Title: Lopez-Rosario v. Habib

State: virginia

Issuer: Virginia Supreme Court

Document:

PRESENT:  Lemons, C.J., Goodwyn, Mims, McClanahan, Powell, and Kelsey, JJ., and Lacy, 
S.J. 
 
KENIA L. LOPEZ-ROSARIO 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    OPINION BY 
v.  Record No. 150587 
 
 
 
         JUSTICE S. BERNARD GOODWYN 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
           
    April 14, 2016 
CHRISTINE HABIB, ET AL. 
 
 
FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY 
John M. Tran, Judge 
 
 
In this appeal, we consider whether the circuit court erred in dismissing a suit for medical 
malpractice on the basis that the plaintiff filed the lawsuit in her own name, although co-
guardians, responsible for her personal affairs, had been appointed. 
BACKGROUND 
 
Kenia L. Lopez-Rosario (Lopez-Rosario) is an adult with several physical and cognitive 
disabilities.  On May 13, 2010, Lopez-Rosario’s parents, Kenia I.R. Lopez and Israel Lopez 
(collectively, parents) petitioned the Circuit Court of Loudoun County to appoint them as Lopez-
Rosario’s co-guardians.  The petition stated that Lopez-Rosario “is an incapacitated individual as 
defined by Virginia Code Ann. § 37.2-1000 and Article II Section 1 of the Constitution of 
Virginia.”  It added that Lopez-Rosario requires extensive care on a daily basis and is cared for 
by her mother full time.  
A psychologist’s report filed with the petition stated, “Kenia functions at about the level 
of a six year old child.  Estimated intellectual functioning is in the range of mild mental 
retardation.  She cannot understand spoken speech, but can understand and communicate in ASL 
[(American Sign Language)], though at the level of a young child.”  The report stated that 
Lopez-Rosario’s “[cognitive] condition is permanent and expected to remain stable.” 
2 
 
The circuit court held, and its order stated, that Lopez-Rosario’s “best interests shall be 
met by appointing co-guardians for her personal decisions, including decisions relating to her 
health, safety, treatment and care.”  The circuit court deemed that she was “incapacitated and 
unable to care for her person and estate” and that her “incapacity is expected to be permanent.”  
The court granted guardianship to the parents and in its order explained that “[t]he co-guardians 
shall be responsible for the personal affairs of Kenia L. Lopez-Rosario.  The co-guardians shall 
have authority pursuant to § 37.2-1020 of the Code to make decisions regarding the support care, 
health, safety, habilitation, therapeutic treatment and residence of Kenia L. Lopez-Rosario.”  
Further, the order stated, “all costs and fees incurred in connection with this proceeding are to be 
paid by Children’s National Medical Center.”1 
Subsequently, Lopez-Rosario had surgery to remove her gallbladder.  The surgeon, 
Christine Habib, M.D. (Dr. Habib), allegedly made an error that injured Lopez-Rosario.  On 
March 7, 2014, Lopez-Rosario filed suit against Dr. Habib and her employer, Virginia Surgery 
Associates (collectively, defendants), alleging that Dr. Habib’s negligence caused her injury.  
Lopez-Rosario filed suit in her own name and without indication that she was under a 
guardianship. 
The defendants filed a plea in bar/motion to dismiss, arguing that because her parents had 
been appointed as her guardians, Lopez-Rosario could not file suit under her own name.  Lopez-
Rosario opposed the plea in bar/motion to dismiss, arguing that the guardianship was limited to 
medical decisions and did not include matters such as filing lawsuits. 
                                                 
1 According to the report attached to the petition for appointment of guardians, the 
petition “arose from a requirement of NCMC [(Children’s National Medical Center)] that 
someone have legal responsibility for making the decision to permit Kenia’s recent orthopedic 
surgery.  That situation was handled satisfactorily via a temporary guardianship, but, going 
forward, Kenia needs someone who can make any such decisions in the future.” 
 
