               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

                                   No. COA19-742

                                 Filed: 4 August 2020

Cumberland County, No. 16-CVS-3205

MARTIN LEONARD, Plaintiff,

              v.

RONALD   BELL,    M.D.,   INDIVIDUALLY,                 PHILLIP   STOVER,      M.D.,
INDIVIDUALLY, Defendants.


        Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 22 January 2019 by Judge Beecher R.

Gray in Superior Court, Cumberland County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 3 March

2020.


        Knott & Boyle, PLLC, by Ben Van Steinburgh and W. Ellis Boyle, for plaintiff-
        appellant.

        Hedrick Gardner Kincheloe & Garofalo, LLP, by M. Duane Jones and Luke P.
        Sbarra, for defendant-appellee Bell.

        Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Assistant Attorney General Kenzie M.
        Rakes, for defendant-appellee Stover.


        STROUD, Judge.


        Martin Leonard (“Plaintiff”) appeals from an order granting Ronald Bell,

M.D.’s and Phillip Stover, M.D.’s (collectively “Defendants”) motions to dismiss

Plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice. Viewing the record “in the light most favorable

to plaintiff,” Preston v. Movahed, ___ N.C. ___, ___, 840 S.E.2d 174, 190 (2020),

because Plaintiff’s medical expert reviewed all the medical records pertaining to the
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                                    Opinion of the Court



alleged negligence available to Plaintiff after reasonable inquiry prior to filing his

complaint, we conclude at the time of the filing of the complaint, Plaintiff had

complied with the requirements of North Carolina General Statute § 1A-1, Rule 9(j).

The production by Defendants’ employer, the North Carolina Department of Public

Safety, Division of Adult Corrections (“DAC”), of additional records regarding

Plaintiff’s medical care four years after the filing of the complaint does not defeat

Plaintiff’s complaint under Rule 9(j), particularly where the records produced were

responsive to Plaintiff’s first request for records in 2013 but were not produced until

years later.    We therefore reverse the trial court’s order dismissing Plaintiff’s

complaint and remand for further proceedings.

                       I.    Procedural and Factual Background

      This case was appealed to this Court previously. Leonard v. Bell, 254 N.C. App.

694, 803 S.E.2d 445 (2017). Defendants appealed the trial court’s denial of their

motion to dismiss based upon public official immunity, and this Court affirmed. This

Court set out the background of this case as follows:

                       Martin Leonard (“plaintiff”) initiated this case
               against defendants in their individual capacities with the
               filing of summonses and a complaint on 5 May 2016. In the
               complaint, plaintiff asserts negligence claims against Dr.
               Bell and Dr. Stover, both physicians employed by the
               Department of Public Safety (“DAC”), albeit in different
               capacities. Those claims are based on allegations that Dr.
               Bell and Dr. Stover failed to meet the requisite standard of
               care for physicians while treating plaintiff, who at all



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             relevant times was incarcerated in the Division of Adult
             Correction (the “DAC”).
                    Specifically, plaintiff alleges that he began
             experiencing severe back pain in late October 2012 and
             submitted the first of many requests for medical care. Over
             the next ten months, plaintiff was repeatedly evaluated in
             the DAC system by nurses, physician assistants, and Dr.
             Bell in response to plaintiff’s complaints of increasing back
             pain and other attendant symptoms. Dr. Bell personally
             evaluated plaintiff nine times and, at the time of the
             seventh evaluation in June 2013, submitted a request for
             an MRI to the Utilization Review Board (the “Review
             Board”). Dr. Stover, a member of the Review Board, denied
             Dr. Bell’s request for an MRI and instead recommended
             four weeks of physical therapy. Plaintiff continued to
             submit requests for medical care as his condition worsened.
             Upon further evaluations by a nurse and a physician
             assistant in August 2013, the physician assistant sent
             plaintiff to Columbus Regional Health Emergency
             Department for treatment.          Physicians at Columbus
             Regional performed an x-ray and an MRI. Those tests
             revealed plaintiff was suffering from an erosion of bone in
             the L4 and L3 vertebra and a spinal infection. Plaintiff
             asserts Dr. Bell’s failure to adequately evaluate and treat
             his condition, and Dr. Stover’s refusal of requested
             treatment, amounts to medical malpractice.

Id. at 695–96, 803 S.E.2d at 447.

      Prior to filing the complaint, Plaintiff requested all his medical records from

many medical providers and provided these to Dr. Parker McConville to review. On

27 November 2013, Plaintiff made his first request for medical records to DAC and

requested “[a]ll medical records, declarations of medical emergencies, sick call filings,

and grievances” from “January 1, 2012-Present.” Dr. McConville initially reviewed

the medical records in April 2014 and then received additional records in April 2016.


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He reviewed medical and imaging records from UNC Health Care, Rex Healthcare,

Columbus Regional Healthcare, FirstHealth Moore Regional Hospital, Southeastern

Regional, Southeastern Health, Wilmington Health Associates, New Hanover

Regional Hospital, and DAC. Thus, Plaintiff’s initial request for medical records

extended back ten months prior to plaintiff’s first visit to Defendant Bell. Plaintiff

received 512 pages of medical records in response to his initial request, and Dr.

McConville reviewed all these records before Plaintiff filed his complaint.

      On 5 May 2016, Plaintiff filed the medical malpractice complaint, with the Rule

9(j) certification based upon Dr. McConville’s review of all the medical records noted

above. On or about 14 October 2016, Plaintiff served his First Request for Production

upon Dr. Bell and requested

             [a]ll medical records of any sort in your possession,
             regarding any health care provider’s medical treatment or
             care of Martin Leonard, including but not limited to: duty
             log or schedule of when you were on call or physically
             present at the Prison in 2012 and 2013; all medical billing
             statements, medical charts, physician’s office records,
             correspondence to or from any person, entity or
             organization; all hospital or medical records regularly
             maintained concerning patients such as physicians’ notes,
             nurse or staffing logs, nursing administration reports,
             incident/occurrence report forms, shift records, psychiatry
             flow sheets, patient data logs, medication administration
             logs, physical/occupational therapy notes, nursing notes,
             and handwritten notes; all orders requesting any
             laboratory study or test or imaging; all laboratory reports;
             all radiological images in electronic format and
             corresponding reports to include MRIs, CT Scans, and
             photographs; all medication and prescription records; all


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               surgical and pathology reports; all medical reports
               furnished routinely or specially to any person,
               organization, or entity including the patient, any
               representative of the patient, or any insurance company;
               and any record of any conversations, correspondence, or
               emails with any pathologists or other employee or agent of
               North Carolina Department of Public Safety.

Dr. Bell responded, “The only medical records related to Plaintiff that are in Dr. Bell’s

possession were produced by Plaintiff’s counsel in connection with the pending

Industrial Commission matter related to Plaintiff’s claims.”1

       On 17 October 2016, Plaintiff served his First Request for Production of

documents on Dr. Stover, requesting the same information as the request to Dr. Bell.

On 20 September 2017, Dr. Stover responded as follows:

               Objection: This request is overly broad, unduly
               burdensome and not relevant to this matter. Seeks
               information not reasonably calculated to lead to the
               discovery of admissible [sic]. This request seeks matters
               and/or documents protected by the work product doctrine
               and/or attorney client privilege. As discovery proceeds in
               this case, Defendant will supplement this response to the
               extent appropriate under the North Carolina Rule of Civil
               Procedure.

(Alteration in original.)



1 Plaintiff had also instituted a Tort Claims action before the Industrial Commission arising from the
same alleged negligence. At oral argument of this case, counsel noted that the Industrial Commission
matter was stayed pending resolution of this case. The record from Defendant’s first appeal contains
the order staying the Industrial Commission proceedings, and it states in relevant part: “1. The above-
captioned action under the State Tort Claim Act is STAYED pending the resolution of the civil action
in the General Court of Justice in Columbus County, save discovery. 2. The above captioned case is
REMOVED from the active hearing docket and all further proceedings.”


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       Defendants then filed motions to dismiss “pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1), (2), and

(6)” addressed in their first appeal. Leonard v. Bell, 254 N.C. App. at 696, 803 S.E.2d

at 447. The trial court denied the motions on 25 October 2016 and both defendants

appealed. Id. This Court’s opinion in the prior appeal was filed in August 2017, and,

upon remand, discovery resumed.

       On or about 11 April 2018, Plaintiff served a subpoena upon DAC requesting

production of his medical records. Our record does not reveal if DAC itself responded

directly to the subpoena, but soon after the subpoena, Dr. Stover supplemented his

September 2017 discovery responses.2               On 19 June 2018, Dr. Stover sent a

supplemental document production to Plaintiff including 1172 pages of prison and

medical records. Of these documents, 354 pages were some of the same medical

records produced in December 2013 by DAC in response to Plaintiff’s request prior to

filing the complaint, but Dr. Stover provided an additional 818 pages of records from

DAC. In their arguments before the trial court and this Court, Defendants stressed

one of these 818 pages of documents included in the new information was a sheet

recording Plaintiff’s TB skin tests over several years.3 This document, a “North




2 Since both Defendants are employees of DAC, these documents may have been intended as
responsive to the subpoena. But whether defendant Dr. Stover provided the records as a supplement
to his prior discovery responses, in response to the subpoena, or for some other reason makes no
difference in this analysis.
3 Defendants noted other information in the records as well, but in their argument regarding records

“pertaining to the alleged negligence,” the TB skin test form was the primary document they stressed.


