Brodkin v. St. Joseph Hospital of Orange CA4/3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 2021
DocketG058192
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brodkin v. St. Joseph Hospital of Orange CA4/3 (Brodkin v. St. Joseph Hospital of Orange CA4/3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brodkin v. St. Joseph Hospital of Orange CA4/3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 6/28/21 Brodkin v. St. Joseph Hospital of Orange CA4/3

NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

FRANCINE BRODKIN,

Plaintiff and Appellant, G058192

v. (Super. Ct. No. 30-2017-00908376)

ST. JOSEPH HOSPITAL OF ORANGE et OPINION al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

Appeal from orders of the Superior Court of Orange County, Sheila Fell, Judge. Affirmed in part and reversed in part with directions. Law Office of Martin N. Buchanan and Martin N. Buchanan; Michael F. Moran and Lisa T. Flint for Plaintiff and Appellant. Carroll, Kelly, Trotter & Franzen and David P. Pruett; Clyde & Co. and Margaret M. Holm for Defendants and Appellants. INTRODUCTION Francine Brodkin has appealed from an order granting a new trial on her successful claims against St. Joseph Hospital of Orange for professional negligence and elder abuse. Both parties moved for a new trial. The trial court granted St. Joseph’s motion for an entirely new trial; Brodkin asserts on appeal that the new trial should be limited to damages only. St. Joseph has cross-appealed, asserting that the trial court should have granted its motion for nonsuit on Brodkin’s elder abuse cause of action. We affirm the trial court’s order denying St. Joseph’s motion for nonsuit. We cannot say the court abused its discretion in determining that Brodkin’s elder abuse evidence, if believed, was sufficient to avoid a judgment for St. Joseph as a matter of law. The new trial orders are both reversed. The trial court should have granted a limited trial on damages only. Accordingly, the order granting St. Joseph’s new trial motion is reversed, as is the order denying Brodkin’s new trial motion. Brodkin’s motion for a new trial limited to damages only must be granted. FACTS1 Sixty-five-year-old Francine Brodkin and her husband provided most of the testimony about her experience at St. Joseph in August 2016. She herself did not remember much about the first part of her stay. Brodkin went to the St. Joseph emergency room with her husband and son at about 7:30 a.m. on August 25, 2016. She suffered from anxiety, and her psychiatrist recommended admission to the hospital’s behavioral unit. She was given an IV and several medications in the ER, and testified she could not remember anything between 2:00 p.m. on the day she was admitted and the early morning of the next day. Brodkin’s husband filled in the blanks. He stated the family members were in the ER for five to six hours before Brodkin was admitted to the behavioral unit.

1 Because we are reviewing an order denying a motion for a nonsuit, we recite only the evidence in favor of the plaintiff’s case. (See Campbell v. General Motors Corp. (1982) 32 Cal.3d 112, 117-118.)

2 During that time, she was given three medications. The third one made her “[fall] back on that gurney, and her eyes were closing, and she became very lethargic and very limp. She was just almost completely knocked out at that point.” Brodkin went to the behavioral unit floor at 2:00 p.m., accompanied by her husband and son. At this point, she was in a wheelchair and “out of it.” Her husband had to sign the admitting papers for her. The hospital psychiatrist tried to evaluate her at about 5:00, but was unable to do so; she was slumping in her wheelchair and was still “really out of it.” Her husband had to recount her medical history. He left at about 6:00 p.m., having been told by the nurses that they needed to get Brodkin settled in her room. At about 8:15 that night, Brodkin phoned her husband and told him she was still in her wheelchair and did not yet have a bed in a room. Her husband spoke to a nurse, who told him they were “still working on it.” Brodkin called her husband at 7:11 the next morning (August 26) to tell him “she was put on this old couch in this darkened room.” She told him she fell off the couch, and she thought she had broken her arm or shoulder. She called him again about an hour later to say she was in pain and had asked for X-rays. Her husband spoke to a nurse, who told him X-rays had been ordered. At 11:00 a.m., Brodkin called her husband to tell him she had still not been taken to have X- rays. Fifteen minutes later, she called again to say she will still sitting in the hall, in pain, waiting for an X-ray. And again at 12:30 p.m. She finally had an X-ray during the early afternoon, confirming that she had fractured her shoulder.2 When Brodkin’s husband arrived for visiting hours in the late afternoon of August 26, he found her lying in a bulky geri chair (a hospital recliner that can be wheeled about) in the hall. When he came to visit the following day, again late in the afternoon, she was again lying in a geri chair in the hall in the same spot. She was also wearing the same clothes she had worn when she was admitted two days earlier and was

2 The order for the X-ray was a “stat” order, that is, one that was to be filled within an hour. Brodkin received her X-ray seven hours after the order was given.

3 again “so medicated that she could barely open her eyes.” Her husband asked the nurses to bathe her and change her clothes. Brodkin was discharged on the morning of August 29. By that time her husband had asked several nurses how she had come to fracture her shoulder. No one knew. Brodkin testified that she remembered rolling off a couch onto the floor early in the morning of the second day, hurting her shoulder. She was in what looked to her like a storage room. She walked out into the hallway to ask for help. The nurses did nothing. She repeatedly asked for an X-ray, but one was not taken until the afternoon. In the meantime, she sat in the geri chair in the hall. She also testified that she had no memory of ever being placed in a hospital bed during the entire time of her stay. It is undisputed that St. Joseph classified Brodkin as being at a high risk to fall when she was admitted to the behavioral unit because of dizziness and unsteady balance. A high risk classification meant she had to be monitored continuously. It is also undisputed that none of the staff saw Brodkin fall or could explain how it happened. Brodkin sued St. Joseph for elder abuse and professional negligence in 2017. The case was tried to a jury in February and March 2019. At the close of Brodkin’s evidence, St. Joseph moved for a nonsuit on her elder abuse claim, arguing that the evidence did not support the elements of such a claim, which were different from and more demanding than those of professional negligence. The court denied the motion. The jury returned a special verdict in Brodkin’s favor on both elder abuse and negligence.

4 A problem arose with the jury’s award of damages. Although the jurors 3 had been instructed that they could not award the same damages twice, the jury awarded Brodkin $287,500 for past non-economic loss (physical pain, mental suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, physical impairment, grief, anxiety, humiliation, and emotional distress) on the negligence count and $112,500 for past non-economic loss (same elements) on the elder abuse neglect count. The jury awarded the same amounts ($287,500 and $112,500 respectively) for future non-economic loss on each count on the 4 same elements. At a subsequent hearing, the trial court ordered Brodkin to elect her remedies.5 Brodkin chose the elder abuse remedy. Both Brodkin and St. Joseph moved for a new trial. The difference was that Brodkin wanted the new trial limited to damages, while St. Joseph moved for an entirely new trial.

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Brodkin v. St. Joseph Hospital of Orange CA4/3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brodkin-v-st-joseph-hospital-of-orange-ca43-calctapp-2021.