Busanic, M. v. Premier Orthopaedic and Sports Med.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 28, 2026
Docket852 EDA 2025
StatusUnpublished
AuthorLazarus

This text of Busanic, M. v. Premier Orthopaedic and Sports Med. (Busanic, M. v. Premier Orthopaedic and Sports Med.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Busanic, M. v. Premier Orthopaedic and Sports Med., (Pa. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

J-A30012-25

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT O.P. 65.37

MATTHEW BUSANIC : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA : v. : : : PREMIER ORTHOPAEDIC & SPORTS : MEDICINE PHYSICAL THERAPY : : No. 852 EDA 2025 Appellant :

Appeal from the Order Entered March 6, 2025 In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Civil Division at No(s): 2020-04947-TT

BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., PANELLA, P.J.E., and SULLIVAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, P.J.: FILED APRIL 28, 2026

Premier Orthopaedic & Sports Medicine Physical Therapy (Premier)

appeals from the order, entered in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester

County, concluding that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence,

granting Appellee Matthew Busanic’s post-trial motion, and relisting this

professional negligence case for a new trial solely on damages. We determine

that the trial court clearly abused its discretion when it determined that the

jury’s verdict was so contrary to the evidence that it shocked its sense of

justice. Thus, we vacate and remand for reinstatement of the jury verdict.

In July 2018, Busanic started a course of physical therapy (3x/week for

4 weeks) at Premier after spraining his ankle while running. At his first

appointment, Busanic met with Premier physical therapist Catilin Wilkinson,

who performed a series of tests to evaluate the strength of his ankles and

developed a set of exercises for him (plan/program). See N.T. Jury Trial, J-A30012-25

10/29/24, at 18, 67. At his second appointment, Busanic received instructions

on how to implement the plan and was shown “close to ten” exercises under

the direction of Premier physical therapist assistant (PTA) Colleen Smith. Id.

at 21, 78. Busanic testified that Smith followed along with him as he

performed each of the exercises to make sure he was doing them correctly.

Id. at 74. The entire program of exercises took approximately one hour to

complete. Id. at 78. Smith testified that when she works with patients, if

“they are doing the exercise in an incorrect way or [] a way that’s likely to

injure them” she steps in and changes how they are performing the exercise.

Id., 10/30/24, at 120. See also id., 10/29/24, at 81 (Busanic testifying

Smith “would have told [him]” if he did not perform an exercise correctly and

that he understood all of the movements “to the best of [his] ability”). Smith

testified that a physical therapy aide often works with a patient, following

them through their plan of care and guiding them through their individualized

exercise program. Id. at 122. However, even when an aide is working with

a patient, Smith testified that she is “always scanning, so if [she] see[s]

something being done incorrectly, [she] will always tell [the aide] to stop the

exercise [and] will come over and change it.” Id.

One of the exercises in Busanic’s plan required the use of a

“TheraBand”—a pre-tied elastic resistance band—that Busanic placed around

his foot and held tightly at waist-level while flexing his foot forward and

backward while sitting on a treatment table. Id., 10/29/24, at 24-25; id.,

10/30/24, at 145. Busanic testified that he was not given any warning by

-2- J-A30012-25

Premier staff about the risks associated with using the TheraBand, whether

the band should not be “bunched up” when placed around his foot, where to

position his hands in relation to his body when he holds the band, or where

on his foot the TheraBand should be positioned. Id., 10/29/24, at 28. Busanic

did the TheraBand exercises1 approximately five to ten minutes that day. Id.

at 35.

When Busanic returned to Premier for more therapy on July 31, 2018,

Matthew Arizini, a physical therapy aide, took Busanic “from one area of the

room to the other and instruct[ed him on] how to do [the exercises] and set

[him] up.” Id. at 34. Busanic testified that Arizini selected the TheraBand he

should use, “instructed [him on how] to . . . press [his] toes or [his] foot

forward and have it come back,” and put the band on his foot before Busanic

performed the TheraBand exercise described above. Id. at 36. Busanic

testified that Arizini handed him the TheraBand and “told [him] to . . . hold it

tight” while he described the motions Busanic should perform. Id. at 37.

Busanic testified Arizini told him to do ten of the exercises, watched him

perform “one or two of them, and then he sort of walked away.” Id. at 38.

As Busanic was performing the seventh repetition, he testified that “the band

instantly slipped off [of his] foot and hit [him] in the [right] eye.” Id. at 38;

____________________________________________

1 Busanic was instructed on how to do two different exercises using the TheraBand. He was injured doing an exercise where he flexed his foot, while sitting on a table, using the TheraBand. During the other TheraBand exercise, Busanic put the TheraBand around his ankle and stepped side-to-side on the floor. Id. at 24.

-3- J-A30012-25

see also Complaint, 7/30/20, at ¶ 11;2 N.T. Jury Trial, 10/29/24, at 96

(Busanic testifying band had been placed “around the ball of [his] foot and the

instep” right before accident); id. at 100. Busanic testified at trial that he did

not know “how or why” the accident happened, but in his deposition testified

that he was holding the band with one hand at the time it slipped off, which

is how Arizini handed him the band. Id. at 97, 100, 114. But see id. at 104

(Busanic testifying “I have no reason to believe I did anything wrong” when

performing band exercise on date of accident). Finally, on re-direct

examination, Busanic testified that he did not “adjust, change, or manipulate

how the band was put on [his] foot in any way.” Id. at 114.

On August 7, 2018, doctors at Wills Eye Physicians/Mid Atlantic Retina

diagnosed Busanic with a sub-retinal hemorrhage and a “severely torn retina

. . . with an associated retinal detachment.” Report of Carl Hyunsuk Park,

MD, 6/18/21, at 1 (unpaginated). Busanic required treatment, five eye

2 Busanic’s first amended complaint states that at the time he sustained his

eye injury he “was performing a resisted planar flexion exercise using a TheraBand at the direction of an unidentified male agent or employee of Premier [] who is believed to have been working under the supervision of Colleen Smith, a physical therapy assistant also employed by [] Premier[.]” Complaint, 9/21/20, at ¶ 9-10. The record is clear that no one actually saw the band hit Busanic’s eye. Arizini testified that he did not remember working with Busanic on the day of the accident. See N.T. Jury Trial, 10/31/24, at 36- 37. Moreover, Christian H. Mongrain, who prepared Busanic’s Certificate of Merit, states that Busanic was injured while “performing resisted TheraBand ankle plantar flexion exercises under the direction and care of Premier Therapy employee, Colleen Smith, PTA, when the TheraBand slipped off of his right foot and struck [his] right eye.” Certificate of Merit, Christian H. Mongrain, PT, DPT, HEM, 8/4/20, at 2 (emphasis added).

-4- J-A30012-25

surgeries,3 and has permanent vision loss. Doctor Park, who performed

Busanic’s first eye surgery, prepared a report that concluded, “to a reasonable

degree of medical certainty[,] all of [Busanic’s] injuries to [his] right eye

(traumatic macular hole, traumatic cataract, severe retinal detachment with

proliferative vitreoretinopathy) were due to the impact caused by the

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