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                                         Opinion of the Court



Carolina Department of Correction Immunization Record/T.B. Skin Test” form, (“TB

skin test form”) included entries from 13 July 2011, 29 July 2012, and 2 July 2013.

TB skin test records from July 2011, July 2012, and July 2013 were included on this

sheet, along with prior years back to 2006. For each year from 2010 until 2013, the

sheet also recorded whether Plaintiff was having symptoms of unexplained

productive cough, unexplained weight loss, unexplained appetite loss, unexplained

fever, night sweats, shortness of breath, chest pain, and increased fatigue. For 2010,

this screening noted “yes” for night sweats, chest pain, and increased fatigue. For

2011, each symptom is marked “no.” For 29 July 2012, every symptom is marked

“no.” For 2013, again, every symptom is marked “no.”4 This record of TB skin tests

and symptoms was in Plaintiff’s DAC medical file as of 1 January 2012 and should

have been provided in response to Plaintiff’s initial request for records to DAC prior

to filing of the complaint, based upon the starting date of Plaintiff’s request for

records from January 2012 forward, since the July 2012 and July 2013 tests occurred

after January 2012 and prior to 27 November 2013, the date of Plaintiff’s request.

This record was not included in the previous productions of documents to Plaintiff,

either upon his request prior to filing the lawsuit, in the Industrial Commission



4 Other medical records from DAC clearly document that Plaintiff was suffering from unexplained
weight loss, night sweats, and worsening pain starting in October of 2012. His eighth visit to Dr. Bell
for these worsening symptoms was on 9 July 2013—only 3 days prior to the entries for the 2013 TB
skin test. But the TB skin test form states that he had no symptoms and the entry for “Refer to
Physician/Health Department” is also marked “no.” Dr. McConville noted this conflict in DAC’s
records of plaintiff’s care in his deposition as discussed in more detail below.

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                                   Opinion of the Court



matter, or from Defendants in response to his request for production of documents.

Although the TB skin test form was responsive to all of Plaintiff’s prior requests, both

prior to and after filing his complaint, neither DAC nor the Defendants in this case

produced it until nearly four and a half years after the first request.

      Neither DAC nor either Defendant ever offered any explanation or excuse for

why it was not produced earlier, nor do Defendants argue that the document was not

responsive to each of Plaintiff’s requests. In addition, this is not a case where the

relevant records, for purposes of Defendants’ motions to dismiss under Rule 9(j), were

in the possession of another medical provider. The relevant records in this case are

the medical records of Defendants’ employer, DAC; in other words, they are effectively

the medical records of Defendants’ own care of Plaintiff.

      On 25 July 2018, less than a month after producing the additional 818 pages

of DAC records to Plaintiff, Defendants took Dr. McConville’s deposition. He could

not produce or definitively identify all the records he had reviewed before the

complaint was filed because his personal copy of Plaintiff’s records had been

destroyed by a fire in his office. However, he did identify the records based upon the

prior responses to discovery. He also discussed his review of the records just produced

by Defendant Dr. Stover. Defendant’s counsel asked Dr. McConville if the TB skin

test form changed “any of [his] opinions in this matter.” Dr. McConville testified




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                                   Opinion of the Court



neither the TB skin test form nor the other additional records had changed his

opinions regarding Plaintiff’s medical care.

      On 17 December 2018, Dr. Bell filed a motion to dismiss Plaintiff’s complaint

based upon Civil Procedure Rules 7, 9(j), and 12(b)(6) and alleged that “Plaintiff’s

reviewing expert, Dr. Parker McConville did not review all medical records pertaining

to the alleged negligence that were available to Plaintiff after reasonable inquiry

prior to the filing of Plaintiff’s complaint.” Dr. Stover did not file a written motion

but made an oral motion to dismiss for the same reason at the hearing on Dr. Bell’s

motion. At the hearing, in January 2019, Dr. Bell introduced the records including

Plaintiff’s TB skin tests covering the years from 2006 to 2013. Plaintiff had a positive

test in 2009. As noted above, this record should have been included in Plaintiff’s

medical records as of January 2012, as it included test results from 2006 until 2013,

but it was not produced until June 2018 in Dr. Stover’s supplemental production of

documents of 818 pages which had not been provided to Plaintiff previously, in either

the Industrial Commission matter or in this case.

      The trial court concluded Defendants’ motions to dismiss should be granted

based upon Plaintiff’s failure to comply with Rule 9(j):

                   (16) The totality of the evidence before the Court
             indicates Dr. McConville failed to review all medical
             records pertaining to Defendants’ alleged negligence that
             were available to Plaintiff after reasonable inquiry prior to
             Plaintiffs’ filing of his civil action.



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                                    Opinion of the Court



                      (17) Based on the foregoing, the Court determines
                Plaintiff has failed to comply with Rule 9(j) of the North
                Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure and this action is
                dismissed with prejudice.

Plaintiff timely appealed.

          II.      Standard of Review of Order Addressing Rule 9(j) Motion

      Our Supreme Court has recently clarified the standard under which the trial

court should consider the issue of compliance with Rule 9(j) and this Court’s standard

of review of the trial court’s order. In Preston v. Movahed, the Supreme Court

reversed the dismissal of the plaintiff’s claim for medical malpractice for evaluation

and treatment of chest pain based upon the trial court’s finding that the plaintiff’s

expert cardiologist “could not reasonably be expected to qualify as an expert witness”

against the defendant nuclear cardiologist. ___ N.C. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 180.

Although the issue here arises from the adequacy of the medical records provided to

Plaintiff for expert review prior to the filing of the complaint, the Supreme Court

noted that the “analytical framework set forth in Moore applies equally to other Rule

9(j) issues in which ‘a complaint facially valid under Rule 9(j)’ is challenged on the

basis that ‘the certification is not supported by the facts.’” Id. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at

183 (quoting Moore v. Proper, 366 N.C. 25, 31-32, 726 S.E.2d 812, 817 (2012)).

      The Supreme Court noted that both the trial court and this Court must view

the evidence regarding the plaintiff’s compliance with Rule 9(j) “in the light most

favorable to plaintiff.” Id. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 190. The trial court is not to resolve


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credibility issues or disputes of fact at this stage in a medical malpractice proceeding

but is only to determine if the plaintiff acted reasonably in his efforts to comply with

Rule 9(j):

                    “Rule 9(j) serves as a gatekeeper, enacted by the
             legislature, to prevent frivolous malpractice claims by
             requiring expert review before filing of the action.” The
             rule provides, in pertinent part:
                    Any complaint alleging medical malpractice
                    by a health care provider pursuant to G.S. 90-
                    21.11(2)a. in failing to comply with the
                    applicable standard of care under G.S. 90-
                    21.12 shall be dismissed unless:
                        (1) The pleading specifically asserts
                        that the medical care and all medical
                        records pertaining to the alleged
                        negligence that are available to the
                        plaintiff after reasonable inquiry have
                        been reviewed by a person who is
                        reasonably expected to qualify as an
                        expert witness under Rule 702 of the
                        Rules of Evidence and who is willing to
                        testify that the medical care did not
                        comply with the applicable standard of
                        care[.]
             Thus, the rule prevents frivolous claims “by precluding any
             filing in the first place by a plaintiff who is unable to
             procure an expert who both meets the appropriate
             qualifications and, after reviewing the medical care and
             available records, is willing to testify that the medical care
             at issue fell below the standard of care.”

Id. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 190 (footnote omitted) (citations omitted) (quoting Vaughan

v. Mashburn, 371 N.C. 428, 434-35, 817 S.E.2d 370, 375 (2018)).




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      As part of its analysis in Preston, the Supreme Court discussed Moore v.

Proper, which addressed the “manner in which a trial court should evaluate

compliance with Rule 9(j), as well as the standard of review for a reviewing court on

appeal.” Preston, ___ N.C. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 182 (quoting Moore v. Proper, 366

N.C. at 26, 726 S.E.2d 814). In Moore, the Rule 9(j) analysis was done in the context

of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment instead of a motion to dismiss:

                     In addressing the Rule 9(j) inquiry, the Court
             explained that “[b]ecause Rule 9(j) requires certification at
             the time of filing that the necessary expert review has
             occurred, compliance or noncompliance with the Rule is
             determined at the time of filing.” The Court agreed with
             previous Court of Appeals precedent holding that “a court
             should look at ‘the facts and circumstances known or those
             which should have been known to the pleader’ at the time
             of filing,” “as any reasonable belief must necessarily be
             based on the exercise of reasonable diligence under the
             circumstances[.]” Additionally, the Court noted that “a
             complaint facially valid under Rule 9(j) may be dismissed
             if subsequent discovery establishes that the certification is
             not supported by the facts, at least to the extent that the
             exercise of reasonable diligence would have led the party to
             the understanding that its expectation was unreasonable.”
             The Court further explained:
                     Though the party is not necessarily required
                     to know all the information produced during
                     discovery at the time of filing, the trial court
                     will be able to glean much of what the party
                     knew or should have known from subsequent
                     discovery materials. But to the extent there
                     are reasonable disputes or ambiguities in the
                     forecasted evidence, the trial court should
                     draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the
                     nonmoving party at this preliminary stage of
                     determining whether the party reasonably


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                    expected the expert witness to qualify under
                    Rule 702. When the trial court determines
                    that reliance on disputed or ambiguous
                    forecasted evidence was not reasonable, the
                    court must make written findings of fact to
                    allow a reviewing appellate court to
                    determine whether those findings are
                    supported by competent evidence, whether
                    the conclusions of law are supported by those
                    findings, and, in turn, whether those
                    conclusions support the trial court’s ultimate
                    determination. We note that because the trial
                    court is not generally permitted to make
                    factual findings at the summary judgment
                    stage, a finding that reliance on a fact or
                    inference is not reasonable will occur only in
                    the rare case in which no reasonable person
                    would so rely.
                    Applying this standard, the Moore Court—
             construing all disputes or ambiguities in the factual record
             in favor of the plaintiff—determined that plaintiff’s
             complaint complied with Rule 9(j) in that plaintiff
             reasonably expected her proffered expert to qualify under
             Rule 702. The Court expressed no opinion on whether the
             plaintiff’s expert would actually qualify under Rule 702
             and “note[d] that, having satisfied the Rule 9(j) pleading
             requirements, plaintiff has survived the pleadings stage of
             her lawsuit and may, at the trial court’s discretion, be
             permitted to amend the pleadings and proffer another
             expert” in the event that her proffered expert later failed to
             qualify under Rule 702.

