Appeals court clarifies "concealment" exception to medical
malpractice claims
By Joe Forward, Legal
Writer, State Bar of Wisconsin
May 28, 2010 – In Pagoudis
v. Korkos, 2009AP2965 (May 26, 2010), the appeals court held
that a patient must have contact with a doctor subsequent to a negligent
act to invoke the "concealment" exception to the statute of limitations
for medical malpractice claims.
On Feb. 15, 2000 , Dr. George Korkos removed a large tumor
from the neck of Elias Pagoudis. A final pathology report dated March 8,
2000 revealed that the tumor was cancerous, and close follow-up was
recommended. A note in Pagoudis's file indicated that he visited Dr.
Korkos's office and was notified of the final pathology report on March
15, 2000. Pagoudis disputes this.
Pagoudis claims he never knew about the final pathology report. He
only learned of it, Pagoudis asserts, when he requested medical records
in July of 2007 because of a reoccurrence.
Pagoudis filed a law suit on Nov. 14, 2008 against the doctor's
office and the Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund. He claims Dr.
Korkos "failed to inform him of the final pathology report results and
failed to require follow-up care associated with his medical
condition."
Court analysis
Dr. Korkos requested summary judgment based on Wis. Stat. section 893.55(1m)(b),
which sets a five-year statute of limitations on medical malpractice
claims from the date of the act or omission, regardless of when the
injury was discovered or should have been discovered. Pagoudis
discovered the injury in 2007 and the injury occurred in 2000.
Dr. Korkos fabricated a patient-file note, Pagoudis alleges, to
conceal his failure to inform Pagoudis of the final pathology report.
Thus, Pagoudis invoked a "concealment" exception to the statute of
limitations under section 893.55(2),
claiming the note evidenced concealment.
The circuit court granted summary judgment in favor of Dr. Korkos
because Pagoudis failed to establish that Dr. Korkos concealed his
failure to inform. The appeals court affirmed.
The critical inquiry under section 893.55(2), the appeals court
wrote, is whether "there are any facts to show that Korkos concealed the
prior omission from Pagoudis," causing delay in bringing suit
before the right of recovery was extinguished by the statute of
limitations.
The exception only applies, the court noted, "when concealment from
the patient prevents or hinders discovery of the negligent act or
omission" before the statute of limitations runs.
The court distinguished Halverson v. Tydrich, 156 Wis. 2d
202, 456 N.W.2d 852 (Ct. App. 1990), a case in which a doctor failed to
recognize the cause of a patient's continued foot and ankle problems
when he should have recognized them. It was determined that the doctors
involved may have given negligent advice and treatment that would have
prevented a lawsuit during the statutory period.
The appeals court noted that in Halverson, "a genuine issue
of material fact existed as to whether [the doctors] had recognized the
injury – had actual knowledge of the thing
concealed – and, during subsequent treatment …
intentionally failed to disclose it."
Here, the mere existence of a note in the medical file, the court
concluded, is not evidence of concealment. Whether the note was
fabricated or not, "there is no evidence that the note prevented
Pagoudis from discovering the negligence" before the statute of
limitations ran.
Dr. Korkos had no opportunity to conceal any negligence, the court
found, because there was no doctor-patient communication after Korkos
obtained the final pathology report. That is, there was no opportunity
to conceal.
Concealment under section 893.55(2) requires subsequent contact
between doctor and patient after the injury or knowledge of injury
occurs, the court held. Pagoudis "failed to demonstrate that Korkos's
alleged concealment caused Pagoudis's delay in discovering the negligent
omission" until after the statute of limitations period expired, the
court concluded.