Court Opinion

ID: 5103131
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-01 23:39:57.592924+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:21:07.155630
License: Public Domain

RONNIE L. WHITE, Judge.
I respectfully dissent. The principal opinion’s conclusion is but another step further down the ill-advised road upon which this Court embarked when it decided State ex. rel. Linthicum v. Calvin.1 As stated in my dissent in Linthicum, the idea that a case is somehow “re-brought” each time a new party is subsequently added to the proceedings flies in the face of statutory interpretation, all accepted definitions of the word “brought”, common sense and most importantly this Court’s *466own precedent.2 If this case were merely a recitation of the facts in Linthicum, a simple reference to my dissent in that case would be sufficient; unfortunately, that is not the case. In the principal opinion the majority continues to progress towards a further derogation of Missouri’s venue rules.
On April 13, 2001, pursuant to section 508.010(4), RSMo, plaintiff Patrick W. Driven brought a medical malpractice suit in the City of St. Louis against Dr. Rebecca Bierman, a resident of California. Because Dr. Bierman was a resident of the state of California and was the only defendant when the case was brought, venue in the City of St. Louis was proper. Five days later, the plaintiff added two additional defendants to the suit that he brought on April 13, United Behavioral Health, Inc., and Thomas Chida, both St. Louis County residents. If the additional defendants had been part of the suit when it was brought, venue would not have been proper in St. Louis City under section 508.010(3).
The divergence of the facts in this case from that in Linthicum seem minimal at first, but an extrapolation of the effect that today’s principal opinion will have on Missouri’s venue law once again displays the turmoil to which Linthicum leads.3 In Linthicum the plaintiff amended his petition a mere one-day after it was first filed. In the present case the petition was amended a full five days after the case was brought. While that difference may seem small in this context, a review of the limitless possibilities that the aftermath of Lin-thicum provides shows the true folly in that decision.
Suppose for instance, a malpractice action between a resident of St. Louis City and an out-of-state defendant who is a resident of the state of California, much like Dr. Bierman. The unfortunate incident took place in a small Missouri town at a local facility. Because the doctor was a resident of California and was the only defendant when the case was brought, venue is proper in St. Louis City under section 508.010(4). However, after a year and a half of pre-trial motions and thousands of pages of discovery, all conducted in St. Louis City, where the action was brought, it is learned that aside from the negligence perpetrated by the doctor, the local nurse who assisted in the procedure was also negligent. Upon learning of her negligence, the defendant amends his suit to include the nurse as a party defendant. The nurse, a resident of the small town, then files a motion requesting change of venue as a result of her addition to the case that was brought in St. Louis City. Both of the other parties to the action, the plaintiff and the defendant doctor, oppose the motion due to the extensive time, resources and effort that has already been exerted developing the case in St. Louis City. However, their objection to transfer, based upon statutory interpretation, common sense and this Court’s own precedent must now fail. Under Linthicum and now Bierman, the case must be moved out of St. Louis City.
Under the rubric of Linthicum, which is extended by this case, no matter how advanced a proceeding may be, nor how inconvenient for the parties that are already involved, if an additional party is added to the law suit at any time, the propriety of venue must be re-determined. While to*467day’s decision can lead to the absurd results described above, its most troubling consequence is the disregard it displays for already taxed judicial resources.
The literally countless number of cases that may now be unnecessarily disrupted when a party is subsequently added will create unnecessary turmoil and work for trial judges. Courts where venue was originally proper must now re-determine venue and transfer actions after proceedings have began. Under these decisions, the addition of an additional party has the potential to bring to a halt an ongoing proceeding and transfer it to a new venue only to start the entire process again. Before these holdings, parties to a lawsuit had a bright line rule upon which they could depend. That rule stated: absent improper venue, a case would be decided where it was brought. Now the only thing that litigants can know for sure is that they better not unpack.
Today this Court misses an opportunity to remedy the wrong that was perpetrated in its decision in Linthicum.

. 57 S.W.3d 855 (Mo. banc 2001).

. Id. at 867.

. The principal opinion begins by stating that this petition for writ of prohibition began in the "wake” of Linthicum, it might more aptly be said that the plaintiff's proper venue in St. Louis City was buried in the "aftermath” of that case.