Advanced Health Care, Inc. v. Guscott

295 P.3d 816, 173 Wash. App. 857
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 26, 2013
DocketNo. 41969-6-II
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 295 P.3d 816 (Advanced Health Care, Inc. v. Guscott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Advanced Health Care, Inc. v. Guscott, 295 P.3d 816, 173 Wash. App. 857 (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Hunt, J.

¶1 Arthur Guscott appeals the superior court’s in limine exclusion of his three expert witnesses’ causation testimonies and its resultant summary judgment dismissal of his tort counterclaims against Advanced Health Care Inc. (AHC), which had sued him for failure to pay for services. He argues that the superior court (1) erroneously ruled that his experts’ testimonies did not meet the Frye test1 and misapplied the Frye test by requiring scientific proof that every aspect of his experts’ causation opinions was not novel; (2) should have instead applied the Daubert test2 to evidence supporting his civil tort counterclaims; (3) erred in granting summary judgment to AHC because Guscott lacked evidence of causation; and (4) erred in denying his motion for reconsideration. We hold that Guscott’s experts’ testimonies did not involve novel scientific theories or methods and, therefore, they did not implicate Frye. We reverse the superior court’s exclusion of Guscott’s experts’ testimonies for failure to meet the Frye test and its summary judgment dismissal of Guscott’s counterclaims against AHC; and we remand for trial.

[860]*860FACTS

I. Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurism

¶2 On Christmas Day 2006, 86-year-old Arthur Guscott was attending a church service with his AHC caregiver. Guscott had previously been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and a 9.4 centimeter abdominal aortic aneurism,3 which was very large and rapidly growing but still intact. Guscott left the church service with his caregiver pushing him in a wheelchair. Guscott’s wheelchair hit a crack in the sidewalk; Guscott fell out of the wheelchair, hitting his elbow and his buttocks hard on the cement. Guscott’s caregiver took him to the emergency room at Providence St. Peter Hospital, where Guscott was treated by Dr. Erik Penner.

¶3 Dr. Penner examined Guscott, consulted his medical records, and learned that he had a large abdominal aortic aneurism, for which he had previously signed a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) directive and had refused surgery. Dr. Penner noted that Guscott had a low blood pressure of “91/63,” which could be a sign of a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurism. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 110. After speaking with Guscott and performing a physical examination on him, however, Dr. Penner concluded that Guscott did not have any “tenderness” or “pain in his abdomen,” suggesting that the abdominal aortic aneurism had not ruptured. CP at 111.

¶4 Because Guscott had primarily complained about pain in his buttocks, Dr. Penner ordered a pelvic x-ray to rule out the possibility of a fracture, a full electrocardiogram (EKG), a complete blood count (CBC), a basic meta[861]*861bolic panel (BMP), and a urinalysis. Dr. Penner did not find anything particularly concerning about Guscott’s medical condition from these tests.4 When the nurses checked Guscott’s blood pressure again, it had risen to “112/68.” CP at 114. Dr. Penner found this increase in blood pressure “reassuring,” and he became “less concern [ed]” about Guscott’s having a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurism because his blood pressure was rising and stabilizing rather than staying persistently low. CP at 115. Dr. Penner discharged Guscott as having merely “contusions” (or bruises) on his buttocks and some cuts on his right elbow. CP at 116.

¶5 At home that evening, the caretaker applied an ice pack to Guscott’s right elbow in accordance with the hospital’s discharge instructions. Guscott was “groaning” and “moaning loudly,” and his transfers from his recliner to his wheelchair and toilet appeared very painful. CP at 261. The two caretakers who worked with Guscott the next morning noted that (1) his blood pressure had remained stable at 113/79; (2) his elbow was still “pink,” “swollen,” and “bleeding”; (3) he complained of pain “all over,” but this pain was primarily concentrated in his coccyx; and (4) he had difficulty urinating. CP at 257-58, 262. The caretakers continued icing his elbow, gave him two Tylenol in addition to his usual morning prescriptions, scheduled an appointment with his personal physician for December 28, and notified his daughter in Chicago so she could attend. Guscott’s evening caretaker gave him two more Tylenol for his pain.

¶6 On December 27, Guscott’s daughter arrived and spent the afternoon reviewing her father’s books and finances with him. Around 2:00 or 3:00 am the next day, Guscott’s painful moans woke his daughter; believing he was having a heart attack, she called 911. At Providence St. Peter Hospital, a computed tomography (CT scan) showed [862]*862that Guscott’s abdominal aortic aneurism had ruptured. Guscott reversed his earlier DNR and was flown to Harborview Medical Center for surgery on his ruptured abdominal aortic aneurism. Vascular surgeon Dr. Nam T. Tran conducted a “fairly routine” successful surgery. CP at 97.

II. Procedure

¶7 AHC sued Guscott for breach of contract, asserting that he had failed to pay for his caretaker services. CP at 9-10. Guscott counterclaimed5 that (1) AHC had been negligent in causing him to fall from his wheelchair, which fall was the proximate cause of his ruptured abdominal aortic aneurism; and (2) AHC’s neglect was also a violation of the vulnerable adult statute, chapter 74.34 RCW. The superior court bifurcated the parties’ claims. The parties settled AHC’s breach of contract claim before trial; thus, the superior court set only Guscott’s tort counterclaims for trial. In anticipation of trial, both parties retained and deposed medical experts to testify about whether Guscott’s fall from his wheelchair had caused his abdominal aortic aneurism to rupture. Ultimately, however, the trial court excluded Guscott’s expert witnesses’ opinions.6

A. Pretrial Expert Witness Depositions

1. Guscott’s Experts’ Opinions

¶8 To prove causation, Guscott relied on the opinions of three experts: Drs. Holmes, Heller, and Gore. But the trial court ruled that none of the three experts’ opinions met the Frye test and, thus, excluded their testimonies.

[863]*863Dr. Holmes

¶9 Dr. John R. Holmes, a cardiologist at Virginia Mason Medical Center, reviewed Guscott’s hospital records and testified in a deposition that he believed Guscott’s fall from his wheelchair had caused his abdominal aortic aneurism to rupture as a result of “deceleration” and “shearing forces.” CP at 213. According to Dr. Holmes, (1) it was well known in the medical community that a “significant trauma” or a “violent fall” (e.g., car crash or skiing accident) could cause a normal aorta to rupture as a result of deceleration, even where the person injured had not suffered direct trauma to the aorta; and (2) it was not a far “stretch” that a fragile, dilated, or calcified aorta like Guscott’s could rupture with even less trauma. CP at 213. Dr. Holmes, however, did not know of any medical studies analyzing the effect of deceleration on the abdominal aorta (as opposed to the thoracic aorta) or abdominal aortic aneurisms specifically.

¶10 Nevertheless, in Dr. Holmes’ opinion, Guscott had an “eggshell” aorta. CP at 215. When Guscott fell hard from his wheelchair, his aorta cracked and started to “leak.”7 CP at 215.

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295 P.3d 816, 173 Wash. App. 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advanced-health-care-inc-v-guscott-washctapp-2013.