3 
 
The court granted the defendants’ plea in bar/motion to dismiss because it deemed that 
Lopez-Rosario was “under a guardianship and does not have standing to file a lawsuit in her 
[own] name.”  Lopez-Rosario appeals. 
ANALYSIS 
 
Lopez-Rosario argues that the circuit court erred in ruling that she lacked standing to sue 
in her own name.  She asserts that her parents’ guardianship authority is limited to medical 
decisions and thus does not prevent her from filing a legal action in her own name.2  The 
defendants respond that the circuit court’s guardianship order deemed Lopez-Rosario 
incapacitated and mentally incompetent and gave the parents authority over Lopez-Rosario’s 
“personal affairs,” so the parents’ guardianship over Lopez-Rosario included the authority to file 
a legal action on her behalf (legal decisions). 
 
Lopez-Rosario agrees that if her parents’ guardianship includes authority over her legal 
decisions, she did not have standing to file suit.  This concession is consistent with and 
demonstrates an understanding of the applicable law. 
If a fiduciary is appointed for a ward, the ward loses the ability to file suit in his or her 
own name.  Code § 64.2-2025 states, in relevant part, 
 
Subject to any conditions or limitations set forth in the order appointing 
the fiduciary, the fiduciary shall prosecute or defend all actions or suits to which 
the incapacitated person is a party at the time of qualification of the fiduciary and 
all such actions or suits subsequently instituted after 10 days’ notice of the 
pendency of the action or suit. 
                                                 
2 At oral argument, Lopez-Rosario argued for the first time that although the parents may 
be her guardians, they were not her conservators, so they did not have authority to file suit.  
Lopez-Rosario did not raise this argument at trial.  Therefore, we will not consider it on appeal.  
Rule 5:25. 
4 
 
Further, we held in Cook v. Radford Community Hospital, 260 Va. 443, 451, 536 S.E.2d 906, 
910 (2000), that pursuant to a previous version of Code § 64.2-2025, “the ward does not have 
standing to sue in his or her own name” if a fiduciary has been appointed on his or her behalf. 3 
In Cook, we decided that a ward of a guardianship arrangement lacked standing to file 
suit, implying that a guardian was a fiduciary.  Id. at 446-47 & n.2, 451, 536 S.E.2d at 907 & n.2, 
910.  Correspondingly, Code § 64.2-2019(A) provides that “[a] guardian stands in a fiduciary 
relationship to the incapacitated person for whom he was appointed guardian.”  Thus, a guardian 
is a fiduciary for purposes of Code § 64.2-2025. 
 
In this case, the guardianship order appointed the parents as “co-guardians” of Lopez-
Rosario.  The term “Guardian” as used in the Code “means a person appointed by the court who 
is responsible for the personal affairs of an incapacitated person, including responsibility for 
making decisions regarding the person’s support, care, health, safety, habilitation, education, 
therapeutic treatment, and, if not inconsistent with an order of involuntary admission, residence.”  
Code § 64.2-2000. 
 
However, Code § 64.2-2009 allows for the creation of a guardianship for a limited 
purpose.  It states, in relevant part, 
A.  The court’s order appointing a guardian or conservator shall . . . (ii) 
define the powers and duties of the guardian or conservator so as to permit the 
incapacitated person to care for himself and manage property to the extent he is 
capable; . . . .  
 
 
B.  The court may appoint a limited guardian for an incapacitated person 
who is capable of addressing some of the essential requirements for his care for 
the limited purpose of medical decision making, decisions about place of 
residency, or other specific decisions regarding his personal affairs.  The court 
may appoint a limited conservator for an incapacitated person who is capable of 
                                                 
