The decedent was admitted to Good Samaritan Hospital in
October of 2002 for a hapatorenal arterial by-pass procedure. Monford Wolf,
M.D., a board-certified anesthesiologist, administered an epidural anesthesia to
the decedent. Jeffery Breslin, M.D., a vascular surgeon, performed the by-pass
procedure. Allegedly caused by the epidural, the decedent suffered a spinal cord
injury and an epidural hematoma. As a result, the decedent was paralyzed from
the waist down and ultimately died on March 8, 2004.
The personal representative of the estate filed a claim
alleging Dr. Breslin deviated from the standard of care. A health claims
arbitration proceeding was, held pursuant to § 3-2A-03, on July 30, 2004.
The Plaintiff filed a Certificate of Merit to accompany his claim as
required by the Healthcare Malpractice Claims Act. Arbitration was waived
and the action was transferred to the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. The
named Defendants included Dr. Wolf, the anesthesiologist, and Plaintiff
later amended to include the professional associations, the hospitals, and
Dr. Breslin and his professional association. A revised certificate
accompanied the amended Complaint which identified Ronald Burt, M.D., a
board-certified anesthesiologist as the expert. During Dr. Burt’s
deposition, he was asked about his qualifications to testify about the
standard of care for a vascular surgeon. He stated that he did not hold
himself out as an expert in vascular surgery or general surgery. His only
field of expertise was anesthesiology.
Based on the foregoing, Defendant Dr. Breslin filed a
Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, a Motion for Summary Judgment due
to Plaintiff’s failure to comply with the Certificate of Merit requirement
of § 3-2A-02. The statutory requirement mandates that an expert must be able
to testify as to the departure of the standards of care, be board-certified
and have clinical, consulting, or teaching experience relevant to the
Defendant healthcare provider’s specialty. The Circuit Court granted summary
judgment in favor of Dr. Breslin because Dr. Burt was not qualified to
testify regarding the alleged breach of post-operative standard of care of
Dr. Breslin.
Plaintiff filed an appeal to the Court of Special
Appeals. Plaintiff argued that failure to submit a Certificate of Merit
pursuant to § 3-2A-02(c)(2)(ii) should result in a dismissal without
prejudice, not summary judgment in favor of the Defendant. The Court of
Special Appeals reversed the trial court.
The Court of Appeals affirmed the reversal explaining
that dismissal without prejudice does not undermine legislative intent.
Instead, dismissal without prejudice balances the interests of a Plaintiff
with a malpractice claim and preventing frivolous claims from moving forward
in litigation. By requiring a dismissal without prejudice, a Plaintiff can
have the opportunity to re-file, assuming the statute of limitations is not
expired, if a qualified expert can later attest in a Certificate to the
departure of the standard of care. Accordingly, the Court of Appeals
affirmed the Court of Special Appeals’ reversal of summary judgment in favor
of the Defendant with instructions that the action be dismissed without
prejudice.