Adwent v. Novak

2017 IL App (1st) 160683
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 17, 2017
Docket1-16-0683
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2017 IL App (1st) 160683 (Adwent v. Novak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adwent v. Novak, 2017 IL App (1st) 160683 (Ill. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

2017 IL App (1st) 160683

FIRST DIVISION July 17, 2017

No. 1-16-0683

) ZBIGNIEW ADWENT, ) Appeal from the Circuit ) Court of Cook County. Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 12 L 10734 ) RICHARD B. NOVAK, M.D., ) ) Honorable Defendant-Appellee. ) Casandra Lewis, ) Judge Presiding. )

JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.

Presiding Justice Connors and Justice Harris concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiff Zbigniew Adwent brought a medical malpractice suit against defendant Dr.

Richard B. Novak. On October 5, 2015, a jury returned a verdict in favor of Dr. Novak. On

appeal, Mr. Adwent claims that the trial court abused its discretion in two respects: (1) by barring

testimony from Mr. Adwent’s expert witness, James Hayes, that Dr. Novak’s chart regarding his

treatment of Mr. Adwent was missing a page; and (2) by refusing to give a jury instruction on

contributory negligence. Because we find neither of these rulings are an abuse of the trial court’s

discretion, we affirm.

¶2 BACKGROUND

¶3 Mr. Adwent filed his initial complaint on September 20, 2012, alleging that, during two

office visits in September 2010, Dr. Novak was negligent in failing to properly investigate or

treat his medical conditions, which included back pain, Group B streptococcus, bacteremia, and

diabetes. The initial complaint was brought against Dr. Novak and Novak Family Medical, but No. 1-16-0683

two days before trial Mr. Adwent was given leave to file a first amended complaint against Dr.

Novak only. In his answer to Mr. Adwent’s first amended complaint, which was filed during the

trial on October 1, 2015, the only affirmative defense that Dr. Novak pleaded was Mr. Adwent’s

failure to mitigate damages.

¶4 A. Pre-Trial Proceedings

¶5 On September 19, 2014, Mr. Adwent filed disclosures pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court

Rule 213(f) (eff. Jan. 1, 2007), disclosing his intention to call James Hayes as a forensic

document examiner. Attached to the disclosures was a report in which Mr. Hayes noted that he

had examined 22 pages of the “original Novak Family Medical office chart” for Mr. Adwent and

opined: “Based upon the examination and comparisons of the exhibits I have determined that the

exhibits submitted are not the complete record of the Zbigniew Adwent medical records.” Mr.

Hayes further explained that his conclusion was based on “the presence of developed latent

images on the submitted documents that could not be correlated to the records. Images from page

21A are not found in the records.”

¶6 On September 20, 2015, Dr. Novak filed a motion in limine to bar Mr. Hayes from

testifying, arguing that Mr. Hayes’s opinion was “inconclusive and speculative.” Attached to the

motion was a transcript of Mr. Hayes’s December 2014 discovery deposition, in which he

explained that his opinion was based on latent images found on a billing record at page 21A of

Mr. Adwent’s medical records. According to Mr. Hayes, these latent images reflected writing—

including the initials “FU,” which he believed referred to “follow up,” as well as “entries for

blood pressure and pulse and other entries that ha[d] not been deciphered but [we]re clearly

visible on the document”—that had been made on another piece of paper while it was laid on top

of page 21A. Mr. Hayes concluded that, because the latent images on page 21A did not appear as

-2­ No. 1-16-0683

actual writing on any page in Mr. Adwent’s medical records, the records were not complete.

¶7 Mr. Hayes conceded in his deposition that he had no knowledge of whether the writing

that appeared in the latent images on page 21A concerned Mr. Adwent. Mr. Hayes also could not

be sure that the writing was Dr. Novak’s; although the handwriting on the latent images was

consistent with Dr. Novak’s handwriting on Mr. Adwent’s medical chart, Mr. Hayes “had not

rendered an opinion regarding authorship.” Mr. Hayes also acknowledged the narrow scope of

his opinion:

“Q. So your single opinion in this case is that there are latent images

shown on Page 21A, the billing record entry, that you cannot correlate to any

other handwritten entry on any other page of Mr. Adwent’s medical chart.

A. Correct.”

¶8 The trial court granted Dr. Novak’s motion to bar Mr. Hayes from testifying at trial. The

court noted that the proposed testimony was “totally speculative” and that there was no way to

know if the writing in the latent image was “work related” or even “related to this particular

patient.” The court continued, “[a]nd if it is related to this particular patient, we don’t know what

he was trying to say. I mean, I don’t know how that could be probative, other than to go to some,

you know—I don’t know, some conspiracy kind of thing.”

¶9 B. Offer of Proof

¶ 10 During trial, Mr. Adwent made an offer of proof as to what Mr. Hayes would have

testified to, questioning Mr. Hayes on the stand outside of the jury’s presence. That testimony,

consistent with Mr. Hayes’s deposition testimony, was that notations had been made on a

document which appeared in latent images on page 21A of Mr. Adwent’s medical records, but

that the document with those notations was not a part of Mr. Adwent’s medical chart as

-3­ No. 1-16-0683

maintained by Dr. Novak. Mr. Hayes also acknowledged that he could not determine whether

that missing document concerned Mr. Adwent and that he had “no way of knowing” what patient

was referred to in the writing appearing as a latent image on page 21A. In response to

questioning from Mr. Adwent’s attorney, Mr. Hayes reiterated that the conclusion he drew from

Mr. Adwent’s medical records was simply that “the document upon which the F/U, the

temperature and the BP were written d[id] not exist in the chart that [he] examined, and [was] not

a part of the characteristics of the exhibits that [he] examined.”

¶ 11 C. Trial

¶ 12 The trial began on September 21, 2015. The evidence was that on August 31, 2010, prior

to going to see Dr. Novak, Mr. Adwent was admitted to St. Alexius Medical Center and

diagnosed with Group B streptococcus, bacteremia, cholelithiasis, low back pain, lumbar disc

disease, Type 2 diabetes, and hypertension. Mr. Adwent was told that he needed an MRI, but

would have to pay for it before he received it. Mr. Adwent left the hospital against medical

advice on September 7, 2010, because, according to his testimony, he could not afford the MRI

and the hospital was not helping him. Although Mr. Adwent could not recall this at trial, one of

his children testified that Mr. Adwent subsequently made a visit to the emergency room at Good

Shepherd Hospital on September 19, 2010.

¶ 13 Mr. Adwent first saw Dr. Novak in the doctor’s office on September 21, 2010,

accompanied by three of his adult children and complaining of intractable back pain. Mr.

Adwent testified that Dr. Novak did not tell him to go to the hospital or to a back specialist but,

instead, prescribed him medication and told him to come back if he did not feel better. Mr.

Adwent also testified that he did not hear Dr. Novak tell his children that he needed to go to the

hospital and that he did not remember telling Dr. Novak that he had been in the hospital for a

-4­ No. 1-16-0683

week or in the emergency room.

¶ 14 Dr. Novak testified, and his patient notes for September 21 reflected, that Mr. Adwent’s

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Adwent v. Novak
2017 IL App (1st) 160683 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2017)

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