Preston, ___ N.C. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 183 (first and third alterations in original)

(citations omitted).

      In Preston, the Supreme Court noted that the analytical framework for a Rule

9(j) issue is the same, whether the motion to dismiss is in the form of a motion for



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                                   Opinion of the Court



summary judgment or a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). Id. at ___, 840 S.E.2d

at 183. The trial court must consider the facts and circumstances known to the

plaintiff, or which should have been known, at the time of the filing, and if there are

any disputes or ambiguities in the evidence, the trial court “should draw all

reasonable inferences” in favor of the plaintiff at this preliminary stage of the case:

                    While the Rule 9(j) issue in Moore arose in the
             context of a motion for summary judgment and focused
             specifically on whether the plaintiff’s expert was
             reasonably expected to qualify as an expert witness, we
             conclude that the analytical framework set forth in Moore
             applies equally to other Rule 9(j) issues in which “a
             complaint facially valid under Rule 9(j)” is challenged on
             the basis that “the certification is not supported by the
             facts.” For instance, where, as here, a defendant files a
             motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) challenging a
             plaintiff’s facially valid certification that the reviewing
             expert was willing to testify at the time of the filing of the
             complaint, the trial court must examine “‘the facts and
             circumstances known or those which should have been
             known to the pleader’ at the time of filing,” and “to the
             extent there are reasonable disputes or ambiguities in the
             forecasted evidence, the trial court should draw all
             reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party at
             this preliminary stage[.]” “When the trial court determines
             that reliance on disputed or ambiguous forecasted evidence
             was not reasonable, the court must make written findings
             of fact to allow a reviewing appellate court to determine
             whether those findings are supported by competent
             evidence.”
                    We stress that Rule 9(j) is unique and that because
             the evidence must be taken in the light most favorable to
             the plaintiff, the nature of these “findings,” and the
             “competent evidence” that will suffice to support such
             findings, differs from situations where the trial court sits
             as a fact-finder. We do not view the legislature’s enactment


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              of Rule 9(j) as intending for the trial court to engage in
              credibility determinations and weigh competent evidence
              at this preliminary stage of the proceedings.

Id. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 183-84 (citations omitted).

       Thus, under Preston and Moore, we review de novo the trial court’s order

regarding Plaintiff’s compliance with Rule 9(j). Id. In this de novo review, we do not

defer to the trial court’s findings of fact but review the Plaintiff’s forecast of evidence

in the light most favorable to Plaintiff. Id. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 181-82 (“[W]e

conclude that both of the lower courts erred in failing to view the evidence regarding

[plaintiff’s expert’s] willingness to testify under Rule 9(j) in the light most favorable

to plaintiff and that the Court of Appeals, in its de novo review, erred by deferring

entirely to the findings of the trial court.”).

                               III.    Rule 9(j) Compliance

       There is no dispute in this case that Plaintiff’s complaint was facially

compliant with Rule 9(j) and that Dr. McConville reviewed the medical care and

medical records available to Plaintiff pertaining to the alleged negligence before

Plaintiff filed the complaint. This appeal does not present any question regarding

Dr. McConville’s qualifications as an expert witness under Rule 702. Here, the issue

is whether Dr. McConville reviewed “all medical records pertaining to the alleged

negligence that are available to the plaintiff after reasonable inquiry.” N.C. Gen.

Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j). In conducting our analysis of this question, we must consider



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“‘the facts and circumstances known or those which should have been known to the

pleader’ at the time of filing. We find this rule persuasive, as any reasonable belief

must necessarily be based on the exercise of reasonable diligence under the

circumstances.” Moore, 366 N.C. at 31, 726 S.E.2d at 817 (citation omitted) (quoting

Trapp v. Maccioli, 129 N.C. App. 237, 241, 497 S.E.2d 708, 711 (1998)).

      The trial court’s order includes the following findings of fact:

                   (5) Plaintiff had a positive PPD test in July 2009 that
             indicated the potential presence of tuberculosis in his
             system. At the time Plaintiff’s complaint was filed, it was
             apparent that his prior tuberculosis exposure and related
             treatment were relevant to his medical malpractice claim.
             (Compl. ¶¶ 93,94,114). Yet, Plaintiff’s medical records
             relevant to his tuberculosis history and related treatment
             were not requested from the Department of Correction.
             Rather, the request was limited to Plaintiff’s medical
             records from, “January 1, 2012- Present.”

                  (6) Plaintiff designated Dr. Parker McConville (“Dr.
             McConville”) as his Rule 9(j)expert.

                  (7) Plaintiff’s Rule 9(j) expert,          Dr.   Parker
             McConville, was deposed on July 25, 2018.

                    (8) Dr. McConville testified as his deposition that
             Plaintiff’s medical records related to Plaintiff’s positive
             tuberculosis test and subsequent treatment and
             monitoring were relevant to the alleged negligence of Dr.
             Bell in that Dr. Bell should have reviewed these records
             and been aware of their contents in developing his
             differential, diagnosis related to Plaintiff’s symptoms.

                    (9) The Court finds that based on Dr. McConville’s
             own testimony, the medical records related to Plaintiff’s
             positive tuberculosis test and subsequent treatment and


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             monitoring are pertinent to the alleged negligence of Dr.
             Bell.

                    (10) Dr. McConville further testified at his
             deposition, however, that he had not received or reviewed
             the medical records related to Plaintiff’s positive
             tuberculosis test and subsequent treatment and
             monitoring and was not aware of the content of those
             records despite being aware of Plaintiff’s prior tuberculosis
             exposure during his Rule 9(j) review in this matter and
             prior to the filing of Plaintiff’s Complaint.

                    (11) Based on the documentary exhibits submitted
             by counsel at the hearing on the Motion, including the
             Authorization for Release of Information submitted to the
             North Carolina Department of Correction and signed by
             Plaintiff on October 12, 2013, it does not appear the
             medical records related to Plaintiff’s positive tuberculosis
             test and subsequent treatment and monitoring were
             requested from the Department of Correction and the
             Court therefore finds there was no “reasonable inquiry”
             into the availability of these records as required by Rule
             9(j).

      Even if this Court were bound by the trial court’s findings of fact if supported

by competent evidence—and it is not, according to Preston—Finding 5 is not accurate.

Plaintiff’s TB skin test form should have been included in the records Plaintiff

received prior to filing his complaint. Although the form goes back to tests from 2006,

the form was part of his existing record as of 1 January 2012.

      The trial court also made the following pertinent conclusions of law:

                    (12) A civil action alleging medical malpractice will
             receive strict consideration for Rule 9(j) compliance and is
             subject to dismissal without strict statutory compliance.



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Thigpen v, Ngo, 355 N.C. 198, 202, 558 S.E.2d 162, 165
(2002) (internal citations omitted).

       (13) A Rule 9(j) motion does not contain a procedural
mechanism by which a defendant may file a motion to
dismiss a plaintiff’s complaint. See, e.g., Barringer v.
Forsyth County Wake Forest University Medical Center,
197 N.C; App. 238, 255-256, 677 S.E.2d 465, 477 (2009).
“The Rules of Civil Procedure provide other methods by
which a defendant may file a motion alleging a violation of
Rule 9(j). E.G., N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rules 12, 41, and 56. Rule
9(j) does not itself, however, provide such a method.” Id.
In such a case, the Court’s analysis is not whether a
genuine issue of material fact exists, or whether the
evidence is viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiff,
but a question of law. Id. See also Rowell v. Bowling, 191
N.C. App. 691, 695,678 S.E.2d 748, 751 (2009) (stating a
trial court’s review of a Rule 9(j) motion is a question of
law, and the Court is not to inquire into the evidence in the
light most favorable to plaintiff); Phillips v. A Triangle
Women’s Health Clinic, 155 N.C. App. 372, 316, 573 S.E.2d
600,603 (2002) (stating compliance with Rule 9(j) is a
question of law, not a question of fact).

