The law in Montana is that a medical malpractice plaintiff has the burden of proving through qualified, competent expert testimony what the alleged applicable standard of care is, how the alleged standard has been allegedly breached, and how the alleged breach has causally resulted in the alleged injuries. This is the law in most jurisdictions.
Montana Medical Legal Panel Act
The Montana Medical Legal Panel Act (MMLP) requires a threshold review of malpractice claims against healthcare providers. Accordingly, medical negligence claims this Act must first submit the case to the Panel for consideration.
The Montana Medical Legal Panel Act exists to place healthcare providers on notice of a potential malpractice claim and provide feedback to the parties about the malpractice claim. The purpose of the MMLP Act “is to prevent where possible the filing in court of actions against health care providers and their employees for professional liability in situations where the facts do not permit at least a reasonable inference of malpractice and to make possible the fair and equitable disposition of such claims against health care providers as are or reasonably may be well-founded.”
Interestingly, the Panel’s deliberations are confidential. “The panel’s decision is without administrative or judicial authority and is not binding upon any party.” Records submitted to the Panel are not to be made public. Moreover, Panel members cannot be called to testify in court about the Panel’s considerations, transcripts are not made, and the decision and reasoning of the Panel are not admissible as evidence in an action subsequently filed in court. In court, the claims starts all over again regardless of what the Panel found.
Montana Malpractice Statute of Limitations
The relevant section of Mont. Code Ann. § 27-2-205 (i.e., sub(1)) provides as follows: 27-2-205. Actions for medical malpractice.
(1) Action in tort or contract for injury or death against a physician or surgeon, dentist, registered nurse, nursing home or hospital administrator, dispensing optician, optometrist, licensed physical therapist, podiatrist, psychologist, osteopath, chiropractor, clinical laboratory bioanalyst, clinical laboratory technologist, pharmacist, veterinarian, a licensed hospital or long-term care facility, or licensed medical professional corporation, based upon alleged professional negligence or for rendering professional services without consent or for an act, error, or omission, must, except as provided in subsection (2), be commenced within 3 years after the date of injury or within 3 years after the plaintiff discovers or through the use of reasonable diligence should have discovered the injury, whichever occurs last, but in no case may an action be commenced after 5 years from the date of injury. However, this time limitation is tolled for any period during which there has been a failure to disclose any act, error, or omission upon which an action is based and that is known to the defendant or through the use of reasonable diligence subsequent to the act, error, or omission would have been known to the defendant.
Are there exceptions to the Montana statute of limitations? Mont. Code Ann. § 27-6-702 provides as follows:
27-6-702. Tolling of statute of limitations The running of the applicable limitation period related to a malpractice claim is tolled upon receipt by the director of the application for review as to all health care providers named in the application as parties to the panel proceeding and as to all other persons or entities named in the application as necessary or proper parties for any court action that might subsequently arise out of the same factual circumstances set forth in the application. The running of the applicable limitation period does not begin again until 30 days after either an order of dismissal, with or without prejudice against refiling, is issued from the panel presiding officer, or from the director upon the consent of the parties to the claim, or after the panel’s final decision, whichever occurs first, is entered in the permanent files of the panel and a copy is served upon the complainant or the complainant’s attorney if represented by counsel, by certified mail.
There is also a 5-year statute of repose.
Malpractice Cap in Montana
Regrettably, Montana law limits the recovery of non-economic damages. past and future. in any malpractice case to $250,000.00. This cap applies regardless of the severity of the non-economic losses incurred. The practical impact of this law is that it kills most medical malpractice cases. So many victims in Montana cannot find a lawyer because lawyers are not interested in cases where the economics do not allow for malpractice claims. Our firm may spend well in excess of $100,000 for a malpractice case. The numbers do not make sense for an ordinary case. Birth injury cases are the most notable exception. Why? Because there is no cap in Montana on economic damages.
Need to Serve Malpractice Complaint in Six Months
Under Montana law, medical malpractice complaints must be served within six months of filing. If the complaint is not served within that time, the court must dismiss the action without prejudice unless the defendant has made an appearance. We discuss this more below looking at Montana malpractice case law.
Montana Personal Injury Verdicts and Settlements
$3,087,000 – Verdict (Montana 2022): A 20-something woman suffered severe myopia. She received phakic intraocular lenses to correct the condition. The woman suffered cornea damage and glaucoma. She sustained total left-eye blindness and legal right eye blindness. The woman alleged negligence against her surgeon. She claimed he failed to address a dislocated lens and inform her that he made off-label use of the lenses. The jury awarded $3,087,000.
$578,200 – Verdict (Montana 2020): A 63-year-old man suffered chest pain, shoulder blade pain, fatigue, and heartburn. He presented to a federally funded community health care center. A nurse referred him for a gallbladder ultrasound. The following week, the man suffered chest pain. He was brought to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with a heart attack. The man died while undergoing heart surgery. His family alleged that the nurse’s failure to order cardiac tests caused his death. The defense admitted liability. A federal judge awarded the family $578,200.
$6,000 – Verdict (Montana 2019): A pedestrian was struck in a supermarket parking lot. She suffered a right foot injury. The woman alleged that the at-fault driver’s excessive speeding and inattentiveness caused her injuries. The at-fault driver admitted liability. A Flathead County jury awarded $6,000.
