Bell v. WILLIAMS CARE CENTER, INC.

409 N.W.2d 294, 226 Neb. 1, 1987 Neb. LEXIS 969
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1987
Docket85-502
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 409 N.W.2d 294 (Bell v. WILLIAMS CARE CENTER, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. WILLIAMS CARE CENTER, INC., 409 N.W.2d 294, 226 Neb. 1, 1987 Neb. LEXIS 969 (Neb. 1987).

Opinion

Grant, J.

Plaintiff-appellant, Thelma Bell, the daughter of Linnie Early, was appointed personal representative of the estate of Linnie Early. She brought this action in Douglas County District Court against the defendant-appellee, Williams Care Center, Inc., a Nebraska corporation, doing business as Williams Care Manor, a nursing home. Plaintiff’s second amended petition set out three causes of action. The first alleged that the wrongful death of decedent was caused by *2 negligence of defendant in its failure to properly care for the decedent, a patient in defendant’s nursing home. The second cause of action prayed for damages for decedent’s medical and funeral expenses, and the third cause of action sought general damages for the pain and suffering of the decedent from the time defendant’s alleged improper care began on December 9, 1981, to Linnie Early’s death on March 20,1982.

The defendant’s answer to plaintiff’s second amended petition generally denied the allegations of the petition and affirmatively alleged that in any and all treatment rendered to decedent, defendant exercised that degree of skill and care expected of a nursing home treating patients in Omaha, Douglas County, Nebraska, or similar communities.

At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the trial court sustained defendant’s motion to dismiss as to plaintiff’s first cause of action seeking damages for wrongful death and as to the portion of plaintiff’s second cause of action seeking damages for decedent’s funeral expenses. Plaintiff has not assigned any error in this ruling. The issues raised in plaintiff’s third cause of action for decedent’s pain and suffering and in her second cause of action for related medical damages were apparently submitted to the jury. The jury instructions are not before us, but the record shows the plaintiff had no objections to the instructions as submitted.

After jury trial, a verdict was apparently returned and judgment entered for the defendant. The verdict is not in the record before us, but a journal entry shows the overruling of plaintiff’s motion for new trial. Plaintiff timely appealed. In this court plaintiff assigns two errors, which together with subparts present the following errors: (1) The trial court erred in not sustaining plaintiff’s motion for a new trial because “[t]he verdict of the jury was not sustained by sufficient evidence and was contrary to the overwhelming evidence of the Appellant” and the verdict must have resulted from passion, prejudice, or mistake, or from the misconduct of defendant’s counsel in “intentionally injecting the issue of race into the jury’s consideration”; and (2) the trial court erred “in allowing two of Appelle’s [sic] expert witnesses to render opinions on an inadequate and insufficient foundation.” We affirm.

*3 The record shows the following. In October of 1980, the decedent, Linnie Early, age 62, became a resident of the Williams Care Manor, owned by defendant. Prior to entering the nursing home, the decedent had been hospitalized and was in need of 24-hour-a-day care. Dr. Kemp, a general practitioner, was decedent’s physician from approximately 1962 to the time of her death. He submitted a physician’s report on decedent’s condition at the time of decedent’s entering defendant’s nursing home. That report listed the decedent’s primary diagnosis at that time as “CVA [with] left side paralysis” and secondary diagnosis as “Hypertension [and] Diabetes.” Dr. Kemp testified that CVA is a “cerebral vascular accident----[I]t’s like a stroke ...” The record shows decedent’s CVA occurred approximately 10 or 11 years prior to her entering defendant’s nursing home.

A nurse’s aide, who worked for the defendant and cared for the decedent, and decedent’s husband testified that the decedent had received a cut on her left great toe during a toenail reduction by a podiatrist brought to the home by defendant on December 9, 1981. Neither of the witnesses had seen the act of cutting. The husband testified that when he visited the decedent the next day, on December 10, 1981, the decedent told him “[t]hat doctor cut my toe .... I cried and cried.” The husband testified further that he observed a bandage on decedent’s left great toe, that he saw decedent almost every day after that, and that the decedent complained of pain in her foot.

The nurse’s aide testified that she did not work on December 9, 1981, but that on December 10 the decedent complained to her that the “toe doctor” had cut her toe, and she removed a white gauze bandage from decedent’s toe and observed a “deep puncture-type cut” with “drainage coming from it.” The aide further testified that on December 29,1981, decedent’s bandage was removed and part of the skin of decedent’s toe was removed with the bandage, and that a nurse in charge, a licensed practical nurse at defendant’s nursing home, had to use scissors to cut the bandage and the skin off.

Thelma Bell testified that she observed a white gauze bandage on decedent’s left toe sometime between December 9 and December 25,1981.

*4 The podiatrist who did the toenail reduction on decedent on December 9, 1981, stated that he did not recall that the decedent’s skin was broken during the procedure and that he did not remember the patient’s complaining of injury, nor did he remember applying any antiseptic or bandage to the patient.

The L.P.N. in charge testified that on December 29,1981, she was called over to observe a wound on decedent’s left great toe for the first time and that she called Dr. Kemp immediately. On December 31, 1981, Dr. Kemp saw decedent. He testified that decedent’s left great toe had an area of healthy, granulated tissue and looked like skin had come off but could possibly be healed. He further testified that there did not appear to be a knife cut or laceration on the toe.

On January 18, 1982, the L.P.N. reported that “[resident has pain in Great [left] toe - broken area healed but area between toes appears damp and tip of toe appears dark.” She testified that between December 31, 1981, and January 18, 1982, the red open area of the toe had filled in and “looked really great, and we were feeling pretty good that, being that she was a diabetic ... it’s going to be okay.” The decedent was seen by Dr. Kemp on January 18, 1982, at which time he noted that decedent’s toe looked like there might be some early infection or gangrene setting in. Dr. Kemp admitted the decedent to Lutheran Medical Center.

On January 22, 1982, the decedent underwent an arteriogram to measure the blood flow to the decedent’s legs. That test showed a 90-percent obstruction in the left, common iliac artery, indicating that the blood supply to decedent’s left leg was markedly diminished. On February 1, 1982, in an attempt to improve the blood supply to decedent’s leg and “in order to save what remains of her left foot,” Dr. Feldhaus, a vascular surgeon, performed a femoral artery graft and bypass. This operation was not successful in improving the blood flow to decedent’s leg. On February 15, 1982, Dr. Donahue, a general surgeon, amputated the gangrenous first and second toes of the decedent’s left foot. Dr. Donahue testified that, at that time, there was “practically no blood at all going into the distal end of the foot.” On March 8, 1982, prior to surgery scheduled for March 9, decedent suffered a heart attack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
409 N.W.2d 294, 226 Neb. 1, 1987 Neb. LEXIS 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-williams-care-center-inc-neb-1987.