      (14) A complaint facially valid under Rule 9(j) may
be dismissed if subsequent discovery establishes that the
Rule 9(j) certification is not supported by the facts. See, e.g,
Moore v. Proper, 366 N.C. 25 at 32,726 S.E.2d at 7l7;
Ratledge v. Perdue, 239 N.C. App. 377, 381, 773 S.E.2d 315,
318 (2015); McGuire v. Riedle, 190 N.C. App. 785, 786, 661
S.E.2d 754,756 (2008); Winebarger v. Peterson, 182 N.C.
App. 510, 514, 642 S.E.2d 544, 547 (2007).

       (15) Rule 9(f) contains no good-faith exception.
When the language of a statute is clear and without
ambiguity, it is the duty of the Court to give effect to the
plain meaning of the statute, and judicial construction of
legislative intent is not required. Oxedine v. TWL, Inc., 184
N.C. App. 162, 167, 645 S.E.2d 864, 867 (2007).



                             - 18 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   Opinion of the Court



                   (16) The totality of the evidence before the Court
             indicates Dr. McConville failed to review all medical
             records pertaining to Defendants’ alleged negligence that
             were available to Plaintiff after reasonable inquiry prior to
             Plaintiffs’ [sic] filing of his civil action.

                   (17) Based on the foregoing, the Court determines
             Plaintiff has failed to comply with Rule 9(j) of the North
             Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure and this action is
             dismissed with prejudice.

      Based upon the trial court’s order, it is apparent that the trial court did not

view the forecast of evidence “in the light most favorable to the Plaintiff” as required

by Moore and Preston. Instead, the trial court concluded that

             “Rule 9(j) does not itself, however, provide such a
             [procedural mechanism by which a defendant may file a
             motion to dismiss a plaintiff’s complaint].” In such a case,
             the Court’s analysis is not whether a genuine issue of
             material fact exists or whether the evidence is viewed in
             the light most favorable to Plaintiff, but a question of law.

             ....

                    (15) Rule 9(j) contains no good-faith exception. . . .

                   (16) The totality of the evidence before the Court
             indicates Dr. McConville failed to review all medical
             records pertaining to the alleged negligence that were
             available to Plaintiff after reasonable inquiry prior to
             Plaintiff’s filing of his civil action.

(Citations omitted).

       The trial court’s order focused on the first portion of the phrase in Rule 9(j):

“all medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1,



                                          - 19 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   Opinion of the Court



Rule 9(j)(1) (emphasis added). The trial court found that because Plaintiff did not

provide Dr. McConville with his records from DAC prior to January 2012, and

because the ultimate diagnosis was a spinal infection caused by tuberculosis and

Plaintiff had first had a positive TB test in 2009, Plaintiff had not provided “all

medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence.” This analysis overlooks the

actual allegation of negligence, which is not specifically a failure to diagnose and treat

tuberculosis; “Plaintiff asserts Dr. Bell’s failure to adequately evaluate and treat his

condition, and Dr. Stover’s refusal of requested treatment, amounts to medical

malpractice.” Leonard v. Bell, 254 N.C. App. at 696, 803 S.E.2d at 447. The allegation

is negligence in the evaluation of Plaintiff’s worsening back pain and other symptoms

over a period of months. But it is not this Court’s role in regard to ruling on a Rule

9(j) motion to determine the importance or weight of additional medical records or to

rule on how “pertinent” the records of Plaintiff’s diagnosis and treatment of

tuberculosis prior to 2012 may be to a determination of liability in this case. Based

upon the record in this case, that issue is a factual dispute to be addressed by medical

experts and resolved by a jury.

      After Defendant Dr. Stover provided additional DAC records in 2018 regarding

Plaintiff’s care and Dr. McConville reviewed this information, Dr. McConville

testified in his deposition that the additional records did not change his opinion

regarding Defendants breach of the standard of care in Plaintiff’s medical treatment.



                                          - 20 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   Opinion of the Court



Defendant’s counsel asked Dr. McConville if the TB skin test form changed “any of

[his] opinions in this matter.” Dr. McConville testified it did not change his opinions.

He noted that he “would question [the TB skin test form’s] accuracy first of all”

because it conflicts with “what was documented in [Dr. Bell’s] notes from the nurses

and the P.A. and Dr. Bell, the answer to some of these questions [regarding

symptoms] would be yes. So I’m not sure why this doesn’t match up with his records.”

In response to further questions, he clarified that even if the TB skin test form was

“accurate,” his opinions had not changed. He explained that “the notes from the

physicians and the P.A. and the nurses” contradicted the notations on the TB skin

test form that Plaintiff had no symptoms. In addition, he noted even if Plaintiff had

not been having weight loss, fever, or night sweats, Dr. Bell had seen Plaintiff about

nine times over the

             course of about seven or eight months complaining of back
             pain, then radicular pain, other physical symptoms like
             weakness in his legs. And--and I believe he complained of
             numbness at some point. . . . [T]here’s still a process going
             on that has not been adequately investigated and--
             basically in my opinion. So the standard of care for that
             would have been . . . further testing, whether it be via an
             MRI or a CT scan with contrast or bloodwork, you know,
             or--or a referral to a specialist.

He further explained that since Dr. Bell had prescribed

             three different NSAIDs I believe--was it--ibuprofen,
             Voltaren, and Naprosyn, all of which would have
             suppressed a fever or temperature. . . . But if he did have a
             temperature, that may have masked the-- the fever. So


                                          - 21 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   Opinion of the Court



             that’s another thing . . . to consider--you know, that I had
             hoped Dr. Bell would have considered because he was
             prescribing them.

      As in Preston, there is a dispute regarding how to interpret certain medical

records and the basis for any change, or lack of change, in an expert’s opinion

regarding the standard of care and an appropriate course of evaluation and

treatment. But it is not the role of the trial court or this Court, at this early stage in

the case, to resolve any ambiguities or issues of fact against the Plaintiff. Instead,

the trial court, and this Court, must view the evidence in the light most favorable to

the plaintiff. Preston, ___ N.C. at ___, 840 S.E.2d at 181-82.

      The primary issue under the facts of this case is not whether the additional

records produced by DAC in 2018 were “pertinent” to the alleged negligence. The

question is whether Plaintiff made “reasonable inquiry” to obtain all the medical

records pertaining to the alleged negligence. The trial court did not address this issue

except to note that “Rule 9(j) contains no good-faith exception,” which essentially

acknowledges Plaintiff’s “good faith” in requesting records but holds Plaintiff to the

impossible standard of ensuring that every medical provider’s response to a record

request is absolutely complete and accurate.

      In addition, the trial court’s Finding of Fact 5 states that Plaintiff’s initial

request for records to DAC, did not include records regarding “his tuberculosis history

and related treatment.” But Plaintiff’s initial request asked for “[a]ll medical records,



                                          - 22 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   Opinion of the Court



declarations of medical emergencies, sick call filings, and grievances” from “January

1, 2012-Present.”   (Emphasis added.)      Plaintiff’s records related to tuberculosis,

including the TB skin test form, which was the focus of Defendants’ motions to

dismiss, would have been included in a complete response to a request for “all” of the

records for this time period. Plaintiff’s request was not limited to any particular type

of records or related to any particular diagnosis; he requested “all” of his medical

records from DAC, as is required by Rule 9(j).

      Prior to filing the complaint, Plaintiff requested records from DAC and other

medical providers outside DAC who evaluated and treated Plaintiff. The record

demonstrates that Plaintiff made “reasonable inquiry” to obtain his medical records,

and the trial court did not find otherwise. Defendants have not identified a reason

plaintiff should have known that DAC had failed to provide the records he requested

in 2013. It is apparent from the records themselves the TB skin test form stressed

by Defendants before the trial court and this Court should have been included in

DAC’s response to Plaintiff’s first request for medical records, as it was part of

Plaintiff’s existing medical records with DAC on 1 January 2012 and at the time of

his request.

       The trial court also found that Plaintiff’s diagnosis and treatment for TB were

pertinent to the alleged negligence. Even if the records are “pertinent,” the question

is whether plaintiff provided to Dr. McConville “all medical records pertaining to the



                                          - 23 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   Opinion of the Court



alleged negligence that are available to the plaintiff after reasonable inquiry.” N.C.

Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j)(1) (emphasis added). Rule 9(j) does not ask the plaintiff

to make a selective request for the medical records he deems “pertinent” to his

medical condition. For example, instead of requesting all his medical records from 1

January 2012 forward, if Plaintiff had requested DAC to produce Plaintiff’s medical

records regarding his diagnosis and treatment for tuberculosis, Defendants would

have a valid objection to Plaintiff’s limiting the records to “certain records” the

plaintiff deemed relevant. This type of limited review of medical records has been

specifically disapproved by Fairfield v. WakeMed, 261 N.C. App. 569, 821 S.E.2d 277

(2018). Instead, Rule 9(j) requires the plaintiff to make “reasonable inquiry” for

production of “all medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence” and to have

the expert witness review all of the records “available to plaintiff after reasonable

inquiry.”   N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j)(1) (emphasis added).        The “alleged

negligence” here was Defendants’ failure to evaluate and diagnose Plaintiff’s medical

issues over a period of months beginning at the end of 2012, not whether Plaintiff had

received proper care for his initial diagnosis of tuberculosis prior to 2012. And

although the TB skin test form was “pertinent to the alleged negligence,” it also

should have been provided in response to Plaintiff’s initial request for medical records

prior to filing his complaint. If DAC had provided this form in response to Plaintiff’s

request prior to filing the lawsuit, it is possible Plaintiff would have then requested



                                          - 24 -
                                       LEONARD V. BELL

                                       Opinion of the Court



additional records going back to Plaintiff’s initial positive TB skin test, but DAC’s

response was incomplete, and the TB skin test form was not provided. Defendants

have not identified anything in the records produced that may have alerted Plaintiff

of a reason to request more information. Instead, the record demonstrates that

Plaintiff’s requests for all medical records from January 2012 was reasonable and

that Plaintiff provided all the records reasonably available to him to Dr. McConville.

