determination of incapacity. By conferring rights on the
ETG, the court temporarily removes these rights from the allegedly
incapacitated person. See Jasser v. Saadeh, 97 So. 3d 241, 248 (Fla. 4th
DCA 2012). For instance, in Jasser, an ETG was appointed because the
court found that the potentially incapacitated person was in danger of
financial abuse and depletion of his accounts. Id. at 244 (ultimately
determining that the person was not incapacitated).
Appellant’s petition for appointment as ETG alleged that Chad was in a
coma and that he needed an emergency guardian to make medical
decisions for him and to “otherwise manage his medical and financial
affairs.” The petition did not specifically describe any imminent danger to
Chad or his property. The order appointing appellant as ETG did not
specifically enumerate the powers appellant could exercise. Instead, the
order simply stated that she had “[a]ll powers and duties given to a plenary
guardian of the person and property, including but not limited to authority
to consent to medical treatment for the ward and to demand, obtain,
review and release to others the medical records of the ward.” It did not
specifically enumerate the power or duty to sue.
5
An important part of the statutory framework is that an ETG’s powers
be “specifically enumerated by court order.” The term “plenary guardian”
is defined by statute and “means a person who has been appointed by the
court to exercise all delegable legal rights and powers of the ward after the
court has found that the ward lacks the capacity to perform all of the tasks
necessary to care for his or her person or property.” § 744.102(9)(b), Fla.
Stat. (2010). However, in another case where letters of guardianship for
an ETG gave plenary powers to the ETG without listing those powers, the
Fifth District indicated its disapproval of this practice of giving
unenumerated plenary powers to an ETG, saying: “The legislature, in
promulgating F.S. 744.3031, had a basis for requiring that an emergency
temporary guardian’s powers be enumerated[.]” Batzle v. Baraso, 776 So.
2d 1107, 1109 (Fla. 5th DCA 2001). Practitioners are also advised that
the statute requires the specific enumeration of powers for an ETG. See §
744.3031(1), Fla. Stat. (2010) (“The powers and duties of the emergency
temporary guardian must be specifically enumerated by court order.”);
David C. Brennan, Fla. Guardianship Law & Proc. § 6.5 (2d ed. June 2014)
(“Even if the emergency temporary guardian is to be given plenary powers,
those powers should be specifically enumerated.”). This is so because an
ETG is something of an anomaly. He or she assumes a guardianship over
a person not yet declared to be incapacitated and in need of a guardian.
Thus, an ETG’s powers should be limited to only those that are necessary
to protect the ward’s interests until the determination of incapacity (or
capacity) is made. The ETG statute protects a potentially incapacitated
individual during the short period of time necessary to determine
incapacity and set up the plenary guardianship, but only where there is
imminent danger to the ward or his property. See § 744.3031(1), Fla. Stat.
(2010) (“The court must specifically find that there appears to be imminent
danger that the physical or mental health or safety of the person will be
seriously impaired or that the person’s property is in danger of being
wasted, misappropriated, or lost unless immediate action is taken.”).
Thus, even if a court can simply designate that an ETG has “plenary”
powers and duties, those powers should be construed narrowly.
Our court has previously held that the potential knowledge of an ETG
of medical malpractice should not be imputed to an incapacitated
individual for the purposes of computing the running of the statute of
limitations. In Stone v. Rosenthal, 665 So. 2d 276 (Fla. 4th DCA 1995),
the victim of the alleged malpractice went into a coma during an operation,
and his wife was appointed the ETG of his person and property for about
three months.2 His son was then appointed permanent guardian of his
2 The governing statute on the date of her appointment did not allow for an ETG
to be guardian of the property. See § 744.3031, Fla. Stat. (1989). However,
6
person, but the record was unclear as to whether a guardian of the
property was appointed. After the ward died, the wife filed a malpractice
action as personal representative of his estate. The defendant doctor
claimed that the statute of limitations barred the action, measured either
from “the date the alleged malpractice occurred, the date Appellant started
to investigate it, the date she hired an attorney, or, at the latest, the date
[the son] was appointed as Stone’s permanent guardian.” Id. at 277.
Relying on Arthur, we concluded that the statute of limitations did not run
from any of those dates, because a guardian of the property had not been
appointed for the decedent. We specifically rejected the notion that the
ETG had the duty to file a malpractice action:
We do not believe that Appellant’s temporary status as
Stone’s emergency guardian imposed upon her the duty to file
a malpractice suit on his behalf. Nor does the record on
appeal show that [the son] (or anyone else) was appointed
permanent guardian of Stone’s property, nor does the record
indicate that he had notice of the possible malpractice at any
time earlier than two years prior to Appellant’s filing suit.
Id. at 278. The Stone opinion does not state whether the ETG was granted
the powers of a plenary guardian, although it does state that the ETG was
guardian of the person and property.
We agree with Stone that the temporary nature of an ETG’s
appointment does not impose the legal duty on the ETG to protect the
ward’s interest in a medical malpractice suit. The ETG’s purpose is to
secure the health and safety of the temporary ward until his capacity can
be determined and then, if necessary, a plenary guardian can be
appointed. This does not contemplate the pursuit of a medical malpractice
suit, which requires the retention of experts and careful analysis of the
care and treatment of the person, something that could never be
accomplished within the short duration of the appointment of an ETG. See
§ 744.3031(3), Fla. Stat. (2010) (providing that an ETG’s authority expires
90 days after his appointment, and may be extended for one additional 90-
day period); Batzle, 776 So. 2d at 1109 (extending ETG’s appointment for
an indefinite time period was a departure from the essential requirements
of law). Thus, whether the ETG had knowledge of the possibility of medical
shortly thereafter an amendment to the statute became effective which permitted
an ETG to act as guardian of the property also. See Ch. 90-271, Laws of Fla.,
(effective October 1, 1990). We presume that, when an extension of the ETG was
applied for, the court granted the wife authority as guardian of the property.
7
malpractice should not be imputed to the ward to commence the running
of the statute of limitations. Knowledge may be imputed from the date a
permanent plenary guardian of Chad’s property is appointed. Stone, 665
So. 2d at 278. We also construe Thomas as consistent with this position,
because Thomas held that the knowledge of the mother of the malpractice
victim could not be imputed to the victim “at least” until the mother was
appointed “plenary guardian.” 982 So. 2d at 68. We interpret this
language in Thomas as referring to a permanent plenary guardian, as that
is how section 744.102(9)(b) defines “plenary guardian.” See §
744.102(9)(b), Fla. Stat. (2010). Thus, Thomas would also suggest that
knowledge of an ETG should not be imputed for the purposes of the statute
of limitations.
Chad was not declared incapacitated and appellant appointed his
plenary guardian until May 19, 2010. Based upon that date, the action
for malpractice at issue here was filed within the statute of limitations.
For these reasons, we reverse the final summary judgment and remand
for further proceedings.
GROSS and FORST, JJ., concur.
* * *
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
8