Charles L. Daniels II, Individually; Charles L. Daniels II, on Behalf of Payton Daniels, a Minor; And Charles L. Daniels II, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Harmony Lynn Daniels v. C. Wayne Lyle, M.D.; C. Wayne Lyle, M.D., P.A.; Medical Services Group, Ltd.; Baptist Health; And Diamond Risk Insurance LLC

2025 Ark. App. 197
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedApril 2, 2025
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 Ark. App. 197 (Charles L. Daniels II, Individually; Charles L. Daniels II, on Behalf of Payton Daniels, a Minor; And Charles L. Daniels II, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Harmony Lynn Daniels v. C. Wayne Lyle, M.D.; C. Wayne Lyle, M.D., P.A.; Medical Services Group, Ltd.; Baptist Health; And Diamond Risk Insurance LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles L. Daniels II, Individually; Charles L. Daniels II, on Behalf of Payton Daniels, a Minor; And Charles L. Daniels II, as Special Administrator of the Estate of Harmony Lynn Daniels v. C. Wayne Lyle, M.D.; C. Wayne Lyle, M.D., P.A.; Medical Services Group, Ltd.; Baptist Health; And Diamond Risk Insurance LLC, 2025 Ark. App. 197 (Ark. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Cite as 2025 Ark. App. 197 ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION I No. CV-22-336

CHARLES L. DANIELS II, Opinion Delivered April 2, 2025

INDIVIDUALLY; CHARLES L. APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI DANIELS II, ON BEHALF OF PAYTON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, FOURTH DANIELS, A MINOR; AND CHARLES L. DIVISION DANIELS II, AS SPECIAL [NO. 60CV-18-5971] ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF HARMONY LYNN DANIELS APPELLANTS

V. HONORABLE HERBERT T. WRIGHT, JUDGE C. WAYNE LYLE, M.D.; C. WAYNE LYLE, M.D., P.A.; MEDICAL SERVICES GROUP, LTD.; BAPTIST HEALTH; AND DIAMOND RISK INSURANCE LLC APPELLEES AFFIRMED

KENNETH S. HIXSON, Judge

This is an appeal from an order granting summary judgment in a medical-malpractice

case related to medical services provided to Harmony Daniels hours before her death.

Appellant Charles L. Daniels II, individually and on behalf of his minor daughter and

Harmony’s estate (hereinafter referred to as “Daniels”), appeals a Pulaski County Circuit

Court order granting summary judgment in favor of appellees C. Wayne Lyle, M.D.; C. Wayne Lyle, M.D., P.A.; Medical Services Group, Ltd.; Baptist Health; and Diamond Risk

Insurance LLC.

In this appeal, Daniels argues that he was not required to obtain the services of a

medical expert witness because the appellees’ alleged negligence “lies within the jury’s

comprehension as a matter of common knowledge.” Appellees respond that expert testimony

was required because a jury could not comprehend the appellees’ alleged negligence as a

matter of common knowledge. Thus, appellees argue that summary judgment was

appropriate. Appellees contend, as an alternative ground for affirmance, that summary

judgment was also appropriate because Daniels’s only claim rests on factual assertions that

are defeated by evidence of discharge paperwork provided to and read by Harmony. We

affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment.

I. Factual Background

Forty-two-year-old Harmony Daniels died of a pulmonary embolism on August 5,

2017. On August 1, 2017—four days before she died—she had been prescribed diclofenac

sodium, a medication that can cause blood clots, for ankle pain. On August 4, Harmony and

her husband, Daniels, spent the night at a hotel in downtown Little Rock to celebrate their

wedding anniversary. Harmony woke up early in the morning on Saturday, August 5, with

severe pain and swelling in her right calf. Around 10:00 a.m., Daniels took Harmony to the

emergency department at Baptist Health Little Rock. Dr. Wayne Lyle, M.D., was her treating

physician. Dr. Lyle ordered an ultrasound, which revealed a large blood clot known as deep

vein thrombosis (“DVT”) extending from her proximal right femoral vein through her calf.

