Wickens v. Oakwood Healthcare System

                                                                       Michigan Supreme Court
                                                                       Lansing, Michigan 48909
____________________________________________________________________________________________
                                                                C hief Justice                   Justices
                                                                Maura D. Cor rigan	



Opinion
                                                                                                 Michael F. Cavanagh
                                                                                                 Elizabeth A. Weaver
                                                                                                 Marilyn Kelly
                                                                                                 Clifford W. Taylor
                                                                                                 Robert P. Young, Jr.
                                                                                                 Stephen J. Markman
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

                                                                                      FILED JULY 24, 2001





                SANDRA J. WICKENS and DAVID WICKENS,


                        Plaintiff-Appellees,


                and


                BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELD,


                        Intervening Plaintiff,


                v                                                                                No. 117731


                OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE SYSTEM, an

                assumed name for OAKWOOD 

                HEALTHCARE, INC., BELLEVILLE

                HEALTH CARE CENTER, an assumed

                name for OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE 

                INC., DR. CHRISTOPHER PABIAN

                and OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER-

                CANTON, an assumed name for

                OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE, INC.,


                        Defendants-Appellants,

                and


                DR. PATRICIA NESTER,

                     Defendant.

                ________________________________
                BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH


                YOUNG, J. 

      The trial court directed a verdict in this medical


malpractice case in defendants’ favor on the basis that


plaintiff’s     claim    was     barred        by    MCL    600.2912a(2),    which


precludes recovery for “loss of an opportunity to survive”


unless the “opportunity was greater than 50%.”                        We hold that


a living person may not recover for loss of an opportunity to


survive, and that plaintiff’s claim is therefore barred to the


extent that it is based on such loss of opportunity.                               We


further hold that the trial court nevertheless erred in

dismissing plaintiff’s case in its entirety, because she has

made additional claims that are independent of her claim for


loss of an opportunity to survive. Accordingly, we reverse in

part and vacate in part the opinion of the Court of Appeals

and   remand    this    matter      to    the       trial     court   for   further


proceedings consistent with this opinion. 


                         I.    FACTS     AND   PROCEEDINGS

      Defendant        Oakwood      Healthcare             System     operates     an

outpatient medical clinic where plaintiff Sandra Wickens1

consulted defendant Dr. Christopher Pabian regarding a lump in

her   right    breast.        Dr.   Pabian          referred    plaintiff    for    a


mammogram that Oakwood personnel administered and interpreted


in April 1995.          The interpreter reported that the breast


tissue had abnormalities, but that they were not cause for


alarm because of plaintiff’s age, forty-eight, and her breast



    1
     Plaintiff David Wickens’ claim is derivative in nature.

For the sake of simplicity, we refer to Sandra Wickens as

“plaintiff.”

                                          2

tissue density.      She was told to get a repeat mammogram in six


months.


      In November 1995, plaintiff tried to get the repeat


mammogram, but Oakwood personnel incorrectly told her that her


insurance would not pay for a second mammogram within twelve


months.     Plaintiff waited the additional six months and had


another mammogram in May 1996, when the interpreter spotted a


mass in the right breast and recommended a biopsy.                     The


biopsy, performed two weeks later, revealed a malignancy.


      On May 29, 1996, plaintiff underwent a mastectomy to


remove her right breast and the adjacent lymph nodes.                  The

malignant lump in her breast measured about six centimeters in

diameter.      Nine    of    the   thirteen     lymph   nodes   contained


malignant tissue, indicating a substantial probability that

the   cancer   had    spread.       Plaintiff    underwent   postsurgery

chemotherapy and radiation treatments to minimize any chance


of spreading.

      In January 1997, plaintiff consulted doctors about a lump

in her left breast.          Although no malignancy was detected,


plaintiff underwent a mastectomy to remove her left breast.

That was followed with chemotherapy and radiation treatments.


      Plaintiff      filed   this    medical     malpractice    suit    in


September 1997, alleging that the one-year delay in diagnosing


her cancer constituted medical malpractice by the defendants.


She alleged that the defendants’ malpractice had caused her to


suffer a poorer prognosis of cure or long-term survival, a


reduction in the quality of life and life expectancy, the need

to undergo more radical intervention than would have been


                                     3

necessary a year earlier, and pain and suffering.


     Both   parties   deposed   plaintiff’s   expert,   Dr.   David


Schapira, an oncologist.        Dr. Schapira testified that the


malignant lump in plaintiff’s right breast would most likely


have measured less than two centimeters in April 1995; that at


that time fewer than nine of plaintiff’s lymph nodes, probably


between one and three, would have been affected by the cancer;


and that it was generally regarded that appropriate treatment


for a cancerous condition of that type would consist of a

lumpectomy and radiation therapy, rather than a mastectomy.