The fact that DAC produced some records which include “pertinent” information

several years after Plaintiff’s record requests and Defendants’ responses to discovery

which did not reveal the records does not require dismissal of Plaintiff’s complaint.

       Plaintiff’s symptoms and complaints of back pain started in October 2012; his

symptoms progressed to include chills, unexplained weight loss, and worsening pain

over the next several months. He saw Dr. Bell nearly every month for about 10

months. There is also no indication Dr. Bell asked Plaintiff about his TB status or

consulted Plaintiff’s DAC medical records which would have revealed this

information.5 At the beginning of Plaintiff’s course of treatment, the cause of his back

pain was not obvious to anyone. Both Defendants presumably would have reviewed

Plaintiff’s medical records maintained by the facility in which they were employed,

including Plaintiff’s TB skin test results from tests conducted at that same facility as


5 In August of 2013, Plaintiff informed physicians at New Hanover Regional Hospital that he had
previously been exposed to TB. However, his initial diagnosis of the infection in his back was
attributed to E. coli. TB was not identified as the cause until October of 2013, when Plaintiff was
treated at UNC Health Care.

                                              - 25 -
                                    LEONARD V. BELL

                                    Opinion of the Court



part of his evaluation of Plaintiff’s symptoms. If they failed to do so, that failure could

be pertinent as it may tend to support Plaintiff’s claim of breach of the standard of

care. But Plaintiff’s claim is not subject to dismissal based upon DAC’s failure to give

a complete response to Plaintiff’s initial request for his records, as he made

“reasonable inquiry” for “all medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence” as

required by Rule 9(j). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j)(1).

      Rule 9(j) notably does not require a plaintiff to provide “all” medical records in

existence regarding the plaintiff’s medical condition, even years prior to a plaintiff’s

medical treatment and prior to the alleged negligence, to an expert for review prior

to filing suit. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j). Many factors may be pertinent to

a medical diagnosis, even going back many years before the alleged negligent care

which is the subject of the claim. Such a standard would likely be nearly impossible

to meet; if even one medical provider inadvertently omitted a single page of records,

the plaintiff’s case would be subject to dismissal. Instead, Rule 9(j) sets a high but

reasonable standard. See id. It requires the plaintiff to make “reasonable inquiry”

for “all medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence” prior to filing suit and

to have a medical expert review all the records “available to the plaintiff” after

“reasonable inquiry.”    Id.   After filing the complaint, Plaintiff served discovery

requests for medical records on both Defendants in this case and subpoenaed records

from DAC. Both Defendants had effectively certified by their discovery responses



                                           - 26 -
                                         LEONARD V. BELL

                                         Opinion of the Court



that Plaintiff already had “all” of the medical records, to the best of their knowledge.6

Yet the recently-produced records upon which they based their motion to dismiss

were records from the very medical facility where they were employed—not records

from another medical provider they may not have been aware of or records

unavailable to them.

        Defendants argue that this case is controlled by Fairfield v. WakeMed, 261

N.C. App. 569, 821 S.E.2d 277. But Fairfield is not applicable to this case. In

Fairfield, the plaintiff’s certification was not in accord with Rule 9(j), as the complaint

stated:

                Counsel for the Plaintiffs hereby certify and affirm, that
                prior to the filing [sic] this lawsuit, pursuant to Rule 9 (j)
                of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure, that certain
                medical records and the medical care received by Mrs.
                Fairfield has been reviewed by a physician who is
                reasonably expected to qualify as an expert witness under
                Rule 702 of the Rules of Evidence and who is willing to
                testify that the medical standard of care provided by
                Defendants did not comply with the applicable standard of
                care.

261 N.C. App. at 571, 821 S.E.2d at 279 (alteration in original) (emphasis added).

6 Defendants argue Dr. McConville’s inability to review the TB skin test form prior to the filing of the
complaint defeats Plaintiff’s malpractice claim because this information was crucial in Plaintiff’s
diagnosis. But Dr. McConville testified this information did not change his opinion. And viewing the
evidence in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, as Preston directs, according to their own discovery
responses, Defendants themselves apparently did not review his TB skin test results which were kept
in the DAC medical files or they did not consider this to be “pertinent” to Plaintiff’s evaluation. Their
argument would tend to support Plaintiff’s argument regarding negligence in failing to suspect a TB-
related infection, since they either (1) did not review the TB skin test form when treating Plaintiff or
(2) reviewed it but still did not suspect TB and misrepresented the records they relied upon in
discovery.


                                                 - 27 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   Opinion of the Court




      This Court noted Rule 9(j) does not allow the plaintiff to have his expert review

only “certain” chosen records regarding the medical care; the expert must review all

records reasonably available to plaintiff:

                     Allowing a plaintiff’s expert witness to selectively
             review a mere portion of the relevant medical records
             would run afoul of the General Assembly’s clearly
             expressed mandate that the records be reviewed in their
             totality. Rule 9(j) simply does not permit a case-by-case
             approach that is dependent on the discretion of the
             plaintiff’s attorney or her proposed expert witness as to
             which of the available records falling within the ambit of
             the Rule are most relevant. Instead, Rule 9(j) requires a
             certification that all “medical records pertaining to the
             alleged negligence that are available to the plaintiff after
             reasonable inquiry” have been reviewed before suit was
             filed.
                     The certification here simply did not conform to this
             requirement. Therefore, the trial court properly ruled that
             Plaintiffs had failed to comply with Rule 9(j).

Id. at 574-75, 821 S.E.2d at 281 (citation omitted).

      Plaintiff had requested all of his medical records from DAC and the particular

record Defendants focus on as “pertinent” to the alleged negligence should have been

included in a complete response to the request.           The TB skin test form, finally

produced over four years after Plaintiff’s first request to DAC, was clearly responsive

to Plaintiff’s initial request for records. The problem arose not from Plaintiff’s request

for records but from DAC’s incomplete response.




                                          - 28 -
                                          LEONARD V. BELL

                                          Opinion of the Court



        The record in question was held by DAC but based upon our record was not

included in any of the records produced by any other medical group or any of

Plaintiff’s treating physicians, including Defendants. Defendants do not argue that

Plaintiff’s initial request for records was unreasonable or insufficient, but they

contend it should have extended back further before his diagnosis. Plaintiff’s request

started with records from 1 January 2012, about nine months prior to Plaintiff’s

initial visit to Dr. Bell.7 Defendants have not demonstrated that the time period of

this request is unreasonable, particularly since the records in question, particularly

the TB skin test form, should have been produced in response to Plaintiff’s first

request. Although the sheet included tests from prior years, it also included tests for

2012 and 2013. The relevant fact in this case, for purposes of Plaintiff’s medical

malpractice claim, is whether TB should have been part of the differential diagnosis

by Dr. Bell much earlier in his treatment of Plaintiff. The TB skin test form—which

should have been produced in the records Plaintiff requested prior to filing suit—

shows Plaintiff first had a positive TB test in 2009.                        Defendants have not

demonstrated why Plaintiff’s initial request should have extended back some period




7 Since Defendants have not yet presented any expert medical opinions regarding the scope of records
which should have been considered “pertinent” to the alleged negligence, and Plaintiff’s expert testified
he would not change his opinion based upon the newly-produced records, Defendants ask this Court
to exercise a level of medical expertise it does not have—and could not exercise even if it did—
regarding the potential relevance of Plaintiff’s medical care several years before the alleged negligence.




                                                 - 29 -
                                         LEONARD V. BELL

                                         Opinion of the Court



of time prior to 1 January 2012, since the record in question was responsive to

Plaintiff’s initial request.8

       Nor have Defendants shown Plaintiff should have known, based upon any

characteristics of the records produced, that the records produced in response to his

initial request were not complete. The medical providers produced hundreds of pages

of records and there was no way for Plaintiff to tell if something had been omitted.

Plaintiff made “reasonable inquiry” for all of his “medical records pertaining to the

alleged negligence” prior to filing suit and then requested records again after filing

suit. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j). Plaintiff received hundreds of pages of medical

records from many providers, some duplicative.                   Even if we assume DAC and

Defendants were merely negligent in failing to find all of the records when Plaintiff

first requested them, and not that they intentionally withheld them to defeat

Plaintiff’s malpractice claim, Plaintiff made reasonable inquiry and his expert

witness reviewed all of the records he received.

                                         IV.     Conclusion




8 Plaintiff’s expert was aware of his positive TB skin tests based upon other information in Plaintiff’s
medical records and considered his medical history as part of his initial opinion developed prior to the
filing of the complaint. Records from Plaintiff’s treating physicians show they were also aware of his
positive TB history. Defendants have not demonstrated why the one-page TB skin test form or other
documents produced in 2018 would have made any meaningful difference in the expert review of the
medical care. After reviewing the additional records, Dr. McConville testified that they did not change
his opinion.

