Henry et al v. Mullis et al
Filing
22
OPINION AND ORDER denying 15 Motion to Dismiss Party ; granting 19 Motion to Consolidate Cases into case 15-5288. Signed by Honorable Timothy L. Brooks on June 24, 2016. (src) Modified on 6/24/2016 (src).
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS
FAYETTEVILLE DIVISION
DENNIS HENRY and KAREN HENRY,
Husband and Wife
V.
PLAINTIFFS
CASE NO. 5:15-CV-5288
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and
RONALD MULLIS, M.D.
DEFENDANTS
and
DENNIS HENRY and KAREN HENRY,
Husband and Wife
V.
PLAINTIFFS
CASE NO. 5:16-CV-5051
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and
RONALD MULLIS, M.D.
DEFENDANTS
and
KAREN HENRY
V.
PLAINTIFF
CASE NO. 5:16-CV-5098
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and
RONALD MULLIS, M.D.
DEFENDANTS
OPINION AND ORDER
Currently before the Court in Henry et al. v. United States et al. , Case No. 5:15-cv5288 ("Henry f' ) are:
•
Plaintiffs Dennis and Karen Henry's Motion to Consolidate Actions (Doc. 27) and
Defendant United States's Response (Doc. 28); and
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•
the Court's Show Cause Order (Doc. 19), Plaintiffs' Response (Doc. 23),
Defendant United States' Reply (Doc. 24), and Plaintiffs' Sur-reply (Doc. 26).
Also currently before the Court in Henry et al. v. United States et al., Case No. 5: 16-cv5051 ("Henry If') are:
•
Defendant United States' Motion to Dismiss Party (Doc. 15) and Brief in Support
(Doc. 16), and Plaintiffs Dennis and Karen Henry's Response (Doc. 18); and
•
Plaintiffs' Motion to Consolidate (Doc. 19) and Brief in Support (Doc. 20), and
Defendant United States' Response (Doc. 21 ).
Finally, before the Court in Henry v. United States et al., Case No. 5:16-cv-5098 ("Henry
/If') is:
•
Plaintiff Karen Henry's Motion to Consolidate Actions (Doc. 3).
As explained in greater detail below, the Court will resolve all of these pending matters
by permitting Mr. and Mrs. Henry to proceed in one consolidated action on all claims that
they have lodged in these three lawsuits, provided that they comply with the pleading
requirements set forth in this Order. A corollary of this ruling is that all of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry's pending Motions in these lawsuits are GRANTED, and the United States' pending
Motion in Henry II is DENIED .
I. BACKGROUND
Mr. and Mrs. Henry allege that around December 3, 2013, Mr. Henry underwent
abdominal surgery at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Fayetteville, Arkansas, and
that metal staples were used to secure his abdomen following the procedure. They further
allege that after Mr. Henry was transferred to postoperative care, he experienced dry
heaves, causing his abdominal wound to open and his intestines to spill outward, being
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punctured by his skin staples, and spilling their contents into his peritoneal cavity. Mr.
Henry then underwent a second surgery, after which he "went on to develop peritonitis ,
sepsis, septic shock, multiorgan failure including respiratory failure , cardiovascular
failure , kidney failure , and liver failure ." Henry/, Doc. 1, ,r 22. The Henrys allege that the
two doctors who performed these operations were negligent, causing the Henrys to suffer
compensable damages , with Mrs. Henry's claim being for loss of services and
consortium.
Mr. Henry filed an administrative claim regarding these events with the United
States Department of Veterans Affairs ("VA") on or about April 27 , 2015 , and the VA
denied his claim on or about October 22 , 2015. Roughly a month later, on November 25,
2015, Mrs. Henry filed a separate administrative claim with the VA, which was still pending
three months later on February 25, 2016, when the Henrys simultaneously filed Henry I
in this Court and Henry II in the Washington County Circuit Court. The complaints in
those two lawsuits were essentially identical , but were filed in separate forums because
federal jurisdiction might be lacking if both defendant doctors were independent
contractors rather than employees of the VA. As it turns out, however, while one doctor
(Dr. Ronald Mullis) was an independent contractor, the other (Dr. William McNair) was an
employee; accordingly, the United States substituted itself as a party for Dr. McNair in
each case, and removed Henry II to this Court. The VA finally denied Mrs. Henry's
separate administrative claim on April 5, 2016. A month later, on May 6, 2016, Mrs. Henry
filed Henry Ill in this Court, asserting the same claims against the United States and Dr.
Mullis that she asserted in Henry I and Henry II.
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II. DISCUSSION
The Henrys are asking this Court to consolidate all three lawsuits into one action
and to permit the Henrys to proceed in the consolidated action on all of their claims
against both defendants. Dr. Mullis has not expressed any opposition to the Henrys'
request. The United States, however, does oppose the Henrys' request, at least with
regard to the consolidation of Henry I and Henry II, and asks this Court instead to dismiss
both Henrys' claims against the United States in Henry II as duplicative, and to dismiss
Mrs. Henry's claim against the United States in Henry I tor having been filed prior to
exhausting her administrative remedies. The United States argues that consolidation
rather than dismissal would frustrate judicial economy because "[w]hen two cases are
merged for the purpose of convenience and not formally merged , they retain their
individual identity," see Henry II, Doc. 21 , ,r 7 (citing Tri-State Hotels, Inc. v. F.D.I.C. , 79
F.3d 707, 711-12 (8th Cir. 1996)), thus imposing an unnecessary burden on the United
States to file a duplicative answer in Henry II. The Court disagrees. The interest of judicial
economy can easily (and best) be served simply by consolidating these cases in a manner
such that they are "formally merged for all purposes," Tri-State Hotels, 79 F.3d at 711,
preventing the separate lawsuits from retaining their individual identities, and allowing the
pleadings that have already been filed in Henry I (and any subsequent amendments
thereto) to control as to all consolidated actions. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 42(a).