Moreover, according to Dr. Schapira, plaintiff’s probability

of living ten years after the 1996 diagnosis was fifteen

percent.    If plaintiff’s breast cancer had been diagnosed in


April 1995, she would have had (1) a seventy percent chance of

surviving ten years if the cancer involved only one lymph

node, or (2) a fifty-five percent chance of surviving ten


years if the cancer involved three lymph nodes.         On cross­
examination, Dr. Schapira opined that plaintiff’s cancer had

likely affected two or three lymph nodes in 1995. 


     Defendants filed a motion in limine for a directed

verdict, arguing that according to Dr. Schapira’s testimony,


plaintiff could not meet the requirements of MCL 600.2912a(2).


Section 2912a(2) provides:


          In an action alleging medical malpractice, the

     plaintiff has the burden of proving that he or she

     suffered an injury that more probably than not was

     proximately caused by the negligence of the

     defendant or defendants.    In an action alleging

     medical malpractice, the plaintiff cannot recover

     for loss of an opportunity to survive or an

     opportunity to achieve a better result unless the

     opportunity was greater than 50%.


                                 4

Defendants argued that Dr. Schapira’s testimony showed that


any malpractice by defendants reduced plaintiff’s probability


of surviving ten years by forty percent.2       Because defendants


calculated   plaintiff’s   loss   at   only   forty   percent,   they


contended that she therefore could not prove that she lost a


greater than fifty percent opportunity to survive, as required


by § 2912a(2).


       The trial court agreed and granted defendants’ motion,


dismissing plaintiff’s entire case. 


       The Court of Appeals reversed, holding that § 2912a(2)


only requires that the plaintiff demonstrate that had the

defendant not been negligent, there was a greater than fifty

percent opportunity to survive.3       Additionally, the Court of


Appeals held that plaintiff satisfied § 2912a(2) by presenting

expert testimony that she would have had a fifty-five to

seventy percent chance of surviving ten years if her cancer


had been diagnosed in April 1995.        The panel further ruled

that the trial court should not have dismissed plaintiff’s

case in its entirety:


            Plaintiffs further argue that the trial court

       erred in not allowing this case to proceed to trial

       on their claim that, as a result of defendants’

       negligence, Wickens was deprived of the opportunity

       for a better result. We agree. Pursuant to MCR

       2.515, a “party may move for a directed verdict at

       the close of the evidence offered by an opponent.

       The motion must state specific grounds in support


  2
   Defendants arrived at forty percent by subtracting the May

1996 ten-year survival rate of fifteen percent from the April

1995 rate of fifty-five percent, given Dr. Schapira’s opinion

that the cancer had likely affected two to three lymph nodes

in 1995.

   3
   242 Mich App 385; 619 NW2d 7 (2000).

                                   5

     of the motion.” . . . Thus, the trial court erred

     in dismissing plaintiffs’ entire cause of action

     without affording plaintiffs the opportunity to

     present their case at trial.      Furthermore, the

     trial court’s dismissal of plaintiffs’ entire cause

     of action was erroneous because defendants merely

     discussed plaintiffs’ claim for loss of opportunity

     to survive in their motion for directed verdict.

     [242 Mich App 393.] 


     We granted defendants’ application for leave to appeal,


directing the parties to brief the issue whether a living


plaintiff   can   bring    a    cause    of    action    for    loss   of   an


opportunity to survive when the claimed injury is a reduction


in her projected chances of long-term survival.4



                           II. STANDARD   OF   REVIEW


     Before trial, defendants filed a motion in limine for

directed verdict to dismiss plaintiff’s claims for loss of an

opportunity to survive and loss of an opportunity to achieve


a better result.       At the hearing on the motion, however,

defendants referred to the motion as “defendants[’] motion for

summary disposition, directed verdict.”                  The trial court


granted the motion for defendants, on the basis of defendants’

interpretation of § 2912a(2).           Because MCR 2.515 states that

“[a] party may move for a directed verdict at the close of the


evidence    offered   by   an   opponent[,]”        we   find   defendants’


characterization of the motion as a directed verdict at the


pretrial stage incorrect. Motions for summary disposition are


brought at this stage, and we therefore treat defendants


motion as a motion for summary disposition.                      This Court


    4
     463 Mich 907 (2000). The order continued the stay of

proceedings in the Wayne Circuit Court that we had previously

ordered on October 20, 2000.

