Boccasile v. Cajun Music Limited

694 A.2d 686, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 153, 1997 WL 236302
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 9, 1997
Docket96-6-Appeal, 95-418-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 694 A.2d 686 (Boccasile v. Cajun Music Limited) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boccasile v. Cajun Music Limited, 694 A.2d 686, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 153, 1997 WL 236302 (R.I. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

The deceased, Ralph Boccasile (Boccasile), was attending the 1989 Cajun Music Festival (the festival) in Escoheag, Rhode Island, when he experienced a severe allergic reaction to the seafood in some of the gumbo he had been sampling. The festival’s first-aid crew succored Boccasile, but unfortunately they were unable to prevent him from eventually succumbing to anaphylactic shock.

In this consolidated appeal, his widow, Jean M. Boccasile (plaintiff), 1 asks us to reverse the Superior Court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of two of the festival’s emergency health-care providers, defendants Aline A Daguanno Champoux, R.N. (Nurse Champoux), and Sarah John, M.D. (Dr. John). The plaintiff sued these and other defendants for negligence in connection with the alleged wrongful death of her husband.

Doctor John and Nurse Champoux argue that because they had volunteered to staff a first-aid station at the festival, one or more of Rhode Island’s good-Samaritan statutes 2 protect them from liability for all but gross, willful, or wanton negligence. They also contend that the judgments below should be affirmed because plaintiff failed to produce any evidence of negligence in opposing their summary-judgment motions. The plaintiff, on the other hand, claims the good-Samaritan statutes are inapplicable to these defendants because, as health-care providers engaged to provide emergency-health-care services to the festival-attending public, they had a preexisting duty to render emergency medical care to her stricken husband, a duty that she claims they badly botched when they supposedly bungled various attempts to treat his allergic reaction.

Our de novo review 3 of the record reveals that in opposing summary judgment, plaintiff failed to submit any expert affidavits or other evidence that, if believed, would establish negligence on the part of either defendant. For this reason, even assuming (without deciding) that defendants are unable to take advantage of the good-Samaritan statutes because their emergency assistance was not rendered gratuitously, we nonetheless conclude that each defendant was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law and that therefore the Superior Court properly entered judgments in favor of these defendants. As indicated by the undisputed facts recited below, plaintiff had to come forward with expert medical evidence to survive defendants’ summary-judgment motions, but she failed to do so.

Facts

In the late summer of 1989, while attending the festival at the Stepping Stone Ranch in Escoheag, Rhode Island, Boccasile apparently ate some Cajun gumbo that contained fish (to which he was allergic), and he soon found himself sinking into a state of anaphy-lactic shock. 4 Walter Larosee (Larosee), a *688 physician’s assistant, was the first person to come to his aid. Larosee was a patron of the festival and is a codefendant in the consolidated action below. After receiving notice that “there was a man having a problem on the hill,” Dr. John and other members of the festival’s first-aid crew left the first-aid tent to go to this area and render emergency assistance. Nurse Champoux, however, stayed at the tent because “someone had to remain” there.

Doctor John testified at her deposition that when she first approached Boccasile, he was still standing under his own power. She identified herself as a doctor and a member of the festival’s first-aid crew. When she asked Boccasile whether he needed any help, he replied that he had eaten some seafood and that he was having an allergic reaction. He then said that he needed a shot. Dr. John asked him to accompany her to the first-aid tent, but he replied that he was unable to do so. He then sat down on the ground and again stated that he needed a shot. Although Boccasile did not tell Dr. John what kind of a shot he needed, she knew that either adrenaline or benadryl would increase the rate and output of his heart and thereby help to counteract the allergic reaction he was experiencing. While Dr. John stayed with Boccasile, other members of the crew returned to the first-aid tent to locate an adrenaline injector and to call an ambulance.

While waiting for the injector, Dr. John continued to speak with Boccasile. She again tried, unsuccessfully, to have him return with her to the first-aid tent. She felt his pulse and found it to be “somewhat rapid and thready.” Doctor John also observed that he was talking in full sentences without difficulty and was not “retracting or using any accessory muscles to breath[e].” He was not wheezing, gasping, or coughing, and he showed no signs of respiratory distress. In a couple of minutes, a person returned with an Epipen, a penlike, spring-loaded, single-dose injector used to administer epinephrine, an adrenaline solution, to persons suffering from anaphylaxis. After verifying that the device given to her was indeed what she thought it was, Dr. John administered it by iiyecting the medicine into Boccasile’s exposed thigh. She asked for a second injector, but none was available.

Meanwhile, back at the first-aid tent, Nurse Champoux had been wondering what was going on out in the field. After another member of the first-aid crew arrived at the tent, Nurse Champoux was finally free to leave her post. Immediately she went to the scene to see if she could be of assistance. Beyond learning that “a man was down,” Nurse Champoux knew nothing about Bocca-sile’s condition before she arrived on the scene and saw him lying there on the ground. By this time others had already come to Boccasile’s aid, and Dr. John had already administered the Epipen injection. Told that an ambulance had been called, Nurse Cham-poux remained with Boccasile until the rescue vehicle arrived.

After Dr. John injected him with the Epi-pen, Boccasile complained that he felt worse and continued to request a shot. When told by Dr. John that she had already given him an injection, Boccasile said that he still did not feel it. Because she lacked any other injectors, Dr. John then attempted to read-minister the Epipen injection into Boccasile’s thigh. After doing so, she testified that the Epipen felt as if it fired a second time and that “I was doing the most I could in a situation where I did not have anything else and where I know that there is residual fluid in the unit in the hope that it might fire a second time.”

Boccasile again stated that he was unable to feel this second shot. He told Dr. John that he could not catch his breath and said, “I am going.” Then his eyes rolled upward, and he lost consciousness. After determining that Boccasile had no pulse and was not breathing, Dr. John began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. She requested between breaths that one of the bystanders obtain a knife and/or a spoon. Doctor John testified that “Dr. Larosee, as I understood him to be, *689 began chest compressions” and that “[h]e seemed quite at ease with it.” 5 Unfortunately although she briefly got a pulse, Dr. John did not get any respirations and was unable to revive Boccasile.

After the ambulance arrived, Boccasile was placed on a stretcher. Doctor John then

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
694 A.2d 686, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 153, 1997 WL 236302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boccasile-v-cajun-music-limited-ri-1997.