Collastica Garza, Individually, as Representative of the Estate of Saragosa Garza, Relators v. the Honorable Sam Bournias, Judge, 87th District Court, Limestone County, Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 1990
Docket10-90-00027-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Collastica Garza, Individually, as Representative of the Estate of Saragosa Garza, Relators v. the Honorable Sam Bournias, Judge, 87th District Court, Limestone County, Texas (Collastica Garza, Individually, as Representative of the Estate of Saragosa Garza, Relators v. the Honorable Sam Bournias, Judge, 87th District Court, Limestone County, Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Collastica Garza, Individually, as Representative of the Estate of Saragosa Garza, Relators v. the Honorable Sam Bournias, Judge, 87th District Court, Limestone County, Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Garza, C. et al v Hon Bournias

PETITION FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS GRANTED

MAY 17, 1990


NO. 10-90-027-CV


IN THE

COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE

TENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

AT WACO


* * * * * * * * * * * * *


COLLASTICA GARZA, INDIVIDUALLY, AS REPRESENTATIVE

OF THE ESTATE OF SARAGOSA GARZA, DECEASED, ET AL,


   Relators

v.


THE HONORABLE SAM BOURNIAS, JUDGE, 87TH DISTRICT

COURT, LIMESTONE COUNTY, TEXAS,

   Respondent



Original Proceeding



O P I N I O N


* * * * * * *

This is an original mandamus proceeding. Relators Collastica Garza, individually, and as representative of the Estate of Saragosa Garza, deceased, and as representative of the wrongful death beneficiaries of the deceased, and others, who are plaintiffs in a medical malpractice action in the trial court, seek to compel the honorable Sam Bournias, presiding judge of the 87th Judicial District Court of Limestone County, to vacate his February 2, 1990, order entered in cause 220007-B compelling Plaintiffs to produce for defendant Robert J. Neff, M.D., a copy of Dr. Paul Blaylock's letter to Plaintiffs' counsel dated August 15, 1989. Relators request that a writ of mandamus issue commanding Judge Bournias to rescind his February 2nd order and to enter an order protecting the correspondence in question from discovery under the attorney work-product exemption or, alternatively, to rescind said order, review the subject correspondence and order those portions containing information protected by the work-product privilege "blacked out before" a photocopy is provided to defendant Neff.

The letter in issue consists of a list of suggested deposition questions compiled by Dr. Blaylock at the request of Relators' attorney to assist the attorney in preparing for the deposition of Dr. Neff. Relators assert as the basis for the relief they are seeking, in addition to the work-product exemption, that the correspondence sought is outside the allowed scope of discovery and that the release of such material would provide Neff with an unfair advantage. We conditionally grant the writ.

In response to defendant Neff's first request for production to the plaintiffs, Relators produced a photocopy of the only written report they had received at that point from Dr. Paul Blaylock, one of their designated testifying experts. Blaylock's report was in the form of a letter to Relators' attorney dated October 29, 1987. Neff's request for production #4 requested the following:

All reports, notes, conclusions, opinions, telephone memoranda, or the like, preliminary or otherwise, of any testifying expert witness, with regard to the incident giving rise to the above-referenced action or with regard to the acts or omissions of the party propounding this request for production, whether favorable or unfavorable.

Dr. Blaylock's October 29th report indicated that, after reviewing the material furnished to him by Relators' attorney, it was his professional opinion that both the emergency room physician, Dr. Neff, and the "first" hospital, General Mexia Memorial, were negligent in the management of Mr. Garza's case. Blaylock then listed the specific acts of negligence on the part of Neff, the emergency room physician, and Mexia General:

1.Suspected abdomen internal injuries, but failed to type and crossmatch blood immediately after arrival;

2.Failure to perform peritoneal lavage correctly;

3.Failure to give blood in timely manner and of sufficient amounts to prevent the patient from bleeding to death;

4.Should not have transferred patient to Waco hospital 44 miles away;

5.Should have done an ultrasound and/or scan for ruptured spleen;

6.If did transfer, should have stabilized patient more, given blood sooner, and sent more blood to be given to patient enroute;

7.If did transfer, should have been by air rather than ground ambulance.

8.Should have had better communications with the receiving hospital and have had them more prepared to address the critical state of the patient;

9.They charged for a suture tray. If they sutured the patient while he had more serious injury, such an action is negligent prioritizing.

10.Patient had O+ blood type. They should have been giving uncrossmatched blood to counter the life-threatening shock;

11.They did not do orthostatic BP and pulse checks;

12.Should have consulted a staff surgeon and taken patient to surgery at first hospital;

13.Patient arrived at hospital at 7:19 p.m. and transferred to another hospital at 11:45 p.m. allowing critical time to pass without adequate assessment and treatment in the interim;

14.Inadequate hospital procedures and protocol for emergency care on weekends;

15.Shipped patient in a moribund state knowing that the probability of death was imminent;

16.Failure to order abdomen films and pelvic films and do ultrasound and CT scan to aid in diagnosis.

17.Should have placed a CVP line (or other central line) in patient who is in shock.

The above-listed acts and omissions were also set forth in Relators' responses to General Mexia Memorial Hospital's first set of interrogatories submitted to Relators. A copy of these responses was furnished to Neff in February, 1989.

As to the "second" hospital, Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center, Blaylock further stated in his report that they, too, were probably negligent but that the damage had been done prior to Hillcrest's involvement and that it is doubtful that Mr. Garza would have survived even if Hillcrest's resuscitation efforts had met the applicable standards. Blaylock then listed eight acts or omissions which in his opinion constituted negligence on the part of Hillcrest. Blaylock suggested in his October 29th report that Hillcrest as well as the ER physician, Dr. Neff, be added as defendants, as he believed sufficient grounds of negligence existed to prevent a suit against Hillcrest and the ER physician from being dismissed as frivolous. Blaylock's October 29th report was prepared on his professional letterhead, which reflects that Blaylock is an attorney as well as a physician.

On September 13, 1989, Relators served on all defendants their supplemental response to all of the defendants' requests for production, including a copy of Dr. Blaylock's written narrative report dated May 16, 1989, which was prepared in the same form as his October 29th report to Relators' attorney. Blaylock's May 16th report reflects that he had reviewed the new materials sent to him by Relators' attorney which had led him to conclude that:

1.Mexia Hospital, based upon the surgical privileges applied for, had the surgical capabilities to do trauma laparotomies and repair of a damaged spleen and/or liver from intra-abdominal bleeding.

2.The Care Flight Availability to the Mexia Hospital was readily available and, if used properly in the Garza case, more probably than not, would have saved the life of Mr. Garza if the Mexia Hospital physicians had elected to prevent Garza from bleeding to death.

Defendant Mexia Hospital sent a second request for production to Relators on November 22, 1989. Request number one asked that Relators produce the following:

Any and all reports prepared after May 16, 1989 by the following experts who may be called as a witness regarding the incident or occasion in question, any injuries or damages claimed to have been sustained as a result thereof, or any other matter of fact upon which the alleged claims are based.

Dr. Blaylock's name was then listed, along with the names of two other experts previously designated by Relators.

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Collastica Garza, Individually, as Representative of the Estate of Saragosa Garza, Relators v. the Honorable Sam Bournias, Judge, 87th District Court, Limestone County, Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collastica-garza-individually-as-representative-of-the-estate-of-saragosa-texapp-1990.