                                    6

reviews a trial court’s decision to grant summary disposition


de novo.      Sewell v Southfield Pub Schs, 456 Mich 670, 674; 576


NW2d    153     (1998).             Similarly,          questions         of    statutory


interpretation           are        reviewed       de     novo.            In    re   MCI


Telecommunications, 460 Mich 396, 413; 596 NW2d 164 (1999).



                                    III.    ANALYSIS

                A. 	A LIVING PLAINTIFF MAY NOT RECOVER FOR 

                     LOSS OF AN OPPORTUNITY TO SURVIVE


       Plaintiff contends that she can recover for the reduction


in her chances of survival caused by the delayed diagnosis as


a   claim     for   loss       of    an    opportunity         to    survive     under   §

2912a(2). We reject plaintiff’s contention that a living

plaintiff may recover for a loss of an opportunity to survive


under § 2912a(2) because it is contrary to the Legislature’s

intent, as evidenced by the statute’s plain language.

       The paramount rule of statutory interpretation is that we


are to effect the intent of the Legislature.                          Tryc v Michigan

Veterans’ Facility, 451 Mich 129, 135; 545 NW2d 642 (1996).

To do so, we begin with the statute’s language.                                   If the


statute’s language is clear and unambiguous, we assume that

the Legislature intended its plain meaning, and we enforce the


statute as written.             People v Stone, 463 Mich 558, 562; 621


NW2d 702 (2001).           In reviewing the statute’s language, every


word    should      be     given      meaning,          and    we    should      avoid   a


construction        that    would         render    any       part   of    the    statute


surplusage or nugatory.               Altman v Meridian Twp, 439 Mich 623,


635; 487 NW2d 155 (1992).

       The first sentence of § 2912a(2) provides, “In an action


                                             7

alleging medical malpractice, the plaintiff has the burden of


proving that he or she suffered an injury that more probably


than not was proximately caused by the negligence of the


defendant or defendants.”          The plain language of the statute,


therefore, expressly limits recovery to injuries that have


already been suffered and more probably than not were caused


by the defendant’s malpractice.             Thus, plaintiff can only


recover for a present injury, not for a potential future


injury.   Plaintiff claims that a living plaintiff who suffers


a reduction in chances of long-term survival because of


medical malpractice may have a cause of action for loss of an

opportunity to survive under the statute.              The testimony that

plaintiff’s   chances    of    surviving     for       a    ten-year   period


decreased,    however,   is    evidence      of    a       potential   future

injury–death–which is not an injury already suffered, as

required by the plain language of the statute.                    Thus, a loss


of an opportunity to survive claim only encompasses injuries

already suffered, which clearly limits recovery to situations

where death has already occurred.                 Because the evidence


concerning the reduction in her chances of survival over a

ten-year period is relevant only to her potential, future


death, the living plaintiff in this case may not recover for


this “loss of opportunity.”


               B. 	THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DISMISSING

                       PLAINTIFF ’S ENTIRE CASE


     Plaintiff   alleged      in    her   complaint        that    defendants’


negligent one-year delay in diagnosing her breast cancer

caused past and future damages including, inter alia, the need



                                     8

for more invasive medical treatments, emotional trauma, and

pain and suffering. Defendants sought a “directed verdict” on


a theory that plaintiff’s claim was precluded by subsection


2912a(2).    In support of their motion, defendants relied


solely on the uncontested expert testimony that the one-year


delay in plaintiff’s diagnosis and treatment caused her ten­

year-survival rate to be reduced from fifty-five percent to


fifteen percent.


      The trial court erred in dismissing plaintiff’s entire


case on the ground that it was barred by application of


subsection 2912a(2).        The ten-year-survival-rate statistics

say nothing about plaintiff’s chances of avoiding the other

injuries she allegedly suffered, such as (1) the more invasive


medical   treatments      caused   by    the   one-year   delay    in   her

diagnosis,   (2)    the   emotional      trauma   attributable     to   her

unnecessarily worsened physical condition, and (3) the pain


and   suffering    attributable    to    her   unnecessarily      worsened

physical condition.       Because of these alleged injuries, the

trial court should not have dismissed plaintiff’s case in its


entirety on the basis of subsection 2912a(2).

      In light of our determination that a living plaintiff may


not recover for loss of an opportunity to survive and that


plaintiff pleaded a cause of action for her injuries from the


more invasive medical procedures she incurred on account of


the alleged negligent delay in diagnosis, it was unnecessary


for the lower courts to have addressed whether plaintiff had


a cause of action solely on the basis of the reduction in her

ten-year survival rate.       Accordingly, we vacate that portion


                                    9

of the Court of Appeals opinion.



