Bon Secours-DePaul Medical Center v. Rogakos-Russell

CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 2, 2025
Docket1230879
StatusPublished

This text of Bon Secours-DePaul Medical Center v. Rogakos-Russell (Bon Secours-DePaul Medical Center v. Rogakos-Russell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bon Secours-DePaul Medical Center v. Rogakos-Russell, (Va. 2025).

Opinion

PRESENT: All the Justices

BON SECOURS-DEPAUL MEDICAL CENTER, INC., T/A DEPAUL MEDICAL CENTER, ET AL. OPINION BY v. Record No. 230879 JUSTICE STEPHEN R. McCULLOUGH January 2, 2025 VASILIA C. ROGAKOS-RUSSELL, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF CONSTANTINE P. ROGAKOS, DECEASED

FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Bon Secours-DePaul Medical Center (“Bon Secours” or “the Hospital”) appeals from a

judgment of the Court of Appeals which affirmed a verdict for the Plaintiff in a medical

malpractice case. Bon Secours argues that the Court of Appeals committed reversible error (1)

in its interpretation of the Dead Man’s Statute; (2) in upholding the circuit court’s refusal to grant

a jury instruction that addressed multiple causes; (3) in affirming the circuit court’s refusal to

permit Bon Secours to employ a hospital stretcher as a demonstrative exhibit at trial, and (4) in

denying the Hospital’s motion to strike. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of

the Court of Appeals.

BACKGROUND

I. A ROUTINE HOSPITAL VISIT TURNS TRAGIC.

Father Constantine P. Rogakos, a retired Greek-Orthodox priest, checked in at Bon

Secours hospital for an outpatient abdominal ultrasound. His doctor had ordered the test to help

him diagnose Father Rogakos’ bloating and abdominal pain. Father Rogakos was eighty-six

years old. He walked with a “quad” cane. His wife described him as having a “shuffled gait.”

Father Rogakos had been using a cane for approximately one year before the hospital visit. He

did not use it at home, because he could hold on to furniture. He could dress himself, but he would sit in a large chair when doing so. He drove himself to his office at the church every day

to hold office hours and help the church. However, he could not serve mass unassisted. He had

fallen on two occasions, once at home when he tripped on a rug, and once at church when he

tripped on a stair.

When Father Rogakos arrived at the hospital reception desk, hospital personnel provided

him with a wheelchair to help him reach the waiting room. When the time came to go to the

ultrasound room, his wife asked if she should go with her husband. The sonographer, Joanna

Regan said “no”, and assured his wife that she would be with him.

Regan accompanied Father Rogakos to a small room for the ultrasound to be taken.

Photographs show an ordinary wheeled hospital stretcher on one side of the room. There was no

chair for him to sit on. He walked to the room with his cane. He was dressed in multiple layers

of clothing. Regan informed Father Rogakos that he should “remove [his] clothing from the

waist up” and put on a medical gown that was laid out for him on a wheeled hospital stretcher.

Regan did not recall whether she checked to see if the wheels on the stretcher were locked.

Regan left the room while Father Rogakos changed.

Regan checked on him a few minutes later and asked if he was ready. He replied “no.”

Just a few moments later, Regan heard “what sounded like a fall.” She rushed into the room and

found Father Rogakos in his undershirt, on the floor, essentially perpendicular to the bed, with

his feet towards the bed and his pants unfastened.

Mrs. Rogakos was informed of her husband’s fall, and she went into the ultrasound room.

She found him lying face down on the floor. He mumbled something in Greek, which Mrs.

Rogakos translated as “what happened?”

2 Hospital personnel rushed Father Rogakos to the emergency room and later to the

intensive care unit. He suffered a laceration on his head, a right periorbital hematoma, and an

intracranial hemorrhage.

After his fall, Father Rogakos made statements to five different persons describing the

circumstances of his fall. He stated that he leaned on the wheeled hospital stretcher while he was

changing, the stretcher moved, and he lost his balance and fell. He made this statement to his

wife; 1 his two daughters;2 a fellow priest, Father George Bessinas; 3 and his treating physician,

Dr. Nabil Tadros.4

Despite efforts by the Hospital to save him, his condition continued to deteriorate. After

ten days, his family decided to withdraw life support, and he passed away.

II. THE JURY FINDS FOR THE PLAINTIFF IN THE ENSUING MEDICAL MALPRACTICE TRIAL.

Vasilia Rogakos-Russell, the Administrator of the Estate of Constantine P. Rogakos (“the

Plaintiff”), filed a wrongful death and survivorship action against the Hospital alleging that

Regan negligently failed to monitor and assist Father Rogakos while he changed and failed to

ensure that the wheels on the ultrasound stretcher were locked.

1 “He said to me I went close to the bed and took my clothes off. And I went and put my right arm on the bed to support myself . . . and the bed moved and I fell down and I hit myself.” 2 “He told me that he leaned on the ultrasound bed and that the bed moved and that he lost his balance and he fell.” 3 “He told me that he came for a simple test, ultrasound test, and while he was in the room by himself changing, he supported himself on the ultrasound bed which gave way, and he fell and injured his head.” 4 “He reported that this [stretcher] was unlocked and when he leaned over to change his clothes, it moved and he lost his balance, fell, etc.”

3 A. Use of a stretcher as a demonstrative exhibit

During the final pretrial conference, counsel for the Plaintiff objected to the Hospital

using certain photographs at trial, noting that the stretcher depicted in the photographs was

different from the one that was implicated in Father Rogakos’ fall. Defense counsel responded

that he would use the photographs of a hospital stretcher “[a]s a demonstrative exhibit,” and that

he would “bring a bed in, and then we can identify it, and that will solve all this photograph

problem.” Following the hearing, defense counsel emailed the court stating that the stretcher

would be “a demonstrative [exhibit] at trial” and sought guidance on how to obtain the approval

from the sheriff to bring it into the courtroom. The circuit court asked counsel if it was “the

same bed in question?” Defense counsel responded that “it is not ‘the same bed’” but that it is

“the same make and model as was present at” the Hospital and offered to present a witness who

would testify that it was the same make and model. The Court subsequently issued an order

prohibiting the Hospital from introducing the stretcher at trial as a demonstrative exhibit because

“the prejudicial effect of the proffered hospital bed substantially outweighs any probative

value . . . [and] there is a high likelihood that the hospital bed may mislead the jury . . . because

the proffered bed is not the bed that the decedent leaned against.”

B. The parties stipulate that the brain injury was a result of the fall.

Prior to trial, the parties reached the following stipulation: that Father Rogakos “fell and

struck his head while alone in the ultrasound room;” that “[a]s a result of the fall, [Father

Rogakos] suffered a right periorbital hematoma and brain injury;” and that Father Rogakos “did

not recover from the injuries he suffered from the fall.”

4 C. The Plaintiff’s evidence includes Father Rogakos’s statements about the circumstances of his fall.

At trial, the Plaintiff offered testimony from Mrs. Rogakos about the hospital visit, Father

Rogakos’ need to walk with a cane, and the statements he made to his family and others about

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