Notwithstanding its opposition to the consolidation of Henry I and Henry II, the
United States apparently refrains at this time from taking any position on the Henrys'
request with regard to Henry Ill, because it has not yet been served with the Complaint in
that case. See Henry II, Doc. 21 ,
,r 13.
Rather, the United States maintains that "[n]o
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action should be taken in [Henry
11n
until the United States is properly served with
summons, it files its Answer to the Complaint, and responds to the Motion to Consolidate
filed in that case ." Id. The Court sees no reason why duplicative filings in Henry Ill would
be any less frustrating to judicial economy than duplicative filings in Henry II would be.
Since it is plain from the face of the Henry Ill Complaint and Motion that Ms. Henry's
claims in Henry Ill are identical to her claims in Henry I and Henry II, and since all of the
parties have already made perfectly clear what their respective positions are with regard
to consolidating the same claims in Henry I and Henry II, the Court sees no reason to
delay decision any further on Henry Ill. Henry Ill will be consolidated with Henry I in the
same manner as Henry II.
The Court turns now to the question of whether Mrs. Henry's claim for loss of
services and consortium must be dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative
remedies. As this Court observed in its Show Cause Order (Doc. 19), "[t]he [Federal Tort
Claims Act] bars claimants from bringing suit in federal court until they have exhausted
their administrative remedies ." McNeil v. United States, 508 U.S. 106, 113 (1993). "[28
U.S.C.] Section 2675 clearly makes the filing of an administrative claim a mandatory
condition precedent to the filing of civil action against the United States for damages
arising from the negligent act or omission of any Government employee acting within the
scope of his employment. " Melo v. United States, 505 F .2d 1026, 1028 (8th Cir. 1974)
(internal citations omitted) . Moreover, "[f]ederal courts have held that where a spousal
consortium claim is an independent claim under state law, the noninjured spouse must
file an administrative claim as a prerequisite to pursuing the consortium claim under the
FTCA, and the mere listing of a spouse on the injured party's own administrative claim
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form does not suffice. " Swizdor v. United States, 581 F. Supp. 10, 12 (S.D. Iowa 1983)
(collecting cases).
In the face of this precedent, the Henrys conceded in their March 11 , 2016
Response to the Court's Show Cause Order that since the VA had not yet denied Mrs.
Henry's administrative claim , "[t]he claim of Karen Henry can be dismissed without
prejudice ." Henry I, Doc. 23, p. 4. However, as noted above, the VA finally denied Mrs.
Henry's administrative claim a little under a month later, on April 5, 2016 . Accordingly, it
would now appear to the Court that the concerns expressed in its Show Cause Order
might be mooted by the filing of a consolidated amended complaint that pleads sufficient
facts to show that all administrative requirements for the claims brought therein have now
been fully satisfied.
Ill. CONCLUSION
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that:
•
Plaintiffs Dennis and Karen Henry's Motion to Consolidate Actions (Doc. 27) in
Henry et al. v. United States et al., Case No. 5:15-cv-5288 , is GRANTED;
•
Defendant United States' Motion to Dismiss Party (Doc. 15) in Henry et al. v. United
States eta!. , Case No. 5:16-cv-5051 , is DENIED ;
•
Plaintiffs Dennis and Karen Henry's Motion to Consolidate (Doc. 19) in Henry et
ar- v. United States et al., Case No. 5:16-cv-5051 , is GRANTED; and
•
Plaintiff Karen Henry's Motion to Consolidate Actions (Doc. 3) in Henry v. United
States et al., Case No. 5:16-cv-5098, is GRANTED.
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IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the above-captioned actions are hereby
consolidated for all purposes under Case No. 5: 15-cv-5288 , and the consolidated action
shall bear the following caption:
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS
FAYETTEVILLE DIVISION
DENNIS HENRY and KAREN HENRY,
Husband and Wife
V.
PLAINTIFFS
CASE NO. 5:15-CV-5288
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA and
RONALD MULLIS, M.D.
DEFENDANTS
Defendants shall not be required to respond to the pending complaints in Case Nos. 5:16cv-5051 and 5:16-cv-5098.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs shall file and serve a consolidated
amended complaint within fourteen (14) days from the date of this Order, pleading
sufficient facts to show that Plaintiffs have exhausted their administrative remedies for all
claims brought therein . If Plaintiffs fail to file their consolidated amended complaint within
the time required , then Mrs. Henry's claims will be dismissed without prejudice for failure
to exhaust her administrative remedies. Defendants shall have the usual time permitted
under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to respond to Plaintiffs' consolidated amended
complaint. The Case Management Order (Doc. 20) that was entered in Case No. 5:15cv-5288 on February 23 , 2016 , shall govern the consolidated action and remains in effect
as to all deadlines, hearings, and other requirements set forth therein .
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IT IS SO ORDERED on this £
t!
day of June,
OKS
S DISTRICT JUDGE
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