                                                - 30 -
                                  LEONARD V. BELL

                                  Opinion of the Court



      Plaintiff made reasonable inquiry for all of his medical records pertaining to

the alleged negligence and he provided these records to his expert witness for review

prior to filing of the complaint as required by North Carolina General Statute § 1A-

1, Rule 9(j). We reverse the trial court’s order dismissing Plaintiff’s complaint based

upon Rule 9(j) and remand for further proceedings.

      REVERSED AND REMANDED.

      Chief Judge McGEE concurs.

      Judge TYSON dissents by separate opinion.




                                         -2-
 No. COA19-742 – Leonard v. Bell


      TYSON, Judge, dissenting.


      Plaintiff’s undisclosed test for tuberculosis occurred more than three years

prior to any treatment of Plaintiff by Defendants in 2012 and 2013. Nothing shows

Defendants were privy to or aware of Plaintiff’s prior tuberculosis test. This prior

2009 test was part of Plaintiff’s medical history. Plaintiff failed to request and

provide these records for Dr. McConville to review.

      Dr. McConville’s Rule 9(j) certification opines Defendants’ treatment of

Plaintiff failed to meet the statutory standard of care by their failing to consider

Plaintiff’s prior and undisclosed history of tuberculosis. Plaintiff’s remedy, if any, is

properly pursued before the Industrial Commission. The trial court’s dismissal is

properly affirmed. I respectfully dissent.

                                      I. Rule 9(j)

      Rule 9(j) is both a threshold and gatekeeper statute. It was enacted to prevent

frivolous malpractice claims “by precluding any filing in the first place by a plaintiff

who is unable to procure an expert who both meets the appropriate qualifications and,

after reviewing the medical care and available records, is willing to testify that the

medical care at issue fell below the standard of care.” Vaughan v. Mashburn, 371 N.C.

428, 435, 817 S.E.2d 370, 375 (2018) (emphasis supplied).

      Rule 9(j) requires a plaintiff asserting medical malpractice to make “reasonable

inquiry” for production of “all medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence”
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                  TYSON, J., dissenting



and to have his expert witness to review all records “available to plaintiff after

reasonable inquiry.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j)(1) (2019).

                               A. Proper Standard of Review

      The trial court’s order accurately reflects the statute’s mandate that a medical

malpractice complaint is to be strictly reviewed for Rule 9(j) compliance and is

properly dismissed in the absence of Plaintiff’s and his expert’s strict statutory

compliance therewith. Thigpen v. Ngo, 355 N.C. 198, 202, 558 S.E.2d 162, 165 (2002).

             [W]here, as here, a defendant files a motion to dismiss
             under Rule 12(b)(6) challenging a plaintiff’s facially valid
             certification that the reviewing expert was willing to testify
             at the time of the filing of the complaint, the trial court
             must examine the facts and circumstances known or those
             which should have been known to the pleader’ at the time of
             filing

Preston v. Movahed, 374 N.C. 177, 189 840 S.E.2d 174, 183 (2020) (emphasis

supplied).

      The majority’s opinion asserts: “The relevant records in this case are the

medical records of Defendants’ employer, DAC; in other words, they are effectively

the medical records of Defendants’ own care of Plaintiff.” Contrary to the majority’s

notion, Plaintiff bears the burden to secure all his records needed to allow his asserted

expert witness to review and to certify Plaintiff’s threshold compliance with Rule 9(j)

with history and records “known or those which should have been known to the pleader

at the time of filing.” Id. (emphasis supplied). The majority’s opinion correctly notes



                                          -2-
                                     LEONARD V. BELL

                                    TYSON, J., dissenting



Dr. Bell’s response to Plaintiff’s request: “The only medical records related to Plaintiff

that are in Dr. Bell’s possession were produced by Plaintiff’s counsel in connection

with the pending Industrial Commission matter related to Plaintiff’s claims.”

       Plaintiff’s complaint of Defendants’ alleged individual actions and liabilities

are asserted in superior court, and not as public officials of the DAC before the

Industrial Commission. DAC’s actions or omissions relative to Plaintiff’s undisclosed

medical records are irrelevant and cannot be imputed to Defendants in this action.

See Leonard v. Bell, 254 N.C. App. 694, 705, 803 S.E.2d 445, 453 (2017) (“Leonard I”).

       As noted, our Supreme Court in Preston held: “The trial court must examine

the facts and circumstances, known or those which should have been known to the

pleader, at the time of filing . . . , and [if any] disputes or ambiguities in the forecasted

evidence, the trial court should draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the

plaintiff.” Preston, 374 N.C. at 189, 840 S.E.2d at 184 (emphasis supplied) (internal

quotation marks and citations omitted).

       Here, no “disputes or ambiguities in the evidence” exist. Id. Plaintiff admits

knowledge of his prior positive tuberculosis test. He also admits not informing

neither his expert witness nor Defendants of his prior test in his medical history. The

majority’s opinion erroneously applies analysis from Preston to require and to “draw

all reasonable inferences in favor of the [plaintiff]” where the record shows no

“disputes or ambiguities in the evidence” exist. Id.



                                            -3-
                                     LEONARD V. BELL

                                   TYSON, J., dissenting



      A medical malpractice complaint, even if initially facially valid under Rule 9(j),

shall be dismissed when subsequent events establish the Rule 9(j) certification is not

supported or is false. Moore v. Proper, 366 N.C. 25, 32, 726 S.E.2d 812, 817 (2012).

The appellate court’s review of undisputed facts is purely a question of law, not a

factual review in the light most favorable to Plaintiff. Id.; see Preston, 374 N.C. at

189, 840 S.E.2d at 184.

      In Preston, our Supreme Court stated the “analytical framework set forth in

Moore applies equally to other Rule 9(j) issues in which ‘a complaint facially valid

under Rule 9(j)’ is challenged on the basis that ‘the certification is not supported by

the facts.’” Preston, 374 N.C. at 189, 840 S.E.2d at 183 (quoting Moore v. Proper, 366

N.C. at 31-32, 726 S.E.2d at 817).

      In both Moore and in Preston, the Court was reviewing a summary judgment

order, while the dismissal order before us does not raise or resolve credibility issues

or show any ambiguities or disputes of fact. The sole issue before us is the trial court’s

dismissal based upon Plaintiff’s and his expert witness’ admitted failures to request

and review applicable records and to strictly comply with Rule 9(j) to file the

complaint. Vaughan, 371 N.C. at 434-35, 817 S.E.2d at 375. That order is properly

affirmed.

                               B. Plaintiff’s Failure to Request




                                           -4-
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   TYSON, J., dissenting



       On 27 November 2013, Plaintiff made his first request for medical records to

DAC.    He specifically requested “[a]ll medical records, declarations of medical

emergencies, sick call filings, and grievances” from “January 1, 2012-Present.”

Plaintiff’s initial medical records request states a specific beginning date that is

approximately ten months prior to Plaintiff’s first visit to Defendant, Dr. Bell. The

record does not show Plaintiff made any medical record requests upon Dr. Bell or Dr.

Stover in their individual capacities.

       Plaintiff received 512 pages of DAC medical records in response to his post

January 1, 2012 request. Dr. McConville was provided all these responsive DAC

records to review and provide his Rule 9(j) certification to challenge Defendants’

compliance with the standard of care before Plaintiff filed his initial and subsequent

complaints.

       The trial court’s unchallenged Finding of Fact 5 states Plaintiff’s initial request

for records to DAC, did not include any records regarding “his tuberculosis history

and related treatment.” Plaintiff’s initial request specifically asked for “[a]ll medical

records, declarations of medical emergencies, sick call filings, and grievances” from

“January 1, 2012-Present,” which pre-dates by months any care rendered by

Defendants.

       The trial court also found Plaintiff had failed to request or provide Dr.

McConville with his records from DAC prior to 1 January 2012. This finding of fact



                                           -5-
                                     LEONARD V. BELL

                                    TYSON, J., dissenting



is also unchallenged. Because the ultimate diagnosis was a spinal infection caused

by tuberculosis, and Plaintiff had a positive TB test in 2009, the trial court correctly

found Plaintiff had failed to provide Dr. McConville with “all medical records

pertaining to the alleged negligence” by Defendants and properly dismissed the

complaint.

       Dr. McConville condemns Defendants for breach of their statutory standard of

care by not reviewing a 2009 PPD test, which Plaintiff did not disclose, request, or

provide, and which he did not review prior to rendering, and upon which he bases his

certification. It is the Plaintiff-patient’s duty to provide and fully disclose their prior

medical history to subsequent treating physicians and Rule 9(j) expert witness. See

Lowe v. Branson Auto., 240 N.C. App. 523, 534, 771 S.E.2d 911, 918 (2015)

(“[P]laintiff’s [rejected] claim for benefits hinged on . . . plaintiff’s failure to disclose

his prior back problems . . . and the doctors’ reliance on plaintiff’s incomplete medical

history.”).

       Plaintiff makes no assertion or showing this 2009 PPD test was disclosed or

available to Defendants in their individual capacities during their treatment of

Plaintiff in late 2012 through mid-2013. If knowledge of this undisclosed medical

record is to be imputed to them by virtue of their employment by DAC, Plaintiff’s

claim lies solely before the Industrial Commission and not in the superior court.




