Kreutz v. Curators of the Univ. of Missouri

Decision Date13 December 2011
Docket NumberNo. WD 72964.,WD 72964.
Citation363 S.W.3d 61
PartiesRichard KREUTZ, Sr., Surviving Father of Richard Kreutz, Jr., Deceased, and Susan Kreutz, Surviving Mother of Richard Kreutz, Jr., Deceased, Appellants, v. CURATORS OF the UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI, et al., Respondents.
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Supreme Court Denied Jan. 31, 2012.

Application for Transfer Denied

May 1, 2012.

Leonard Cervantes, St. Louis, MO, for Appellants.

Sara Obermark, St. Louis, MO, for Respondents, Ordways and Life Christian.

Colly Durley, Columbia, MO, for Respondent, Kraatz.

Before: ALOK AHUJA, P.J., THOMAS H. NEWTON, and JAMES EDWARD WELSH, JJ.

THOMAS H. NEWTON, Judge.

Mr. Richard Kreutz, Sr., and Mrs. Susan Kreutz appeal the dismissal of their petition seeking damages for the wrongful death of their son, Mr. Richard Kreutz, Jr. The trial court dismissed the Kreutzes' petition because the health care affidavits required to be filed with the petition by section 538.225 failed to comply with the statute in that the doctor opining that the defendant health care providers breached the standard of care, was not a “legally qualified health care provider,” as defined by the statute. Additionally, the trial court dismissed the petition against The Board of Curators of the University of Missouri (the Board) on the ground of sovereign immunity. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

The following facts were taken from the petition. On November 27, 2006, Mr. Kreutz, Jr., a mentally impaired man, was treated for burns on his hands at University Hospital in Columbia, Missouri. Dr. James Kraatz, the treating physician, debrided 1 the burns and gave him morphine for the pain. The hospital released him to the care of personnel at Lighthouse Group Home, where he lived. The following afternoon, Mr. Kreutz, Jr., was found unresponsive with shallow respiration. An unconscious Mr. Kreutz, Jr., was readmitted to University Hospital with respiratory failure. His condition deteriorated; he was diagnosed with anoxic ischemia and drug exposure/poisoning. He was transported to a hospital in St. Louis, near the Kreutzes, that specialized in rehabilitation for ventilator weaning. A little over a month later, Mr. Kreutz, Jr., was unresponsive and pulseless. He was declared dead on January 23, 2007; the cause of death was “complications of hypoxic encephalopathy [loss of oxygen to the brain] following debridement of thermal burns.”

On January 7, 2010, the Kreutzes filed their petition for damages for wrongful death against Dr. Kraatz; the Board d/b/a University Hospital; Life Christian Outreach, Inc., the company operating the group home; and its owners Linda Ordway and Greg Ordway d/b/a WW Country Home and Lighthouse Group Home (collectively “the Defendants). The Kreutzes' attorney filed affidavits pursuant to section 538.225,2 alleging that he had obtained the written opinion of Dr. Richard Payne, the pathologist who performed the autopsy of Mr. Kreutz, asserting that each defendant failed “to use such care as a reasonably prudent and careful health care provider would have under similar circumstances and that such failure to use such reasonable care directly caused or directly contributed to cause the damages claimed in the Petition.”

The Defendants filed motions to strike the affidavits because they did not meet the standards set forth in section 538.225. They alleged that Dr. Payne did not meet the statutory criteria of a “legally qualified health care provider” because he was not actively practicing and had not actively practiced within five years of retirement “substantially the same specialty” as Dr. Kraatz, a surgeon, or Life Christian Outreach, Inc., a group home for the mentally disabled. The Kreutzes filed an affidavit by Dr. Payne explaining his experience with and knowledge of the administration of morphine. The court struck the health care affidavits, and the Defendants filed motions to dismiss for failure to file the required health care affidavits. The Board also sought dismissal as a defendant under the doctrine of sovereign immunity. The motion court dismissed the petition without prejudice 3 for failure to comply with section 538.225 and, as to the Board, on the ground of sovereign immunity. The Kreutzes appeal.

Standard of Review

Whether a health care affidavit complies with section 538.225 is a question of law, which we review de novo. Spradling v. SSM Health Care St. Louis, 313 S.W.3d 683, 686 (Mo. banc 2010). In our review, we consider the plain meaning of the language used to discern the legislature's intent. Id. Whether sovereign immunity applies to a defendant is also a question of law to be reviewed de novo. See Ogden v. Iowa Tribe of Kan. & Neb., 250 S.W.3d 822, 824 (Mo.App. W.D.2008).

