Cash v. Kim

342 S.E.2d 61, 288 S.C. 292, 1986 S.C. App. LEXIS 314
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 18, 1986
Docket0654
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 342 S.E.2d 61 (Cash v. Kim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cash v. Kim, 342 S.E.2d 61, 288 S.C. 292, 1986 S.C. App. LEXIS 314 (S.C. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Goolsby, Judge:

This is a medical malpractice case. Ronald H. Kim, M.D., and T. Keith Wood, M.D., appeal from a jury verdict in favor of the respondent Dorothy Neal Cash. The jury awarded Mrs. Cash actual damages. It also assessed punitive damages against each physician. The questions on appeal relate to the sufficiency of the evidence as to proximate cause and as to punitive damages. 1

*294 In October, 1980, Mrs. Cash began experiencing numbness in her right arm. Her family physician referred her to Dr. Marcelino Chavez, a neurosurgeon. He recommended neck surgery.

Mrs. Cash thereafter entered the Spartanburg General Hospital. Dr. Chavez visited Mrs. Cash the night before her scheduled operation and obtained her written consent for him to perform a surgical procedure described as “a nerve root decompression.”

While performing the operation, Dr. Chavez preferred to have a central venous pressure catheter in place. Its purpose is to aspirate any air entering the vascular system.

Dr. Wood, an anesthesiologist, also visited Mrs. Cash the night before her operation. Although he explained to her about the anesthesia, Dr. Wood did not tell her that, because of the possibility of air getting into her vascular system, a catheter would be placed in her heart. Hospital personnel took Mrs. Cash to the operating room the following afternoon. Dr. Wood inserted a needle into her arm and a fluid began to flow into her system. Just before she lost consciousness, Mrs. Cash remembered seeing an oriental male, later identified as Dr. Kim, come into the room. Dr. Kim, a partner of Dr. Wood, is also an anesthesiologist.

While she was unconscious, Dr. Kim, in Dr. Wood’s presence, attempted six times without success to insert the catheter into Mrs. Cash’s subclavian vein. Dr. Wood then passed the catheter through her right, external jugular vein into her auricle.

An x-ray taken sometime after the insertion of the catheter revealed a hemomediastinum, an accumulation of *295 blood in the chest cavity. At one point during the placement of the catheter, a blood vessel was torn and a leakage of blood occurred. Upon finding the hemomediastinum, Dr. Chavez canceled the neck surgery.

Mrs. Cash awoke in the intensive care unit. She remained there for four days.

Dr. Chavez performed the neck surgery upon Mrs. Cash a few days later. This time, Dr. James F. Greene, a general surgeon, inserted the central venous pressure catheter. Before doing so, however, he discussed the procedure with her and obtained her oral consent.

Mrs. Cash incurred additional medical expenses because of the hemomediastinum.

She now suffers from painful breathing problems and, as a consequence, tires easily.

I.

Each physician argues the trial court erred in submitting the case to the jury and in not granting his motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict. By a single exception, each physician questions whether the record contains any evidence that his negligence was a proximate cause of Mrs. Cash’s injuries.

A plaintiff in a malpractice case brought against a physician must prove the physician’s negligence was a proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury. Hanselmann v. McCardle, 275 S. C. 46, 267 S. E. (2d) 531 (1980); Clark v. Ross, 284 S. C. 543, 328 S. E. (2d) 91 (Ct. App. 1985). A physician’s negligence may be deemed a proximate cause of a plaintiff’s injury only when without that negligence the injury either would not have occurred or could have been avoided. Hughes v. The Children’s Clinic, P.A., 269 S. C. 389, 237 S. E. (2d) 753 (1977). The question of proximate cause is ordinarily one of fact for the jury and the trial judge’s sole function regarding the question is to inquire whether particular conclusions are the only reasonable inferences that can be drawn from the evidence. Carter v. Anderson Memorial Hospital, 284 S. C. 229, 325 S. E. (2d) 78 (Ct. App. 1985).

In their brief, Dr. Wood and Dr. Kim restrict their argument regarding lack of sufficient evidence to support a finding of proximate cause to the specification of negligence *296 alleging lack of informed consent. This court recently recognized that an action based on the lack of informed consent is no different from any other action for medical malpractice and that, in such an action, the burden rests on the plaintiff, using the objective test, to prove proximate cause. Hook v. Rothstein, 281 S. C. 541, 316 S. E. (2d) 690 (Ct. App. 1984), cert. denied, 283 S. C. 64, 320 S. E. (2d) 35 (1984).

We need not decide, however, whether Mrs. Cash offered sufficient evidence to support a finding that a reasonable person in her position would not have submitted to the procedure at issue had he or she been adequately informed because Mrs. Cash alleged in her amended complaint that other negligent acts and omissions on the part of both physicians also proximately caused her injuries. For example, as to Dr. Wood, Mrs. Cash alleged he was negligent, among other things, because he set about “to perform a medical procedure without having adequate training [or] experience”; and as to Dr. Kim, Mrs. Cash alleged he was negligent, among other things, because he failed “to halt the attempted insertion of the catheter after failing in several prior attempts to insert it.”

Neither Dr. Wood nor Dr. Kim now disputes the sufficiency of the proof of these other specifications of negligence. Also, neither physician questions, by argument in their brief, the sufficiency of the evidence as to one or more of these other negligent acts and omissions being a proximate cause of Mrs. Cash’s injuries. See Beach Co. v. Charleston County School District, 263 S. C. 7, 207 S. E. (2d) 406 (1974) (contention not argued in the brief will be deemed abandoned on appeal).

Here, the negligence causes of action on which the jury based its general verdict alleged several theories of liability and thus presented several issues for the jury to consider. Where a jury returns a general verdict involving two or more issues and its verdict is supported as to at least one issue, the verdict will not be set aside, Anderson v. West, 270 S. C. 184, 241 S. E. (2d) 551 (1978). We have, then, no alternative but to uphold as to both physicians the jury’s findings implicit in its general verdict on Mrs. Cash’s causes of action for negligence. Unchallenged theories of liability support the verdict against them.

*297 II.

Dr. Wood and Dr. Kim also argue that the evidence does not support the award of punitive damages against each of them. Their exception raises the question of whether the record contains any evidence of recklessness on the part of either in treating Mrs. Cash.

Punitive damages are recoverable in a medical malpractice case “where a physician has been guilty of gross negligence amounting to reckless indifference in treating a patient.” 70 C. J. S. Physicians and Surgeons

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Bluebook (online)
342 S.E.2d 61, 288 S.C. 292, 1986 S.C. App. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cash-v-kim-scctapp-1986.