Clark v. Doe

695 N.E.2d 276, 119 Ohio App. 3d 296
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 23, 1997
DocketNo. C-950667.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 695 N.E.2d 276 (Clark v. Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Doe, 695 N.E.2d 276, 119 Ohio App. 3d 296 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

*300 Marianna Brown Bettman, Presiding Judge.

This is an appeal from a medical malpractice action brought by Kenneth Clark (“Clark”) and his wife Rhonda Clark.

On September 2, 1990, Clark was riding on his motorcycle when his right leg hit a parked car. As a result, Clark sustained an open, comminuted fracture of the tibia and fibula. Clark was taken to Clinton Memorial Hospital, where he was treated in the emergency room and admitted for two days. While at Clinton Memorial, Clark’s leg was put in a cast.

On September 6, 1990, Clark visited Dr. Raul Florez, an orthopedic surgeon. Florez scheduled surgery for September 14, 1990, in order to conduct an internal fixation of the fracture with an intermedullary nail. On the date of the scheduled surgery, the cast was removed, and an infection appeared to be present in the wound. The surgery was canceled. Clark was then placed in a different, long-leg cast.

On September 18, 1990, the cast was “wedged” in order to improve alignment. The cast remained on until October 5, 1990, when Clark’s leg was recasted. On November 28, 1990, the cast was removed, and Clark was placed in a long-leg air cast. According to Florez, Clark’s healing was excellent, and “nature was doing what it was supposed to do.” On December 11, 1990, Clark’s leg was placed in a long-leg brace to provide more support.

In February 1991, the brace was removed in order to speed up the healing. On March 4,1991, Florez’s chart indicated that Clark complained that his leg was crooked. However, Florez believed the leg was in satisfactory alignment.

On April 2, 1991, Florez noted a ten-degree valgus (meaning outward; away from the body) deformity in Clark’s leg that he felt required correction by way of an osteotomy with a bone graft and insertion of an intramedullary nail. Clark was also advised to continue his routine activity. On April 23, 1991, Clark came in for x-rays, and the osteotomy was scheduled.

On June 3, 1991, Florez performed an osteotomy and inserted an intramedullary nail into Clark’s leg. On June 27,1991, Clark’s alignment was measured at a six-to-seven-degree valgus deformity. By early 1992, Clark’s valgus deformity was in the ten-to eleven-degree range. Clark continued treatment with Florez until early 1992 when he switched to Dr. Mark Siegel. At this time, Clark’s degree of malalignment was in the twelve-degree range.

Clark and his wife filed a medical negligence claim against Florez and John Doe. 1 The Clarks alleged that Florez failed to intervene in a timely and *301 appropriate fashion to correct the malalignment, which resulted in permanent injury to Clark’s leg. The case was tried before a jury, which rendered a verdict in favor of Florez. The Clarks (“appellants”) appeal, raising five assignments of error. Despite the fact that our disposition of the second assignment of error determines this appeal, we will address the other assignments of error to assist in a retrial of this case. We will consider the assignments of error in their logical order.

SCOPE OF EXAMINATION

Appellants’ third assignment of error is that the trial court improperly excluded their expert’s explanations of his answers during cross-examination. Appellants argue that in three separate instances the trial court sustained defense counsel’s objections and struck Scheller’s explanation of his answers from the record, and that this misled and confused the jury and resulted in prejudicial error. Based on our examination of Scheller’s testimony, what was stricken was either not objected to, nonresponsive, or hearsay. We overrule this assignment of error.

JURY INSTRUCTIONS

Appellants’ first assignment of error is that two portions of the jury instructions given by the trial court were prejudicially erroneous.

The first part of the jury charge about which appellants complain consisted of instructions on proximate cause and intervening and unforeseeable causes. 2 The instructions were given verbatim as requested by Dr. Florez in proposed jury instruction number ten, and appellants argue that they were misleading and confusing.

These instructions, taken from the syllabus of a 1983 case involving the negligence of an automobile mechanic, 3 were dense and hard to follow; however, they were technically correct. The court would have done better, had the issue *302 been properly before the jury, to use the standard Ohio Jury Instructions on intervening and superseding causes. 1 Ohio Jury Instructions (1996), Section 11.30.

We agree with appellants that there was no evidence of any superseding or intervening negligence warranting any instruction on this subject. However, because the jury answered a special interrogatory finding that Dr. Florez was not negligent, these instructions were harmless error. Civ.R. 61.

Appellants also argue that the jury instructions given on different methods of treatment served to mislead and confuse the jury, and constituted prejudicial error. Appellants again argue that no instruction on this subject was warranted, because the case dealt with “the timeliness and technical execution of the particular procedures used.”

Although Dr. Florez argues that appellants failed to raise the issue below, it appears from the record that appellants did object to this instruction and thus have not waived their right to appeal this issue.

We agree with Florez that different methods of treatment were discussed in this case and, therefore, that an instruction on this subject was not inappropriate.

The trial court gave two instructions on different methods of treatment, one correct and one incorrect. The first instruction is from the standard 3 Ohio Jury Instructions (1996), Section 331.02, paragraph 3, and is a correct statement of the law. 4 It informs the jury that there may be more than one method of treatment, and that the selection of one over the other by the defendant doctor is not in and of itself negligent. The instruction ends with the admonition that the jury still must decide whether the use of that treatment comported with the standard of care. In short, the instruction properly informs the jury that a doctor cannot be held liable simply for his selection of a different procedure than another doctor might have used. However, the doctor can still be held liable if he performs that procedure negligently.

Later in its charge, the court gave another instruction on the same subject. This instruction was given by the court exactly as requested in Florez’s proposed instruction number 25, entitled “Two Schools of Thought.” 5 This second instruction tells the jury that as long as the doctor chooses and follows a *303 recognized method of treatment, he is not negligent, even though another doctor would have chosen a different treatment. This is incorrect.

In Kurzner v.

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Bluebook (online)
695 N.E.2d 276, 119 Ohio App. 3d 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-doe-ohioctapp-1997.