Legal Analysis

In their first point, the Kreutzes argue that the trial court erred in striking the section 538.225 affidavits and in dismissing the petition because Dr. Payne was a “legally qualified health care provider” in that he was practicing “substantially the same specialty” as the Defendants. They argue that Dr. Payne was legally qualified because the issue in the case involved the administration and monitoring of medicine, which Dr. Payne had experience with as a medical doctor. The Kreutzes rely on Spradling. Their reliance is misplaced.

Section 538.225.2 states, ‘legally qualified health care provider’ shall mean a health care provider licensed in this state or any other state in the same profession as the defendant and either actively practicing or within five years of retirement from actively practicing substantially the same specialty as the defendant.” Recently, the Missouri Supreme Court interpreted “substantially the same specialty as the defendant to include doctors who may not share the same board certification as the defendant doctor but perform the same procedure as the defendant doctor. Spradling, 313 S.W.3d at 689. According to the supreme court, a physician could be of “substantially the same specialty” if he had “an expertise in the medical procedure at issue,” whatever his specific certifications or lack thereof. Id. The doctor providing an opinion of a breach of the standard of care causing the plaintiff's damages in the healthcare affidavit in Spradling met this standard because he was actively performing the procedure at issue, vertebroplasty, although he was not certified in the same medical specialty as the defendant doctor. Id.

The legislature requires that the healthcare provider actively practice under similar circumstances in order to provide an opinion that a defendant doctor breached the necessary standard of care in the profession and thereby caused a plaintiff's pleaded damages, and we must give effect to that intent. See Spradling, 313 S.W.3d at 688. In his affidavit, Dr. Payne claims that he knows a patient should be monitored after receiving morphine from his experience with the toxicity of morphine and knowledge of the administration of morphine, but he does not allege that he actively administered morphine or that he had retired from doing so within the previous five years. Because he was not actively practicing, or within five years of retiring from practicing, the administration of morphine or the post-administration monitoring of patients, Dr. Payne was not a legally qualified health care provider. The trial court did not err in striking the affidavits or dismissing the petition for failure to file the mandatory health care affidavits. The Kreutzes' first point is denied.4

In their second point, the Kreutzes argue that the trial court erred in granting the Board's motion to dismiss on the ground of sovereign immunity because they alleged “that Defendant Curators directed and/or encouraged its agents, servants and/or employees including Defendant Kraatz to prematurely discharge decedent from its hospital,” thereby contributing to his death. The Kreutzes argue that...

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6 cases
  • Washington v. City of St. Louis
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Eastern District of Missouri
    • March 31, 2022
    ...relationship with the PFPC effects a waiver of its sovereign immunity as to Plaintiff's claim. See Kreutz v. Curators of Univ. of Missouri. , 363 S.W.3d 61, 63-64 (Mo. Ct. App. 2011) ("Whether sovereign immunity applies to a defendant is ... a question of law.").Previously, this Court has d......
  • Crouch v. City of Kan. City
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • August 5, 2014
    ...petition. Rule 74.04(c). “Whether sovereign immunity applies to a defendant is ... a question of law.” Kreutz v. Curators of Univ. of Mo., 363 S.W.3d 61, 63–64 (Mo.App.W.D.2011). And “Missouri courts have routinely held that sovereign immunity is not an affirmative defense and that the plai......
  • Caplinger v. Salim Rahman, M.D. & Salim Rahman, M.D., L. L.C.
    • United States
    • Missouri Court of Appeals
    • August 14, 2017
    ...466 S.W.3d at 696. We deny Plaintiff's first complaint, but agree with the second and decline to follow Kreutz v. Curators of Univ. of Missouri, 363 S.W.3d 61 (Mo.App. W.D. 2011), to the extent it suggests otherwise. We reverse the judgment of dismissal and remand for further proceedings.Th......
  • Pennington-Thurman v. Christian Hosp. Ne.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Eastern District of Missouri
    • October 22, 2019
    ...breached the necessary standard of care in the profession and thereby caused a plaintiff's pleaded damages[.]" Kruetz v. Curators of Univ. of Mo., 363 S.W.3d 61, 64 (Mo.App. 2011). "If the plaintiff or his attorney fails to file such affidavit, the court shall, upon motion of any party, dis......
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