Anita Patenaude Dunning v. Marvin S. Kerzner, M.D.

910 F.2d 1009, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 14245, 1990 WL 118138
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 16, 1990
Docket89-1645
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 910 F.2d 1009 (Anita Patenaude Dunning v. Marvin S. Kerzner, M.D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anita Patenaude Dunning v. Marvin S. Kerzner, M.D., 910 F.2d 1009, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 14245, 1990 WL 118138 (1st Cir. 1990).

Opinion

CYR, Circuit Judge.

In the present wrongful death action Anita Patenaude Dunning asserts a medical malpractice claim premised on Dr. Marvin Kerzner’s negligent failure to diagnose the colon cancer which precipitated the death of her husband. Following a seven day trial in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant physician. The plaintiff contends on appeal that certain misapprehensions concerning the scope of a physician’s duty of care under Rhode Island law led the district court into a spate of prejudicial rulings which entitle her to a new trial. 1

I

BACKGROUND

Approximately once a year between 1972 and 1978, and again in 1982, plaintiffs decedent, Roger Patenaude, was seen by the defendant, a board-certified specialist in internal medicine. Patenaude’s presenting complaints included, at various times, abdominal pain, nausea, gas build-up, and bloody stools. Numerous diagnostic tests were performed, including gastrointestinal and gall bladder series, as well as blood studies, with negative or normal results. Since the outset of the physician-patient relationship and until 1982, Dr. Kerzner attributed Patenaude’s complaints to “irritable bowel syndrome.” 2 In June of 1982 cancer was discovered in Patenaude’s large intestine. Patenaude died less than three years later.

In January of 1975 the Lahey Clinic performed tests on Patenaude, including a barium enema. Three months later, during Patenaude’s annual visit to Dr. Kerzner, Patenaude complained for the first time of intermittent blood in the stools. Dr. Kerz-ner performed a guaiac smear test on a stool sample, which did not indicate the presence of blood. Patenaude showed Dr. Kerzner a list of the tests performed at the Lahey Clinic, but the list did not indicate whether or not the barium enema had been performed with or without “air contrast,” “air contrast” being the more sensitive technique.

*1011 Patenaude visited Dr. Kerzner for routine physical examinations in January of 1976 and in April of 1977. Although Pate-naude continued to report digestive disturbances, Dr. Kerzner’s notes indicate no complaints of rectal bleeding.

In October of 1978 Patenaude informed Dr. Kerzner that he had been examined at the U.S. Public Health Service (“JFK Clinic”) in May of 1978. Dr. Kerzner’s notes state:

He is also complaining of some pasty-type blood in his stools intermittently and did have a proctoscope ? sigmoido-scope exam with his government physical exam ... Records will be obtained. Question of repeat sigmoidoscopy will be discussed at that time.

Dr. Kerzner urged Patenaude to obtain the medical records relating to the physical examination at the JFK Clinic. 3 Patenaude did not do so.

Dr. Kerzner did not inform Patenaude of the medical implications of bloody stools, nor did he tell Patenaude that the bleeding could be a symptom of colon cancer. Dr. Kerzner himself continued to believe that cancer was the least likely diagnosis.

Dr. Kerzner testified that Patenaude was a nervous person and that he did not want to alarm him. He considered Patenaude an intelligent person who would follow through and obtain the information from the JFK Clinic.

Patenaude did not visit Dr. Kerzner again until some three and one-half years later, in February 1982. In June of 1982 Patenaude was diagnosed as having a moderately differentiated and invaded adeno-carcinoma of the sigmoid colon, which was treated by surgical excision. In June 1983 examination revealed a large liver mass consistent with metastasis of the colon cancer. After unsuccessful chemotherapy, Pa-tenaude died in April of 1985.

At trial, plaintiff called Dr. Kerzner to testify. When Dr. Kerzner was asked whether he had attempted to find out from the Lahey Clinic what type of barium enema had been performed and whether Pate-naude had complained to the Lahey Clinic about bloody stools, the district court sustained defendant’s objections. 4

Plaintiff also called Dr. Jerome DeCosse, a specialist in bowel disease — in particular, cancer of the large colon — as an expert witness. Dr. DeCosse was asked to assume, inter alia, that Dr. Kerzner “strongly urged” Patenaude to have more diagnostic tests and to obtain medical records from the JFK Clinic, but that Kerzner had not followed through on Patenaude’s failure to do so. Dr. Kerzner’s attorney interposed an objection on the ground that the hypothetical was misleading. 5 Although the *1012 district court was not impressed with the basis offered by defendant’s counsel in support of the objection, the following colloquy ensued:

THE COURT: Well, let’s get to it. Is this witness going to tell us that this doctor had the duty to go out to the hospital and get that colonoscopy?
[PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: He’ll testify that this doctor had the duty to flag that file and to follow it up.
THE COURT: What would he do? [PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: He would write a letter specifically saying, within a month, specifically saying—
THE COURT: Have you got any case that says that he’s got such a duty? [PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: I don’t think this is a matter of law, Judge, I think it’s a matter of opinion testimony. THE COURT: Now wait a minute, this isn’t a dictatorship at this point in time. This is a standard of care.
[PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: That’s right.
* * * * # *
THE COURT: Well tell me what duty he had.
[PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL]: He had the duty (1) to obtain the records, and (2) to make a specific focused communication to this patient to say, assuming what Kerzner said [concerning his request that Mr. Patenaude obtain his own records] is true, to say it is very important for you to obtain these records or to follow up on this. At least that’s what he’ll testify to.
I think that it’s not a matter of law, that that, that the question of how far the doctor has to go to communicate to the patient, it’s like the question of how much warning do doctors have to give to a patient. It is a question of fact and it’s subject to expert opinion, your Honor, and this doctor will testify that given all of those circumstances in that hypothetical Dr. Kerzner had a duty not to just let the file lie flat, that he had a duty to flag that file because this was a symptomatic patient with symptoms indicative of potential cancer which is a deadly disease, and he just couldn’t let it go on. I think he’s entitled to testify to that, that there is no rule of law that prevents it and that it is subject to opinion testimony.
THE COURT: I’m going to note your statement as an offer of proof and I’m going to sustain the objection.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
910 F.2d 1009, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 14245, 1990 WL 118138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anita-patenaude-dunning-v-marvin-s-kerzner-md-ca1-1990.