Blackman for Blackman v. Rifkin

759 P.2d 54, 12 Brief Times Rptr. 697, 1988 Colo. App. LEXIS 199, 1988 WL 71285
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 1988
Docket85CA1272
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 759 P.2d 54 (Blackman for Blackman v. Rifkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackman for Blackman v. Rifkin, 759 P.2d 54, 12 Brief Times Rptr. 697, 1988 Colo. App. LEXIS 199, 1988 WL 71285 (Colo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

HUME, Judge.

Plaintiff, Meredith A. Blackman, through her guardian, Barbara J. Blackman, appeals a judgment entered on a jury verdict in favor of defendants, physicians Frank Barber, Robert Rifkin, and Karl John Heil-man, on claims of negligent malpractice. The jury also returned a verdict determining that nurse Patricia Dryden Springer, a non-party whose alleged negligence plaintiff sought to impute to the defendant hospital, was not negligent. Plaintiff also appeals the trial court’s order directing a verdict for defendant Paul Sheridan, a nursing assistant, on plaintiff’s claim of negligence, and in directing verdicts for all individually named defendants on her claims for false imprisonment. We affirm.

The individual defendants and nurse Springer constituted the medical staff (E.R. Team) that treated plaintiff after her admission to the emergency room of the University of Colorado Hospital. Plaintiff sought damages for injuries she suffered as a result of alleged substandard medical care she received from the E.R. Team on August 1,1982, after she was admitted in a highly intoxicated state with a scalp laceration on the back of her head. While being treated, she apparently regurgitated and aspirated stomach contents into her lungs, resulting in respiratory failure, cardiac ar *56 rest, and ultimately in permanent brain damage. The precise moment of regurgitation and aspiration is unknown, but the evidence tended to show that it occurred approximately an hour after plaintiff’s admission, while Dr. Rifkin was suturing her head laceration.

I.

Plaintiff first contends that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury as follows:

“The fact that the Plaintiff’s conduct pri- or to her arrival in the Emergency Room caused or contributed to her medical condition and furnished the occasion for medical treatment is not a defense to the Plaintiff’s claim that her medical condition was treated negligently.”

In support of her contention, plaintiff relies on Whitehead v. Linkous, 404 So.2d 377 (Fla.App.1981); Matthews v. Williford, 318 So.2d 480 (Fla.App.1975); Yardeny v. Fondacaro, 57 A.D.2d 924, 395 N.Y.S.2d 46 (1977); Lamoree v. Binghamton General Hospital, 68 Misc.2d 1051, 329 N.Y.S.2d 85 (1972); Larson v. Belzer Clinic, 292 Minn. 301, 195 N.W.2d 416 (1972). However, our review of those cases indicates that they concern factual situations which render them inapposite to the facts presented here.

Some of the cited cases pertain to situations in which the plaintiff’s prior negligent conduct was so distinct or remote from the ultimate injury as to render evidence concerning that conduct irrelevant and inadmissible as a matter of law on the issues in the malpractice claim. Others involve situations in which the prior negligent conduct was less distinct and remote and might arguably have had legal relevance, but where no evidence was presented upon which the fact-finder could rationally have found that the prior conduct could have caused the ultimate injuries.

In this case, however, both plaintiff and defendants introduced evidence concerning the degree of plaintiff's intoxication and the symptoms she manifested at the time of her admission and throughout her stay in the emergency room. All parties also introduced evidence concerning professional standards of care that should be followed in diagnosing and treating intoxicated persons, and the difficulty involved in distinguishing whether plaintiff’s physical and psychological behavioral symptoms were the result of head trauma or of intoxication.

Substantial evidence was also introduced concerning plaintiff’s inability to provide an adequate history to aid the E.R. Team in its diagnostic efforts, and that her continued resistive, combative, and obstructive behavior interfered with the E.R. Team’s diagnostic and treatment efforts. Thus, the evidence of plaintiff’s intoxication here was neither remote nor distinct from the issues of malpractice. Her intoxication and its resulting effects were highly relevant to the fact-finder’s determination of appropriate standards of care and deviations therefrom.

Finally, there was evidence that plaintiff’s regurgitation and aspiration were the direct result of the physiological effects of alcohol, rather than the result of any act or omission by the E.R. Team. An expert witness testified that alcohol intoxication increases both the likelihood of regurgitation by irritating the stomach, and the likelihood of aspiration by depressing the central nervous system so as to diminish the functioning of protective reflexes which normally prevent aspiration of regurgitated material. He also testified that while certain precautions should be taken to reduce the likelihood of aspiration, no steps could prevent its happening, and that regurgitation and aspiration could occur quickly and in a passive manner not likely to be detected by attending medical professionals. Further, the witness offered his opinion that plaintiff’s aspiration and her resulting brain injury was the direct result of her intoxication, and that the E.R. Team did not deviate from the reasonable standards of care required by their respective professions in treating her. Thus, in this case, there was evidence upon which the jury could rationally find that plaintiff’s own conduct in becoming intoxicated was *57 in fact a cause of her ultimate brain damage.

Plaintiffs contention is not that the evidence of her intoxication should have been excluded. Indeed, she contended at trial that her intoxicated condition warranted the E.R. Team’s more acute vigilance in protecting her. Nevertheless, plaintiff seeks to insulate her own conduct in becoming intoxicated from the jury’s consideration as a possible cause of her brain damage. Her proposed instruction acknowledges that her conduct caused the intoxication which existed when she arrived at the emergency room, but seeks to preclude the jury from considering that conduct as a causative factor for her ultimate brain damage. Under the circumstances presented, we conclude such a limitation on the intoxication evidence is not warranted.

Issues of negligence, contributory negligence, and causation are ordinarily questions of fact to be determined by the jury, and the concept of contributory negligence rests on the principle that a plaintiff must exercise a reasonable degree of care to avoid undue risk of harm to himself. Roberts v. Fisher, 169 Colo. 288, 455 P.2d 871 (1969); Fay v. Kroblin Refrigerated Xpress, Inc., 644 P.2d 68 (Colo.App.1981). Here, the court gave instructions defining negligence, reasonable care, special standards of care applicable to doctors and nurses, and the word “cause.”

The court’s definition of “cause,” taken from CJI-Civ.2d 9:28 (1980), reads in pertinent part:

“If more than one act or failure to act contributed to the claimed injury, then each act or failure to act may have been a cause of the injury.

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Bluebook (online)
759 P.2d 54, 12 Brief Times Rptr. 697, 1988 Colo. App. LEXIS 199, 1988 WL 71285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackman-for-blackman-v-rifkin-coloctapp-1988.