2 Dr. Lyle informed Harmony and Daniels of the diagnosis; prescribed her an anticoagulant,

Xarelto; and told her to continue walking. Harmony was discharged from the hospital and

given discharge instructions. Around 5:00 that afternoon, Harmony collapsed and lost

consciousness while walking in downtown Little Rock. She was taken to the University of

Arkansas for Medical Sciences (“UAMS”) emergency room, but she never regained

consciousness. She was pronounced dead just after 7:00 p.m. Dr. Frank Peretti performed

an autopsy and determined that Harmony’s cause of death was pulmonary embolism due to

DVT of the right leg.

On August 27, 2018, Daniels, on behalf of himself, his minor daughter, and

Harmony’s estate, filed a medical-malpractice lawsuit pursuant to Arkansas Code Annotated

section 16-114-206 (Repl. 2016) against C. Wayne Lyle, M.D., P.A. Daniels pleaded that his

“cause of action is brought exclusively under the ‘common knowledge’ exception” of section

16-114-206(a), and he affirmatively disclaimed any causes of action that would require expert

medical testimony under section 16-114-206. Daniels asserted that Dr. Lyle breached his

duty of “ordinary care” because he “did not tell Harmony Daniels that her ‘[e]xtensive deep

vein thrombosis’ was a life-threatening condition.” He claimed that Dr. Lyle’s breach was the

proximate cause of Harmony’s death. Although he initially named C. Wayne Lyle, M.D.,

P.A, as the sole defendant, Daniels later amended his complaint three times to add C. Wayne

Lyle, M.D., individually, and Medical Services Group, Ltd. (collectively the “Lyle appellees”),

as well as Baptist Health and Diamond Risk Insurance LLC (collectively the “Baptist Health

3 appellees”) as defendants.1 The Lyle appellees and Baptist Health appellees filed answers

denying the material allegations.

During the next few years, the parties filed a series of competing summary-judgment

motions. In May 2019, the Lyle appellees and the Baptist Health appellees filed nearly

identical motions for summary judgment alleging that the applicable standard of care, the

breach of that standard, and the medical causation for Daniels’s claim were not matters of

common knowledge that lie within a jury’s comprehension. Thus, Daniels was required to

provide expert testimony to support each element of his claim, and because he had not done

so, the Lyle and Baptist Health appellees argued that they were entitled to judgment as a

matter of law. On August 23, 2019, the circuit court denied appellees’ motions for summary

judgment because Daniels’s deadline to designate a case-in-chief expert had not yet passed.

That deadline was May 22, 2020.

On May 22, 2020, Daniels did not designate a case-in-chief expert, but he did file a

motion for partial summary judgment with respect to liability against all appellees, claiming

that he had met his burden of proof on all elements of his medical-malpractice “common

knowledge” case without using experts. The Lyle appellees, in turn, filed a competing motion

for summary judgment alleging that Harmony “was provided comprehensive information

1 Although Daniels did not name her as a defendant, he further alleged that Manuela Debacker, RN, Harmony’s treating nurse on August 5, knew that Harmony’s DVT “was a life-threatening condition,” that Nurse Debacker did not inform Harmony or Daniels that Harmony’s DVT was life threatening, that Debacker was acting as an employee or agent of Baptist Health within the course and scope of her employment, and that her actions and omissions were imputed to Baptist Health.

4 about her condition, including that it could ‘lead to serious and even[ ] life-threatening

complications if the clot travels to the lungs’ and that she read it.” They attached an affidavit

from their expert, Randolph P. Maddox, M.D., who stated that the “[s]tandard of care [for]

patient diagnosis, treatment, and how patients are to be provided instruction regarding

diagnoses and treatment recommendations is something that is taught in medical school and

residency because it is not a matter of common knowledge.” Dr. Maddox further stated that

Dr. Lyle’s treatment of Harmony was “all within the applicable standard of care.” Relying on

that affidavit, the Lyle appellees asserted that Daniels failed to meet proof with proof.

The Baptist Health appellees filed a renewed summary-judgment motion several days

later also contending that this is not a common-knowledge-exception case, and because

Daniels chose not to disclose a case-in-chief standard-of-care expert against Baptist Health,

summary judgment should be granted. The Baptist Health appellees relied on an expert

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