Reed v. Campagnolo
Decision Date | 01 September 1993 |
Docket Number | No. 1,1 |
Citation | 630 A.2d 1145,332 Md. 226 |
Parties | Tina Smedley REED et al. v. Mary CAMPAGNOLO et al. Misc., |
Court | Maryland Court of Appeals |
Diane M. Janulis (Roy B. Cowdrey, Jr., Robert M. Messick, Jr., Cowdrey, Thompson & Karsten, PA, all on brief), Easton, for appellant.
Angus R. Everton (Diane S. Deros, Mason, Ketterman, and Morgan, Stanford H. Franklin, Gary S. Mandel, Franklin and Schapiro, all on brief), Baltimore, for appellee.
Argued before MURPHY, C.J., and ELDRIDGE, RODOWSKY, McAULIFFE, CHASANOW, KARWACKI and ROBERT M. BELL, JJ.
This case of alleged medical malpractice comes to us from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Certification of Questions of Law Act (the Act), Md.Code (1974, 1989 Repl.Vol.), §§ 12-601 through 12-609 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (CJ). The certified questions are:
Reed v. Campagnolo, 810 F.Supp. 167, 172-73 (D.Md.1993).
Under the Act, this Court considers "only questions of state law, not questions of fact." Mercantile-Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Purifoy, 280 Md. 46, 54, 371 A.2d 650, 655 (1977). We will not "evaluate or weigh the evidence, but instead [will] accept the statement of facts submitted by the certifying court." Food Fair Stores v. Joy, 283 Md. 205, 219 n. 7, 389 A.2d 874, 882 n. 7 (1978). The Act " 'does not authorize [this Court] to go beyond the questions certified in the order of the certifying court.' " Toll v. Moreno, 284 Md. 425, 437, 397 A.2d 1009, 1015 (1979) (quoting Krashes v. White, 275 Md. 549, 557, 341 A.2d 798, 802 (1975)); see also Public Serv. Comm'n v. Highfield Water Co., 293 Md. 1, 10, 441 A.2d 1031, 1035 (1982).
Plaintiffs, Tina Smedley Reed and Frederick E. Reed, seek damages against defendants, Mary Campagnolo, M.D. and Bruce Grund, M.D. Defendants rendered prenatal care to Mrs. Reed and her unborn child at a Caroline County Health Department maternity clinic beginning in January 1986, the third month of Mrs. Reed's pregnancy. 1
Id. (footnotes omitted).
Id. at 168 ( ).
In August 1989 the plaintiffs and Ashley Nicole made claim through the Health Claims Arbitration Office under the Maryland Health Care Malpractice Claims Act, CJ §§ 3-2A-01 through 3-2A-09. Thereafter, the parties waived arbitration, see CJ § 3-2A-06(A), and in February 1991 the plaintiffs filed their complaint with the United States District Court.
Initially that complaint contained three counts, described by the federal court as follows:
The plaintiffs subsequently abandoned Count III, which the federal court had read as undertaking to allege "a cause of action for wrongful life." Id. at 169.
The first certified question asks whether the claim alleged in Count I of the complaint states a cause of action under Maryland law. The allegations undertake to state what has been called a "wrongful birth" claim. W.P. Keeton, Prosser & Keeton on the Law of Torts § 55, at 370 (5th ed. 1984), succinctly states the background and context of this theory of liability.
(Footnote omitted).
The issue presented by the first certified question is whether the claim is simply a traditional negligence claim, as the Reeds contend, or whether the claim fails to withstand traditional tort analysis, as the defendants contend. If the latter, then the defendants submit that this Court should not recognize it as a new tort, but rather should defer to the General Assembly.
In Jones v. Malinowski, 299 Md. 257, 473 A.2d 429 (1984), we affirmed a judgment entered against a physician who, when undertaking to perform a bipolar tubal laparoscopy, misidentified the left Fallopian tube and cauterized the wrong structure. Id. at 260, 473 A.2d at 430. Citing numerous cases, we recognized as "well accepted" the proposition "[t]hat there is a cause of action in tort based upon traditional medical malpractice principles for negligence in the performance of a sterilization procedure." Id. at 263, 473 A.2d at 432. There the unplanned pregnancy resulted in the birth of a normal child. The principal issue in Jones was the measure of damages. We concluded that the trier of fact would be permitted "to consider awarding damages to parents for child rearing costs to the age of the child's majority, offset by the benefits derived by the parents from the child's aid, society and comfort." Id. at 270, 473 A.2d at 435. We thus recognized that there could be compensable injury to parents when a child is born as a result of medical negligence.
In the case now before us the alleged negligence of the physicians occurred after Mrs. Reed was pregnant and consists of a failure to offer or perform certain tests that "would have revealed the severe and irreversible birth defects of" Ashley Nicole. Brief of Appellants at 8, Complaint p 28. The plaintiffs then aver that "[r]easonably prudent prospective parents in similar circumstances, faced with the knowledge of severe birth defects such as those described above would have seriously considered and ultimately chosen termination of pregnancy at a stage safe to the mother." Id., Complaint p 31.
Although Jones v. Malinowski is not directly controlling, we shall apply here the same "traditional medical malpractice principles for negligence" analysis that was applied there. 299 Md. at 263, 473 A.2d at 432.
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