Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Child May Bring Parental Consortium Claim in Iowa

Slipknot-Paul-Gray

Slipknot bass player Paul Gray was found dead in 2010. A hypodermic needle was found next to Gray’s bed, as well as many pills that were apparently scattered across the room.

The Iowa Supreme Court decided a child whose father died while she was in utero, may bring a parental consortium claim but her mother’s spousal consortium claim was untimely.

The late Paul Gray, former Slipknot bassist, died from an overdose or lethal combination of medications. Before his death he was being treated by Dr. Daniel Baldi, an addiction medicine and pain management specialists.

Paul died on May 24, 2010. Breena Gray, then pregnant with their daughter filed suit a wrongful death action against Dr. Baldi, and others involved with Gray’s treatment. The lawsuit was filed on February 14, 2014.

The statute of limitations for a medical malpractice case in Iowa is 2 years from the time the claimant knew of the death. In response to the lawsuit Dr. Baldi filed a motion for summary judgment because both claims (wrongful death and spousal consortium) were out of the statute of limitations.

Gray argued the claims were not time barred because she did not discover the actual injury and cause of Paul’s death until two years later.

Parental Consortium

Generally, under Iowa law a child has until age 10 to file a wrongful death action. Baldi asserted the child was not a minor under the statute and therefore could not bring a claim.

Despite Baldi’s plead for strict reading of the rule, the court believed an unborn child’s deprivation occurs when they are born, not immediately at the parents death.

The court declined to address any philosophical arguments about unborn children as beyond the scope of a parental consortium claim and a “fools errand.”

The court held that a child conceived but not yet born at the time of their parent’s death can bring a parental consortium claim after the child is born. The court reversed the district courts summary judgment.

 

This case is Estate of Paul Gray by Brenna Gray v. Daniel J. Baldi, et al. Case No. 14-1547, Iowa Supreme Court


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