                          IV. CONCLUSION


     In light of the plain language of MCL 600.2912a(2), which


allows recovery only for injuries that have already been


suffered, we conclude that a living plaintiff may not recover


for loss of an opportunity to survive on the basis of a


decrease in her chances of long-term survival.           We further


conclude that, although plaintiff may not recover for loss of


an   opportunity   to   survive,   the   trial   court   improperly

dismissed her remaining claims, which are not premised upon

her decreased chances of long-term survival.       Accordingly, we


reverse in part and vacate in part the opinion of the Court of

Appeals and remand plaintiff’s case to the trial court for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.


      CORRIGAN , C.J., and TAYLOR and MARKMAN , JJ., concurred with

YOUNG, J.





                                10

                 S T A T E      O F   M I C H I G A N


                               SUPREME COURT





SANDRA J. WICKENS and DAVID WICKENS,


       Plaintiff-Appellees,


and                                                         No. 117731

BLUE CROSS/BLUE SHIELD,

       Intervening Plaintiff,

v

OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE SYSTEM, an

assumed name for OAKWOOD 

HEALTHCARE, INC., BELLEVILLE

HEALTH CARE CENTER, an assumed

name for OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE 

INC., DR. CHRISTOPHER PABIAN

and OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE CENTER-

CANTON, an assumed name for

OAKWOOD HEALTHCARE, INC.,

       Defendants-Appellants,


and


DR. PATRICIA NESTER,

     Defendant.

________________________________

CAVANAGH, J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).


       I concur with the majority’s holding that a living person


may not recover for a loss of an opportunity to survive under


the    plain   language   of    MCL   600.2912a(2).   The    majority,


however, also holds that the evidence concerning plaintiff’s

reduced life expectancy is relevant only to her potential


future death. Thus, the majority fails to address whether


plaintiff may recover for injuries suffered as a result of


learning of her reduced life expectancy under the statute as


a loss of an opportunity to achieve a better result.               Because


I believe that a living person may recover for injuries


suffered as a result of learning of a reduction in life


expectancy as a loss of an opportunity to achieve a better


result and that the evidence concerning plaintiff’s reduced


life expectancy is relevant to whether defendant caused these


injuries, I respectfully dissent.

     Plaintiff asserts she may recover for her reduction in

life expectancy as either a claim for loss of an opportunity


to survive or loss of an opportunity to achieve a better

result    under   §   2912a(2).        I    agree   with   the   majority’s

reasoning that under the plain language of § 2912a(2), a


living person may not recover for a loss of an opportunity to

survive.      However,     the    statute      also    provides    for   an

alternative claim, loss of an opportunity to achieve a better


result.     Thus, I would conclude that a living person may

recover for injuries suffered as a result of learning of a


reduction in life expectancy under that claim, if there is


evidence that the defendant more probably than not caused the


injury.    I believe plaintiff satisfied this burden.


     The    first     sentence    of   §    2912a(2)   expressly    limits


recovery to injuries that have already been suffered and more


probably than not were caused by defendant’s malpractice.

Thus, as the majority notes, the plaintiff can only recover


                                       2

for a present injury, not for a potential future injury.


Although this precludes plaintiff from asserting a claim for


loss of an opportunity to survive, it does not preclude


plaintiff from asserting a claim for loss of an opportunity to


achieve a better result, as the majority contends.             The


statute allows for recovery for injuries already suffered. In


this case, the injuries already suffered are the pain and


suffering,   that    were   generated   by   the   knowledge   that


plaintiff’s chances of living ten years severely decreased.


Thus, plaintiff’s claim for such injuries already suffered as


a result of defendant’s malpractice would satisfy the first

requirement, that there be a present injury.         However, the

correct claim is for a loss of an opportunity to achieve a


better result.      Plaintiff asserted a claim for loss of an

opportunity to achieve a better result on the basis of her

reduced life expectancy.       Therefore, the next question is


whether summary disposition on this alternative claim was

proper.

     The second sentence of § 2912a(2) states that a plaintiff


may not recover for a loss of an opportunity to survive or

achieve a better result “unless the opportunity was greater


than 50%.” The statute is clear that the Legislature intended


the word “opportunity” in that phrase to mean the opportunity


a plaintiff had to survive or achieve a better result, absent


any malpractice.    Thus, the statute clearly requires that the


premalpractice opportunity to survive or achieve a better


result must exceed fifty percent for a plaintiff to recover.