3 Cook interpreted what was then Code § 37.1-141, which subsequently became Code 
§ 37.2-1026.  2005 Acts ch. 716.  Later the provision was recodified at Code § 64.2-2025.  2012 
Acts ch. 614.  Code § 64.2-2025 is substantively the same as former Code § 37.1-141. 
5 
 
managing some of his property and financial affairs for limited purposes that are 
specified in the order. 
Thus, while the Code and our precedent in Cook show that the appointment of a guardian for the 
full range of statutory purposes removes from the ward the ability to file suit in his or her own 
name, it is possible for a guardianship to be limited in nature, such that the guardian does not 
have authority over legal decisions.  Therefore, we must determine whether the circuit court 
erred in ruling that the parents’ guardianship over Lopez-Rosario was as broad as the statutes 
authorize rather than being limited such that it did not provide the parents authority to make legal 
decisions on behalf of Lopez-Rosario. 
Because there were no disputed facts relevant to the plea in bar/motion to dismiss and the 
circuit court’s ruling was based on its interpretation of a guardianship order, a finding of law, we 
review the circuit court’s decision de novo.  Shevlin Smith v. McLaughlin, 289 Va. 241, 251, 
769 S.E.2d 7, 12 (2012).  Given that the psychologist’s report states that the petition was filed to 
enable the parents to make medical decisions for Lopez-Rosario and that Children’s National 
Medical Center paid the fees and costs associated with obtaining the guardianship order, it 
appears that the immediate purpose for filing for a guardianship was to enable Lopez-Rosario’s 
parents to make medical decisions on her behalf.  However, the language of the order is 
controlling in this case.  See Temple v. Mary Washington Hospital, 288 Va. 134, 141, 762 
S.E.2d 751, 754 (2014) (“This Court has stated on numerous occasions . . . . that trial courts 
speak only through their written orders and that such orders are presumed to reflect accurately 
what transpired.”). 
The circuit court’s order states that Lopez-Rosario was “deemed incapacitated and unable 
to care for her person and estate” and that her “incapacity is expected to be permanent.”  It gave 
6 
 
the parents authority to make decisions for Lopez-Rosario regarding “support care, health, 
safety, habilitation, therapeutic treatment and residence of Kenia L. Lopez-Rosario.” 
 
Code § 64.2-2000 states that a “Guardian” is “responsible for the personal affairs of an 
incapacitated person, including responsibility for making decisions regarding the person’s 
support, care, health, safety, habilitation, education, therapeutic treatment, and, if not 
inconsistent with an order of involuntary admission, residence.”  The guardianship order noted 
Lopez-Rosario’s incapacity and gave the parents authority in each area listed in the definition of 
“Guardian” under Code § 64.2-2000.4  The order did not specify any limitations on the parents’ 
guardianship, effectively granting them all of the authority that a court may vest in a guardian.  
Thus, the parents are Lopez-Rosario’s full guardians, not limited ones. 
As guardians, the parents were Lopez-Rosario’s fiduciaries.  Code § 64.2-2019(A).  
Thus, pursuant to Code § 64.2-2025, the parents had the authority and obligation to prosecute 
lawsuits on Lopez-Rosario’s behalf.  Therefore, in accordance with our prior decision in Cook, 
260 Va. at 451, 536 S.E.2d at 910, Lopez-Rosario lacked standing to file suit in her own name. 
                                                 
4 The only potential area of distinction between the statutory definition of the decision-
making responsibilities of a full guardian and those assigned in the guardianship order is that 
Code § 64.2-2000 gives a guardian authority over “support” and “care” of the ward with the two 
consecutive terms being separated by a comma, and the guardianship order omits the comma 
between those words and thus states that the parents are responsible for decisions regarding 
“support care.”  The term “support care” was not found in dictionaries reviewed by this Court.  It 
appears that the order sought to track Code § 64.2-2000, and that the circuit court made a clerical 
error by omitting the comma between “support” and “care.”  At oral argument, Lopez-Rosario’s 
counsel commented that the distinction “looks like a typographical error.”  Thus, we consider 
there to be no distinction between the duties listed in the guardianship order and those listed in 
the definition of “Guardian” in Code § 64.2-2000. 
 
7 
 
CONCLUSION 
 
In summary, for the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court granting 
the plea in bar/motion to dismiss on the basis that Lopez-Rosario lacked standing to file this suit 
Affirmed.