Cottage Park Place v. State Dept.of Public Health CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 27, 2015
DocketC072323
StatusUnpublished

This text of Cottage Park Place v. State Dept.of Public Health CA3 (Cottage Park Place v. State Dept.of Public Health CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottage Park Place v. State Dept.of Public Health CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 4/27/15 Cottage Park Place v. State Dept.of Public Health CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

COTTAGE PARK PLACE, LP, C072323

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. 34-2011- 00095103-CU-MC-GDS) v.

STATE DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH,

Defendant and Respondent.

A nursing assistant failed to adequately supervise an elderly resident of a nursing facility owned by plaintiff Cottage Park Place, LP, which resulted in the fall and subsequent death of the resident. Cited by defendant State Department of Public Health (the Department) for violation of a federal regulation requiring adequate supervision of residents, Cottage Park Place challenged the citation in court. The trial court entered judgment in favor of the Department, and Cottage Park Place appeals.

1 On appeal, Cottage Park Place contends: (1) our role is to review the trial court’s ruling de novo, (2) Cottage Park Place is not responsible for the nursing assistant’s inadequate supervision, and (3) various interpretive federal authorities establish that Cottage Park Place is not responsible for the nursing assistant’s inadequate supervision. We conclude: (1) Cottage Park Place’s contention that our role is to review the trial court’s ruling de novo is without merit because Cottage Park Place ignores the trial court’s credibility determination as to the nursing assistant, (2) Cottage Park Place is responsible for the nursing assistant’s inadequate supervision of the resident under the rule of nondelegable duties, and (3) Cottage Park Place’s reliance on interpretive federal authorities is forfeited because those authorities were not brought to the attention of the trial court. BACKGROUND The Long-Term Care, Health, Safety, and Security Act of 1973 (Health & Saf. Code, § 1417 et seq.) allows the Department to cite a long-term health facility for violations of state or federal laws or regulations relating to those facilities. (Health & Saf. Code, § 1423.) The most serious violation – a Class AA violation – occurs when the violation is “a direct proximate cause of death of a patient or resident of a long-term health care facility.” (Health & Saf. Code, § 1424, subd. (c).) Cottage Park Place operates Gramercy Court, a long-term skilled nursing facility, where resident Mary Anne Holden was injured on October 12, 2007, and later died of her injuries. The Department issued a Class AA citation and assessed a civil money penalty of $90,000 against Cottage Park Place for violation of 42 Code of Federal Regulations part 483.25, subdivision (h)(2), which provides: “[T]he facility must ensure that [¶] . . . [t]he resident environment remains as free of accident hazards as is possible; and [¶] . . . [e]ach resident receives adequate supervision and assistance devices to prevent accidents.”

2 Specifically, the Department cited Cottage Park Place for not providing “adequate supervision” to Holden on the morning of October 12, 2007. Cottage Park Place contested the citation in the superior court, which contest was tried by the court under Health and Safety Code section 1428. After trial, the court, on Cottage Park Place’s request, issued a statement of decision. Cottage Park Place claims on appeal that we must review the superior court’s interpretation of the relevant laws de novo, implying that the facts were not in dispute. That claim, however, is problematic because Cottage Park Place does not accept the facts as found by the trial court. We therefore recount the relevant parts of the statement of decision. The court noted that there was no dispute that Cottage Park Place provided (1) a facility as free of accident hazards as possible and (2) assistance devices. Therefore, the court focused on “whether the facility’s nursing staff provided [Holden] adequate supervision during the relevant morning hours of October 12, 2007.” Concerning its view of the facts, the trial court wrote: “[Holden] was a 97-year[-]old woman who resided at Gramercy Court from January 31, 2007, until October 12, 2007 . . . . [Citations.] Her admitting diagnoses included a history of recent stroke and dementia. The medical records for [Holden] disclosed that she required extensive assistance in ambulation, transfer, personal hygiene, locomotion and bed mobility; in fact, she had been transferred with one-person-assistance from her admission until the date of her fall. The testimony of witnesses for both parties confirmed that [Holden] required extensive assistance with bed mobility and was totally dependent on staff for transfers, dressing and personal hygiene. Her well-documented debilities include being basically comatose, a state that was confirmed by the testimony of [Holden’s] son. The testimony of both parties also agreed that [Holden] moved very little and, when she did move, did so very slowly.

3 “[Cottage Park Place] offered uncontroverted evidence at trial that [Holden] had no history of falls in [Gramercy Court] prior to October 12, 2007, was under her ideal body weight at 100.6 pounds, had previously been transferred with one-person-assistance without any falls for over eight months prior to her fall, and that her Certified Nurse Assistant [CNA 1] had taken care of [her] prior to [] her fall. In any event, the Court finds that [Cottage Park Place’s] evidence of the care of [Holden] prior to the fall on October 12, 2007, is not determinative of whether the nursing staff failed to supervise her adequately in the morning hours of October 12. “According to her testimony and her unverified statement, [citation], CNA 1 was the only caregiver in [Holden’s] room on October 12, 2007. CNA 1 testified that [Holden] was in the middle of her bed, lying on her back, with her (contracted) legs bent over her, when CNA 1 turned for ‘a split second’ to check on either the position or the brakes of the wheelchair. CNA 1 testified that the time during which her attention to the wheelchair was diverted was ‘no more than two seconds.’ CNA 1 further testified that, during those two seconds, [Holden] rolled from the middle of the bed to the edge of the bed and fell to the floor while CNA 1 was standing to the side of the bed, approximately seven inches away from the mattress. CNA 1 testified that when she returned her attention to the patient, [Holden] was falling to the floor. She stated that, as [Holden] fell, her feet or legs brushed the front [of] CNA 1’s legs.” “CNA 1 had cared for [Holden] on a continuous basis, and [Cottage Park Place] had verified her training, competence and orientation. [The Department] produced no evidence that CNA 1 had ever dropped any other resident while [the resident was] under her care. Further, from the record, the Court had no reason to believe that [Cottage Park Place] had other than a good history of compliance with the Department’s regulations governing skilled nursing facilities.”

4 Holden was transported to Sutter Memorial Hospital, where it was determined that she had spinal fractures and that she was not a candidate for surgery. She was not given nutrition or liquids and died four days later. Concerning the credibility of CNA 1, the trial court wrote: “The Court finds that CNA 1’s testimony of the events on October 12, 2007, is inconsistent with any physically-known maneuver that [Holden] would have been able to accomplish in order to put her into a position to fall over the edge of the bed. The Court finds incredible, and therefore unreliable, the testimony of CNA 1 as to the events during the fall on October 12, 2007.

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Related

People v. Tully
282 P.3d 173 (California Supreme Court, 2012)
In Re Josue S.
84 Cal. Rptr. 2d 796 (California Court of Appeal, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
Cottage Park Place v. State Dept.of Public Health CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottage-park-place-v-state-deptof-public-health-ca-calctapp-2015.