                                 3

       In this case, plaintiff’s expert Dr. Schapira testified


that, had plaintiff’s cancer been properly diagnosed, her


lowest ten-year survival rate percentage would have been


fifty-five percent. Regarding plaintiff’s injury of undergoing


more invasive medical procedures, Dr. Schapira testified that


the delayed diagnosis caused the cancer to spread to more


lymph nodes, necessitating these procedures.                           This injury is


clearly   one          hundred      percent       attributable      to     defendant’s


delayed diagnosis. Thus, viewing the evidence in a light most


favorable to plaintiff, she submitted evidence that would


allow a jury to conclude that her premalpractice opportunity

to achieve a better result was greater than fifty percent,

and,    therefore,            summary      disposition       of    that     claim   was


improper.         

       The next question to address is what damages, if any,

plaintiff may recover for a reduction in life expectancy.                            As


this opinion previously discussed, the first sentence of §

2912a(2) limits a plaintiff’s recovery to injuries already

suffered and that were more probably than not caused by


defendant’s malpractice. Thus, plaintiff can only recover for

a   present           injury,      not     for    a   potential     future      injury.


Plaintiff’s injury of having to undergo more radical treatment


is a present injury, and, thus, is recoverable under the


statute      as       an     injury      suffered.       The      additional     injury


plaintiff suffered as a result of defendant’s malpractice was


that   her    chance          to    live    beyond     ten     years     was   severely


decreased.             The      majority          asserts       that       plaintiff’s

premalpractice             chance     of    surviving    ten      years,    fifty-five


                                                 4

percent in this case, is irrelevant to whether the defendant


caused the injuries suffered, i.e., pain and suffering, as a


result of learning about the reduction in that chance of


survival.      I   disagree.       The     only      way    defendant    caused


plaintiff’s    secondary     injury      of    pain    and    suffering    from


learning of her reduced life expectancy is if defendant caused


plaintiff’s primary injury, the reduction in plaintiff’s life


expectancy.    The secondary injury, the pain and suffering,


will always be one hundred percent attributable to the primary

injury, thus, we must make sure defendant caused the primary


injury. To ensure defendant more probably than not caused the

primary injury and, thus, the resulting secondary injury,

plaintiff must prove that the primary injury meets the greater


than   fifty   percent      threshold.         Evidence       supporting    the

assertion that defendant’s negligence more probably than not

caused this injury was plaintiff’s expert who opined that


defendant’s failure to timely diagnose plaintiff’s breast

cancer caused plaintiff’s fifty-five percent premalpractice

chance to live ten years to decrease to fifteen percent. This


evidence, which shows that plaintiff had a better than even

chance of living ten years before defendant’s malpractice,


supports a finding that defendant, not plaintiff’s cancer,


more   probably    than     not   caused      the     injury.     Plaintiff,


therefore, submitted evidence that would allow a jury to


conclude that her premalpractice opportunity to achieve a


better   result,    i.e.,    to   avoid       pain    and    suffering    after


learning of her reduced life expectancy, was greater than

fifty percent, and, therefore, summary disposition of that


                                    5

claim was improper. Thus, I would conclude that the reduction


in plaintiff’s better than even chance to live ten years is a


recoverable injury under the statute; however, the correct


claim is for loss of an opportunity to achieve a better


result, and plaintiff can only recover for the pain and


suffering generated by the knowledge that her chances of


living ten years severely decreased.


                         CONCLUSION


     In light of the plain language of MCL 600.2912a(2), I


would conclude that a living person may not recover for a


reduction in life expectancy as a loss of an opportunity to

survive, but may recover for a reduced life expectancy as a

loss of an opportunity to achieve a better result.         The


recovery for a reduction in life expectancy as a loss of an

opportunity to achieve a better result claim is not based on

the plaintiff’s potential future death, but is limited to the


emotional damages already suffered.     However, to recover for

a loss of either an opportunity to survive or achieve a better

result, the opportunity, absent any malpractice, must have


been greater than fifty percent to ensure that defendant’s

malpractice more probably than not caused the injury.      The


Court of Appeals applied this interpretation of § 2912a(2) and


held that plaintiff’s loss of opportunity to achieve a better


result claim was erroneously dismissed because she submitted


evidence that, had defendants properly diagnosed her breast


cancer, she would have had at least a fifty-five percent


chance of surviving ten years. I would, therefore, affirm the

judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand plaintiff’s case


                              6

to the trial court for proceedings consistent with this


opinion.


     WEAVER and KELLY , JJ., concurred with CAVANAGH , J.





                                7