                                            -6-
                                    LEONARD V. BELL

                                   TYSON, J., dissenting



Plaintiff does not allege Defendants either improperly failed to produce or improperly

withheld evidence.

      Strict compliance with Rule 9(j)’s pleading requirement rests solely upon

Plaintiff and his expert witness. See id. Admitted, unchallenged, and undisputed

evidence in the record supports the trial court’s findings and conclusions to dismiss.

Thigpen, 355 N.C. at 202, 558 S.E.2d at 165. No burden shifting, review in light most

favorable, or the existence of genuine issues of material fact relieves Plaintiff of strict

compliance with the pleading requirement under Rule 9(j). Moore, 366 N.C. at 32, 726

S.E.2d at 817. The appellate court’s review of undisputed facts is purely a question

of law, not a factual review in the light most favorable to Plaintiff. Preston, 374 N.C.

at 189, 840 S.E.2d at 184.

                          II. Plaintiff’s Rule 9(j) Certification

                                  A. Prior to Filing Claim

      The trial court properly dismissed Plaintiff’s complaint for failure to comply

with Rule 9(j). Dr. McConville admitted he had failed to reference or review Plaintiff’s

PPD test from 1 July 2009 prior to making his certification.

      N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j) provides:

             Medical malpractice. Any complaint alleging medical
             malpractice by a health care provider pursuant to G.S. 90-
             21.11(2)a. in failing to comply with the applicable standard
             of care under G.S. 90-21.12 shall be dismissed unless:

             (1) The pleading specifically asserts that the medical care


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                                    LEONARD V. BELL

                                    TYSON, J., dissenting



                 and all medical records pertaining to the alleged
                 negligence that are available to the plaintiff after
                 reasonable inquiry have been reviewed by a person who
                 is reasonably expected to qualify as an expert witness
                 under Rule 702 of the Rules of Evidence and who is
                 willing to testify that the medical care did not comply
                 with the applicable standard of care;

             (2) The pleading specifically asserts that the medical care
                 and all medical records pertaining to the alleged
                 negligence that are available to the plaintiff after
                 reasonable inquiry have been reviewed by a person that
                 the complainant will seek to have qualified as an expert
                 witness by motion under Rule 702(e) of the Rules of
                 Evidence and who is willing to testify that the medical
                 care did not comply with the applicable standard of
                 care, and the motion is filed with the complaint.

N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j) (2019) (emphasis supplied).

      The plain language of Rule 9(j) mandatorily requires a plaintiff’s medical

malpractice action “shall be dismissed” unless a qualified medical expert reviews “all

medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence that are available to the plaintiff

after reasonable inquiry” prior to filing the complaint. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule

9(j) (1)-(2) (emphasis supplied).

      “[C]ompliance with Rule 9(j) is determined at the time the complaint is filed.”

Mangan v. Hunter, __ N.C. App. __, __, 835 S.E.2d 878, 883 (2019). This Court held:

“Rule 9(j) unambiguously requires a trial court to dismiss a complaint if the

complaint’s allegations do not facially comply with the rule’s heightened pleading

requirements.” Barringer v. Wake Forest Univ. Baptist Med. Ctr., 197 N.C. App. 238,



                                            -8-
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                  TYSON, J., dissenting



255, 677 S.E.2d 465, 477 (2009). This Court further held “even when a complaint

facially complies with Rule 9(j) by including a statement pursuant to Rule 9(j), if

discovery subsequently establishes that the statement is not supported by the facts,

then dismissal is likewise appropriate.” Id.

        Based upon Dr. McConville’s review, expert opinion, and certification,

Plaintiff’s complaint included the following false Rule 9(j) certification:

              Plaintiff states that the medical health providers who
              Plaintiff reasonably believes will qualify as expert
              witnesses under Rule 702 of the North Carolina Rules of
              Evidence reviewed all of the allegations of negligence
              related to medical care that is described in this Complaint
              and all the medical records pertaining to the alleged
              negligence that are available to Plaintiff after a reasonable
              inquiry.

(emphasis supplied).

                                B. Deposition Testimonies

        The majority’s opinion asserts Dr. McConville’s belief that Defendants should

have included tuberculosis in their differential diagnosis earlier. By accepting this

premise and sidestepping Rule 9(j), the majority misapplies a level of medical

standard of care to determine a prior and undisclosed three-year-old tuberculosis test

may create individual liability for Defendants. This notion is contrary to the required

standard of care, our statutes, rules, procedures, precedents, and the facts of this

case.




                                          -9-
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   TYSON, J., dissenting



      Dr. McConville’s opines Dr. Bell was individually guilty of medical malpractice,

because Dr. Bell should have suspected a tuberculosis infection sooner and ordered

an MRI scan due to Plaintiff’s prior positive, but undisclosed, 2009 PPD test, more

than three years prior to Dr. Bell’s initial treatment.         Dr. McConville testified

Plaintiff’s prior history of tuberculosis was “relevant” to forming and the development

of the “differential diagnosis.”

      Equally, or even more important, is Dr. Bell’s and Dr. Stover’s lack of

knowledge of the prior test that Plaintiff had failed to disclose in his medical history.

Dr. McConville testified to Plaintiff’s positive 2009 PPD test:

             Defendants’ Counsel: I want to break that apart just a little
             bit, but did you review [Plaintiff]’s medical records related
             to his positive PPD test in 2009?

             Dr. McConville: No. I saw the note from the infectious
             disease doctor when he was hospitalized that he had a past
             history of tuberculosis so - - and that was in September - -
             August, Sep- - August, September when he was
             hospitalized and had his surgery- - initial surgery.

             Dr. McConville: So PPD basically you get a - - you know, a
             shot, you know, typically just subcutaneously in your
             forearm, and then you come back two days later and see if
             there’s any - - oh, what’s the right word—if it’s - - if it’s red
             or indurated. And then that - - that diameter is- - is
             measured. And there’s a cutoff that if it’s above a certain,
             you know, diameter, then there is - - assume that, you
             know, this person’s been exposed to tuberculosis.

             Defendants’ counsel: Do you know the size of [Plaintiff]’s
             [PPD] result was in 2009?



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                            LEONARD V. BELL

                           TYSON, J., dissenting



      Dr. McConville: I don’t ‘cause I don’t believe I reviewed
      those records.

      Defendants’ counsel: Do you know what treatment he was
      provided?

      Dr. McConville: I do not, no.

During cross examination by Plaintiff’s counsel, Dr. McConville testified:

      Plaintiff’s counsel: And would [night sweats] have been
      something that would be important for Dr. Bell to put in
      his request for an MRI that he made in June of 2013 for
      [Dr.] Martin?

      Dr. McConville: I think that in conjunction with his
      previous diagnosis of tuberculosis, yes. It’s very pertinent.

      ....

      Plaintiff’s counsel: Do you recall seeing any notes from Dr.
      Bell that referenced that positive tuberculosis test?

      Dr. McConville: Not that I recall, no.

      Plaintiff’s counsel: Is that something that’s important?

      Dr. McConville: Yes

      Plaintiff’s Counsel: Let me ask that a little more clearly. Is
      that something that would be important for Dr. Bell to
      know?

      Dr. McConville: Yes. I think that would definitely have
      guided him in his decision-making process in regards to, A,
      his differential and, B, what test that he might have
      ordered for [Plaintiff], not only radiographic [X-ray] tests
      but also bloodwork.

      Plaintiff’s counsel: So in order to know about that prior


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                                     LEONARD V. BELL

                                     TYSON, J., dissenting



                tuberculosis test, Dr. Bell would have had to review
                [Plaintiff]’s previous medical records, correct?

                Dr. McConville: I assume, yes.

(emphasis supplied).

          During re-direct, Dr. McConville further testified:

                Defendants’ counsel: Okay. What would Dr. Bell have
                needed to know about for the purposes of his providing
                medical care to [Plaintiff] and abiding by the standard of
                care in this case - - what would Dr. Bell have needed to
                know about the prior positive PPD test?

                Dr. McConville: A, if he was treated. And B, it might have
                been prudent to get, you know, chest CT to make sure that
                he had no had - - developed active tuberculosis again, But
                also like, you know, with this case, you know, the end
                result- - you know, you assume with the complaints of night
                sweats or cold chills or what have you, weight loss and low
                back pain - - you know, you want to rule out, you know, an
                infection in the spine from tuberculosis.

                                     C. Motion to Dismiss

          Plaintiff’ sought his medical records from DAC beginning from the time period

two and one-half years after his July 2009 PPD positive diagnosis for tuberculosis.

As a result, Dr. McConville failed to review the results of this test and any treatment

before rendering his Rule 9(j) certification. Nothing in the record shows Plaintiff ever

informed or provided either of the Defendants with this PPD test, any treatment

thereof, or with any disclosure of his prior tuberculosis to hold them individually

liable.



                                            - 12 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   TYSON, J., dissenting



      Dr. McConville testified to the importance of this test to Defendants’ alleged

breach of their standard of care by failing to diagnose Plaintiff’s tuberculosis infection

earlier. It is undisputed Dr. McConville did not review the results of the 2009 PPD

test and bases and certifies his opinion of Defendants’ alleged breach of the required

standard of care upon their failures to know the undisclosed. When questioned by

Defendants ‘counsel at deposition, Dr. McConville could not ascertain if the 2009 test

was the result of latent or active tuberculosis bacteria.

