Cheyenne Regional Medical Center claims governmental immunity protects it from being sued by a Colorado man who claims emergency room staffers there wouldnât treat him in 2021 because he refused to wear a face mask. Â
Christopher Fonte filed a lawsuit against the hospital in August in the U.S. District Court for Wyoming. Â
Fonteâs lawsuit complaint says he was in a severe T-bone vehicle crash two years ago that left him fighting for breath, wracked with chest pain and head and body injuries. When he went to the emergency room in Cheyenne, staff asked him to wear a mask so they could evaluate him. Â
Still struggling to take a full breath, Fonte refused to wear a mask and had to leave the emergency room without the medical treatment he needed, his complaint alleges. Â
In a Friday motion and memorandum to dismiss the lawsuit, the hospital claims governmental immunity under a Wyoming law â passed in 2021 â that protects health care providers from lawsuits relating to their COVID-era actions. Â
âRequiring patients to wear masks during a global pandemic to prevent transmission of a deadly virus is neither âgross negligenceâ nor âwillful or wanton misconduct,â particularly in a health care setting where vulnerable patients are present,â says the hospitalâs memo. Â
The document also says Fonte didnât announce, before suing, that he was about to sue a government entity, though state law requires it in many cases. Â
Wyoming Protects Hospitals From COVID LawsuitsÂ
The hospital claims government immunity under a law the Wyoming Legislature passed April 6, 2021. The statute says health care providers âshall be immune from liability for damagesâ relating to COVID-19. Â
People still can sue a health care provider for COVID-related damages if they can demonstrate the provider acted with âgross negligence or willful or wanton misconduct.âÂ
The hospital says Fonte failed to demonstrate gross negligence or willful or wanton misconduct on its part. Â
âPlaintiffâs claims arose in the middle of the deadly COVID-19 pandemic and must be considered in that context,â says the memorandum, which argues further that the hospitalâs âalleged conduct (was) requiring Plaintiff to wear a harmless mask to prevent the spread of a deadly virus.âÂ
About To Sue You, GovernmentÂ
Wyoming law requires generally that a person suing the government must file a notice of claim at the entityâs business office within two years of the injury sparking the lawsuit. Â
Cheyenne Regional Medical Center is an extension of the Laramie County government. Â
People suing state and local governments for violating their rights under the federal civil-rights-action law (42 USC 1983) do not have to file a notice of claim, the memorandum says. Â
But Fonte didnât file his lawsuit under that statute. He filed it under the federal Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (EMTALA). That act says it doesnât preempt state law except in areas where its language conflicts directly with state law. Â
EMTALA doesnât conflict with Wyomingâs law requiring people to announce theyâre about to sue the government, the hospitalâs memorandum argues. Â
If a federal judge agrees with the hospital, Fonte will have missed his two-year claim deadline altogether: It passed Aug. 5. Â
The hospital is represented by Denver-based attorney Jonathan Corrigan. Â
A Little Background Â
Fonteâs complaint says wearing a mask wasnât an option for him after the car crash. Â
âThe nurse insisted that Plaintiff must âcomplyâ and put on a mask or he would not be treated,â the complaint says. Â
He was reportedly âin no shape to be dealing with such unreasonable and careless behavior,â so he offered to go outside, but he asked that a senior nurse come out to assess him and help with his intake. Â
He sat down, exhausted, on the concrete ground outside. The complaint says a nurse came out to him and asked if he âhad some frustration about the mask policy?â Â
Fonte said he couldnât breathe well, heâd been in an accident, and he needed to be seen. Â
None of the staff offered screening or help, or an oxygen mask or âany attention whatsoever,â Fonteâs filing alleges. Â
âInstead, all nurses and personal (sic) fixated on forcing some level of compliance in wearing a mask,â the filing reads. âEven going so far as to say that it could be worn loosely, and that she didnât agree with the policy but that as an employee she must enforce it.â Â
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) allowed hospitals to admit patients without masks if they had difficulty breathing while masked, the complaint says. Â
Fonteâs friends were also there, and the complaint says they urged hospital staff to help the man. Â
âThe staff simply walked away leaving Plaintiff at the emergency entrance,â it reads. Â
He âhad to be transported back homeâ and taken for treatment to other medical offices over the following days and weeks in what his complaint describes as an unnecessary prolonging of treatment. Â