$800,342 – Verdict (Montana 2019): A motorcyclist was T-boned. He suffered personal injuries. The man alleged that the at-fault driver’s failure to yield the right-of-way caused his injuries. He received $50,000 from the liability insurer. The man also made a UIM claim against Progressive, who disputed it. A Cascade County jury awarded $750,342.
$2,000,000 – Verdict (Montana 2019): A 3-year-old boy was biking around the trailer park he and his family resided in. He was fatally struck by a reversing vehicle. His parents alleged that the at-fault driver’s negligence caused his death. They claimed he failed to ensure a clear path before reversing. The family also alleged that the trailer park’s owner negligently designed the trailer park by not installing speed bumps and other traffic control devices. Both defendants denied liability. They argued that the boy’s father should have supervised him. The Lake County jury found the trailer park owner 80 percent liable, the at-fault driver 15 percent liable, and the boy’s father 5 percent liable. They awarded $2,000,000.
$55,000 – Verdict (Montana 2018): A man was a passenger in a vehicle that T-boned another vehicle. He suffered an eyelid laceration, a left-hand laceration, hand fractures, wrist fractures, and spinal fractures. The man alleged that his driver’s negligence caused his injuries. He claimed he failed to yield the right-of-way and drove while intoxicated. The Lake County jury awarded the man $55,000.
$360,000 – Verdict (Montana 2017): A woman was cleaning a toilet at a fairground. After flushing it, a piece exploded and hit her left foot, which suffered a fracture and soft-tissue injuries. She also developed reflex sympathetic dystrophy. The woman alleged negligent design and manufacture against the toilet’s manufacturer. The defense contested liability, arguing contributory negligence. A Lewis and Clark County jury awarded $360,000.
$435,518 – Verdict (Montana 2016): A 28-year-old construction worker fell off a roof. He suffered bilateral ankle fractures. The man was brought to the hospital. He had an IVC filter inserted to prevent blood clots. It was supposed to be removed within three weeks. However, no one told the man this. The IVC filter remained inside him for four months. During a follow-up appointment, an orthopedic surgeon detected it and ordered a removal procedure. The man underwent three removal procedures. The first two were unsuccessful. During the third procedure, the surgical team removed most of it. However, a piece broke off and remained inside the IVC. The man alleged that the hospital staff’s negligence caused his injuries. He claimed they failed to tell him that the IVC filter needed to be timely removed. The hospital denied liability. They argued that the physician who inserted the filter was not their employee. The Lewis and Clark County jury ruled in the man’s favor. They awarded $435,518.
$650,000 – Verdict (Montana 2016): A railcar repairman attempted to remove a machine screw. The screw broke and shattered his safety glasses. The man suffered a deep corneal laceration. He alleged that his employer’s negligence contributed to his injury. The man claimed it provided defective safety glasses, failed to inspect them, and allowed him to work in unsafe conditions. His employer denied liability, arguing that the man was comparatively negligent for wearing safety glasses instead of safety goggles. The Park County jury found both parties equally negligent. They awarded $650,000.
$27,000,000 – Settlement (Montana 2015): A 21-year-old man was on a church mission trip. He and some friends took a supervisor-approved side trip to a national park. On their way back, their vehicle went off-road and rolled over several times. The man suffered a severe brain injury. He was rendered a quadriplegic. The man alleged that his friend’s negligent driving caused his permanent injury. He also argued that his church was liable because his friend was their agent. The church denied liability, arguing that the man and his friend were not acting as missionaries during the side trip. This case settled for $27,000,000.
Montana Medical Malpractice Case Law
- In Peterson v. Simon, citing pending, (Mont. 2024), the Montana Supreme Court addressed whether a medical malpractice lawsuit should be dismissed with or without prejudice due to the plaintiff’s failure to serve the complaint within the required six-month period under Mont. Code Ann. § 25-3-106. The trial court had dismissed the case with prejudice, citing the expiration of the statute of limitations, but the Supreme Court ruled that the statute mandates dismissal without prejudice in such circumstances unless the defendant has already appeared in the case. The trial court’s decision to dismiss with prejudice was therefore reversed, as the dismissal was based solely on untimely service, and the statute required a dismissal without prejudice.
- In Est. of Phillips v. Robbins, cite pending (Mont. 2024), the court addressed another six month serving rule case. The decedent passed away after receiving medical treatment from at Logan Health, prompting his estate to file a medical malpractice claim. Although the claim was filed within the required time, the estate failed to serve the complaint within the six-month deadline. An amended complaint was later filed and served, but it was outside the statute of limitations for medical malpractice cases. Logan Health moved to dismiss, arguing that the statute of limitations had expired, and the court agreed, dismissing the case with prejudice. The estate’s attempts to argue that the limitations period had been tolled and to amend the dismissal were rejected, with the court finding that the failure to serve the original complaint within six months barred any further action.
- In Kipfinger v. Great Falls Obstetrical & Gynecological Assocs., 525 P.3d 1183 (Mont. 2023) the Montana Supreme Court held that a doctor’s testimony as to his or her personal practice is insufficient alone to establish either the applicable standard of medical care or that a different act or omission deviated therefrom, for purposes of the breach element of a medical-malpractice claim.
Contact Us About Montana Medical Malpractice Cases
If you have a potential medical malpractice lawsuit in Montana, call us today at 800-553-8082 or contact us online for a free case evaluation.