Allen v. Tong

2003 NMCA 056, 66 P.3d 963, 133 N.M. 594
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 2003
Docket22,325
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2003 NMCA 056 (Allen v. Tong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Tong, 2003 NMCA 056, 66 P.3d 963, 133 N.M. 594 (N.M. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

SUTIN, Judge.

{1} Plaintiff Phillip Allen, also known as Phillip Lindberg, appeals from an adverse jury verdict on his medical malpractice claims against Defendant Dr. Rolando M. Tong. Plaintiff asserts: (1) the district court erred by refusing Plaintiffs tendered UJI 13-302B NMRA 2003 and by submitting a 13-302B instruction that was prejudicially confusing and not in conformity with UJI requirements, (2) opposing counsel made an improper and highly prejudicial comment during closing argument warranting reversal, and (3) the district court abused its discretion in denying Plaintiffs motion for a new trial which was based on these two asserted trial mishaps. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

{2} On September 29, 1994, Bobbi Lind-berg (Lindberg) took her then fifteen-year-old son, Phillip (Plaintiff) 1 to the emergency room at Rehobeth McKinley Hospital, because Plaintiff had a swollen, tender testicle, and he was in pain and vomiting. An emergency room physician, Dr. Beamsley, took Plaintiffs history, examined him, and took a Doppler reading of Plaintiffs pulse in both testicles. Dr. Beamsley called Defendant, who was the on-call surgeon, and described Plaintiffs condition. Dr. Beamsley told Defendant that he felt Plaintiff had testicular torsion and also stated that the condition was a surgical emergency.

{3} Defendant received this call from Dr. Beamsley at about 6:40 a.m. After the call, Defendant took a shower, shaved, got dressed, and then went to the hospital. Defendant thought he arrived at the hospital before 8 a.m. Plaintiff contends Defendant did not arrive until about 9:20 a.m. It would usually take Defendant anywhere from two to five minutes to drive from his home to the hospital. When Defendant arrived at the hospital, he reviewed Plaintiffs chart, spoke with Plaintiff, collected medical history from him, and proceeded with a physical examination and a Doppler examination to check for a pulse in each of Plaintiffs testicles. Through differential diagnosis, Defendant believed that the diagnosis was fifty-fifty between testicular torsion and epididymitis and he ordered a scan. Defendant agreed that a safe time to wait to operate and explore was about six hours from the onset of symptoms. The physician who administered the scan, Dr. Biunno, diagnosed epididymitis.

{4} Dr. Tong did not see Plaintiff again on September 29 until 5 p.m. Plaintiff had been on pain medication during the day and was in a lot less pain when Defendant saw him at 5 p.m. Defendant performed another Doppler exam and could not hear a pulse in the left testicle. Lindberg testified that Defendant told her he was not going to take Plaintiff to surgery because Plaintiff had an infection, epididymitis. Defendant kept Plaintiff in the hospital and on intravenous antibiotics for the night.

{5} In the morning of September 30, Plaintiff had no pain and was hungry. His pain medication was discontinued and he ate some breakfast and most of his lunch. Defendant examined Plaintiff between 11 a.m. and noon that day. Plaintiff had no pain and wanted to go home. During his examination of Plaintiff, Defendant found that the left testicle was larger and he could not hear a pulse on the Doppler. Defendant attributed these circumstances to the infection. He discharged Plaintiff, having determined that Plaintiff was no longer in severe pain and was able to hold down a meal.

{6} Lindberg took Plaintiff back to the hospital the night of September 30 because Plaintiffs testicle had become greatly enlarged and discolored. The next morning, another surgeon, Dr. Voss, examined Plaintiff, conducted surgery, and found testicular torsion. Dr. Voss determined that it was too late to save the testicle and removed it. Plaintiff sued Defendant and others relating to the loss of his left testicle.

{7} Plaintiff presented expert medical testimony indicating that Defendant’s actions fell below accepted medical practice standards because Defendant should have recognized the probability of testicular torsion and therefore should have conducted surgery in time to confirm the existence of the condition and likely save the testicle. Defendant presented expert medical testimony indicating that his conduct did not fall below those standards.

{8} In regard to instructing the jury, Plaintiff contends that many acts and omissions of Defendant constituted medical malpractice, including: the delay in arriving at the hospital; Defendant’s failure to properly consider each of many circumstances, such as Plaintiffs age, his normal urinalysis, the onset of severe pain, nausea and vomiting, the testicle swollen to twice its size, the absence of pain when urinating; and Plaintiffs prior painful episodes; Defendant’s failure to realize the critical significance of delay in regard to surgically acting to save a testicle when testicular torsion is indicated; Defendant’s failure to examine Plaintiff while Plaintiff was standing, rather than lying down; Defendant’s mistaken judgment that the Doppler was not operating properly; Defendant’s failure to properly consider Doppler readings; Defendant’s release of Plaintiff with a swollen testicle and the positive Doppler results for torsion; Defendant’s having ordered unnecessary and improper tests, resulting in harmful delay; and Defendant’s failure to perform the required simple surgical procedure of untwisting the testicle and tacking the torsion to the scrotum early on, based on the possibility of testicular torsion.

{9} The parties submitted requested jury instructions prior to trial, including their proposed 302B instructions (we refer to the tendered and given UJI 13-302B as the “302B instruction”). Plaintiffs tendered 302B instruction consisted of nineteen individual acts and omissions, each of which, Plaintiff contended, would constitute a breach of duty on Defendant’s part. As his 302B instruction, Defendant tendered the form UJI 13-302B with no blanks filled in. The district court held a pretrial conference on the requested instructions, at which Plaintiffs nineteen-part 302B instruction was discussed; however, Plaintiff has not supplied a transcript of that conference, and we are unable to determine what was discussed. Following that conference, both parties submitted revised 302B instructions. Plaintiff reduced his 302B instruction to five individually listed acts and omissions each of which, Plaintiff contended, constituted a breach of duty on Defendant’s part. Defendant submitted a two-contention instruction. At the direction of the district court, the parties then fashioned a 302B instruction that was given to the jury.

{10} The jury returned a defense verdict. Plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial based on instruction error and on a statement defense counsel made in closing claimed by Plaintiff to be prejudicial. The motion was deemed denied due to the passage of thirty days. See Rule 1-059(D) NMRA 2003.

DISCUSSION

The Asserted Instruction Error

{11} Plaintiff asserts that the nineteen acts and omissions set out in his pretrial requested 302B instruction were all supported by evidence. This assertion also applies to his condensed five-part instruction later tendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 NMCA 056, 66 P.3d 963, 133 N.M. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-tong-nmctapp-2003.