      The majority’s opinion asserts “Defendants have not demonstrated why the

one-page skin test form or other documents produced in 2018 would have made any

meaningful difference in the expert review of the medical care.” This assertion is

erroneous in two different ways. First, it places a burden upon Defendants that is

contrary to Preston, all precedents, and our statutes.       Plaintiff, not Defendants,

maintains the burden of compliance with Rule 9(j) prior to filing the complaint.

Preston, 374 N.C. at 189, 840 S.E.2d at 183. Second, given the nature of tuberculosis

and the specific culture found after Plaintiff’s surgery, Defendants’ purported

knowledge of Plaintiff’s undisclosed 2009 positive history of tuberculosis is critical to

support Dr. McConville’s Rule 9(j) certification.

      Dr. McConville’s testified Plaintiff’s prior diagnosis of tuberculosis and any

treatment thereafter is pertinent to the standard of care and allegations of negligence

against Dr. Bell and Dr. Stover.        Dr. McConville opined Plaintiff’s history of



                                          - 13 -
                                    LEONARD V. BELL

                                   TYSON, J., dissenting



tuberculosis, in conjunction with his other symptoms, should have made Dr. Bell

suspicious of a potential tuberculosis infectious process in diagnosing and treating

Plaintiff.

       Plaintiff’s original complaint filed in Columbus County, which contained Dr.

McConville’s Rule 9(j) certification, alleged the source of Plaintiff’s infection was from

tuberculosis. Plaintiff’s later complaint, filed in Cumberland County, with a similar

certification, only mentions UNC Hospital’s tuberculosis cultures post-surgery, and

not the 2009 PPD test. Plaintiff’s appellate brief alleges tuberculosis as the source of

his infection.

       This Court in Mangan recently examined a similar issue of the statute’s

mandate requiring the expert’s review of “all medical records” to comply with Rule

9(j). Mangan, __ N.C. App. at __, 835 S.E.2d at 883. In Mangan, and unlike here,

the parties disputed whether the Rule 9(j) expert had reviewed all medical evidence.

Id. Here, Plaintiff concedes in depositions, before the trial court, in briefs, and at oral

argument that Dr. McConville did not review Plaintiff’s 2009 PPD test or treatment

to indicate tuberculosis.

       These facts before us mirror those in Fairfield v. WakeMed, where a Rule 9(j)

medical expert certified he had reviewed “certain” plaintiff’s medical records.

Fairfield v. WakeMed, 261 N.C. App. 569, 574, 821 S.E.2d 277, 280 (2018). This Court

affirmed the trial court’s dismissal.



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                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                   TYSON, J., dissenting



      “North Carolina courts have strictly enforced the provisions of Rule 9(j).” Id. at

574, 821 S.E.2d at 281. More illustratively, this Court held:

             Based on the unambiguous language of the Rule, all of the
             relevant medical records reasonably available to a plaintiff
             in a medical malpractice action must be reviewed by the
             plaintiff’s anticipated expert witness prior to the filing of
             the lawsuit, and a certification of compliance with this
             requirement must be explicitly set out in the complaint.

Id.

      To not strictly follow this rule and allow an expert to “selectively review a mere

portion of the relevant medical records would run afoul of the General Assembly’s

clearly expressed mandate that the records be reviewed in their totality.” Id.

      Dismissing Plaintiffs argument to the contrary, this Court continued:

             Rule 9(j) simply does not permit a case-by-case approach
             that is dependent on the discretion of the plaintiff’s
             attorney or her proposed expert witness as to which of the
             available records falling within the ambit of the Rule are
             most relevant. Instead, Rule 9(j) requires a certification
             that “all medical records pertaining to the alleged
             negligence that are available to the plaintiff after
             reasonable inquiry” have been reviewed before suit was
             filed.

Id. at 574-75, 81 S.E.2d at 281.

      Rule 9(j) compels the Plaintiff to provide to their expert and requires the expert

to review “all medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence that are available

to the plaintiff after reasonable inquiry” before the filing of the complaint. N.C. Gen.

Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j) (emphasis supplied).


                                          - 15 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                  TYSON, J., dissenting



      Dr. McConville expressly admitted he had failed to review the results of

Plaintiff’s 2009 PPD test showing his tuberculosis infection before making the

certification in the complaint, which is the basis of his alleged breach of the standard

of care against Dr. Bell and Dr. Stover. During discovery, Defendants learned Dr.

McConville had not reviewed all of Plaintiff’s relevant medical records, prior to 1

January 2012, the same type of breach of the standard of care for which he opines

Defendants are liable.

      This Court’s holdings in Fairfield and Barringer controls the analysis and

proper outcome of Dr. McConville’s failure to review. Fairfield, 261 N.C. App. at 574,

821 S.E.2d at 280; Barringer, 197 N.C. App. at 255, 677 S.E.2d at 477. “[E]ven when

a complaint facially complies with Rule 9(j) by including a statement pursuant to

Rule 9(j), if discovery subsequently establishes that the statement is not supported

by the facts, then dismissal is likewise appropriate.” Barringer, 197 N.C. App. at 265,

677 S.E.2d at 477. The trial court’s order of dismissal complies precisely with both

precedents.

                    D. Reasonableness of Plaintiff’s Record Inquiry

      The majority’s opinion asserts Plaintiff’s made a reasonable inquiry for records

after “January 1, 2012.” Rule 9(j) requires records “available to the plaintiff after

reasonable inquiry” before the filing of the complaint. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule

9(j). Plaintiff’s brief and arguments do not show his specific and dated request for



                                         - 16 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                  TYSON, J., dissenting



records for his Rule 9(j) expert witness to review and certify Defendant’s alleged

negligence was reasonable to excuse and give credence to Dr. McConville’s

certification

       Considering Plaintiff’s own knowledge of his recent 2009 PPD test and

tuberculosis diagnosis, Plaintiff could have requested medical records for an

expanded term from the DAC, at least for the period of his incarceration. At the time

Plaintiff sought treatment for his back pain, he was or should have been aware of his

recent past tuberculosis infection. Plaintiff’s counsel failed to request all the records

available “after reasonable inquiry” relating to the infection prior to obtaining Rule

9(j) certification and filing his complaint. No allegation or evidence tends to show

Plaintiff disclosed or informed Dr. Bell or Dr. Stover of his past PPD test or provided

any medical history of tuberculosis infection. It was Plaintiff’s duty to disclose.

       Dr. McConville opined Defendants breached their standard of care and

committed medical malpractice by treating a patient with a history of tuberculosis

and without more immediately ordering an MRI study to rule out that infection. Dr.

McConville further testified Defendants individually breached their standard of care

and committed medical malpractice by not seeking out Plaintiff’s medical records

when Plaintiff presented his symptoms: numbness in his legs, blood in his stool, night

sweats, unexplained weight loss, fatigue, and severe pain.




                                         - 17 -
                                   LEONARD V. BELL

                                  TYSON, J., dissenting



      Dr. McConville testified he did not review nor seek out these same records, but

yet he condemns Defendants of breach of the required standard of care and medical

malpractice for their alleged same failures. Dr. McConville’s basis of Plaintiff’s prior

history of tuberculosis was disclosed in chart notes from a UNC Hospital infectious

disease physician after Plaintiff’s surgery and treatment.        No information was

disclosed to Defendants while they were treating Plaintiff. Dr. McConville’s opinion

from this record was vital to his assertion and certification of Defendants’ alleged

breach of the standard of care to support the Rule 9(j) certification in Plaintiff’s

complaint.

      Plaintiff stipulated at oral argument that Defendants and their employers did

not withhold any evidence of the PPD test to later ambush Plaintiff or Dr. McConville

during the deposition, or that Plaintiff’s incarceration limited his knowledge or access

to his records or the treatments he received. Plaintiff does not assert the 2009 PPD

tuberculosis test was disclosed or known to nor held by Defendants individually.

      Additionally, the specific dates in Plaintiff’s medical record’s request failed to

encompass the time frame of his 2009 PPD test of tuberculosis infection. This PPD

test was relatively recent to Plaintiff’s 2012 complaints of back pain and was not so

remote in time to Defendants’ treatment to excuse Plaintiff’s disclosure thereof or

being provided for review. This recentness in time is unlike a diagnosis of a chronic

disease at childhood or tests and treatments from many years earlier.



                                         - 18 -
                                    LEONARD V. BELL

                                    TYSON, J., dissenting



         Plaintiff’ admittedly failed to comply with the statute or to inform Defendants

or Dr. McConville of his past medical history and records at the time of their

treatment of Plaintiff and the Rule 9(j) review. His argument is properly overruled,

and the trial court’s order affirmed.

                                      III. Conclusion

         Rule 9(j) affirmatively and mandatorily requires the qualified medical expert

to review “all medical records pertaining to the alleged negligence that are available

to the plaintiff after reasonable inquiry” and certify breach of the statutory standard

of care prior to the filing of the complaint. N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 9(j).

         The majority’s opinion (1) fails to properly apply the statute; (2) misconstrues

our precedents to recast undisputed and conceded facts as ambiguities; (3) shifts from

Plaintiff and places an improper burden on Defendants; and, (4) misinterprets

Plaintiff’s expert’s own testimony and failures to erroneously reverse the trial court’s

order.

         The trial court’s order reflects the correct ruling under the law and precedents

and is properly affirmed. I respectfully dissent.




                                           - 19 -
