Andries v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.

12 So. 3d 260, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 4462, 2009 WL 1310987
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 13, 2009
Docket3D08-845
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 12 So. 3d 260 (Andries v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andries v. Royal Caribbean Cruises, Ltd., 12 So. 3d 260, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 4462, 2009 WL 1310987 (Fla. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

SALTER, J.

Aulette Andries appeals an adverse final summary judgment on her Jones Act and maintenance and cure claims against a passenger cruise line. Ms. Andries alleged that her staphylococcus infection 1 was incorrectly treated by medical staff aboard her ship and that this resulted in the onset of an incurable kidney disease known as “immunoglobulin A nephropa-thy” (“IgA nephropathy”). The circuit court granted summary judgment because it found the plaintiffs experts’ testimony on the alleged causation too novel and investigational to be admissible.

The clinical observations of those experts and scientific literature regarding an association between a staph infection and IgA nephropathy require us to apply the analysis detailed by the Supreme Court of Florida in Marsh v. Valyou, 977 So.2d 543 (Fla.2007). Finding that in this case the plaintiffs medical and scientific evidence constituted a sufficient predicate for admissibility under Marsh, we reverse.

I. “Pure Opinion” versus “New or Novel Scientific Evidence”

Marsh distinguishes two types of expert medical/scientific opinions. When the method of formulating an expert opinion is not “new or novel,” but is instead “widely accepted” and based on established scientific principles and methodology, an expert may render “pure opinion testimony” and it may be based solely on the expert’s training and experience. Marsh, 977 So.2d at 548. Such “pure opinion” testimony is the first category of expert scientific/medical evidence considered under Marsh. The fact that experts may disagree about an opinion or medical diagnosis does not transform an expert’s opinion into a “new or novel principle” in the second category of opinions, nor does that disagreement preclude or limit admissibility. Rather, the resulting “battle of the experts” creates an issue for resolution by the jury (precluding summary judgment on that issue if material to the underlying cause of action).

*262 The second category of expert scientific/medical evidence pertains to expert opinions based upon new or novel scientific tests or methodologies. To be admissible, this type of evidence must have “sufficient indicia of reliability” to satisfy the Frye 2 test. Marsh, 977 So.2d at 549. Under that test, “[t]he proponent of the evidence bears the burden of establishing by a preponderance of the evidence the general acceptance of the underlying scientific principles and methodology.” Castillo v. E.I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co., Inc., 854 So.2d 1264, 1268 (Fla.2003). 3 Frye issues are reviewed de novo, with “general acceptance determined as of the time of the appeal.” Id.

In Marsh, the issues were whether the court should admit expert testimony linking the trauma occurring in a car accident to the onset of fibromyalgia, and whether the testimony was “pure opinion” or subject to the Frye test. Our Supreme Court determined that the Frye test did not apply, and that even if it did, the expert testimony satisfied that test. That Court concluded that the causation testimony in that case was not new or novel:

The American College of Rheumatology published classification criteria for fibro-myalgia in 1990. Marsh’s experts based their diagnoses and opinions about the cause of her fibromyalgia on a review of her medical history, clinical physical examinations, their own experience, published research, and differential diagnosis.

Marsh, 977 So.2d at 548 (citations and quotation omitted). The Court also concluded that Marsh’s experts did not base their opinions on' new or novel scientific tests or procedures.

Marsh also reaffirmed that admissibility does not depend upon proof of scientific studies “conclusively demonstrating a causal link” or an identification of the “precise etiology” of the medical condition allegedly caused by predicate events. Id., 977 So.2d at 549.

II. The Expert Testimony Regarding Staph and IgA Nephropathy

We next consider the nature of the expert opinions offered by Ms. Andries in this case. Her first expert witness was a physician at the University of Miami specializing in nephrology, the treatment of kidney disease. Based on the witness’s twenty years of experience and his review of records relating to Ms. Andries’s medical care and certain laboratory studies, the physician testified that the relationship between a staph infection and IgA nephropa-thy likely occurred in Ms. Andries’ case and “is well known to all of us even from the early part of our training.” He testified that a staph infection is characterized by antigens that precipitate an immune response and the production of antibodies which are believed to accumulate in the glomeruli (essentially the filtration tubes in the kidney). In certain cases, these deposits accumulate quickly and culminate in an acute, progressive kidney disease of the kind observed in this case. Because other diseases are also associated with IgA nephropathy (including HIV infection, liver disease,- and certain allergies), this physician reviewed Ms. Andries’s medical records and history in order to rule out those conditions.

*263 A second physician and professor of medicine also opined regarding an observed, if idiosyncratic, 4 association between staph infections and IgA nephropa-thy. Applying the so-called “Bradford Hill” criteria for the establishment of causality from epidemiologic data on association of disease and environmental factors, 5 he opined that “the association of staphylococcal infection and glomerulonephritis satisfies these criteria to a sufficient degree to indicate causality.” This expert had practiced medicine for over 40 years, was a specialist in immunological kidney diseases, and had authored numerous peer-reviewed research papers on nephro-pathy and related immunologic injury to the kidney.

Finally, Ms. Andries offered published Japanese 6 (and other) research studies regarding the observed incidence of IgA ne-phropathy following methicillin-resistant staph infections. Among other published articles, a 2003 journal described a case of IgA nephropathy following a patient’s staph infection apparently acquired during knee surgery. A 2004 study described a staph-related antigen as “a new candidate for the induction of IgA nephropathy,” 7 based upon studies using mice as subjects. A 2006 article documented eight cases in which staph infections were the confirmed sources of IgA buildup in the kidney. 8 A number of other medical and scientific articles described the clinically-observed correlation between staph and IgA nephropa-thy and evaluated the mechanisms that might be at work.

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Bluebook (online)
12 So. 3d 260, 2009 Fla. App. LEXIS 4462, 2009 WL 1310987, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andries-v-royal-caribbean-cruises-ltd-fladistctapp-2009.