Cubit v. Ridgecrest Community Hospital

194 Cal. App. 3d 1552, 240 Cal. Rptr. 346, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 2154
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 24, 1987
DocketDocket Nos. F006263 and F006487
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 194 Cal. App. 3d 1552 (Cubit v. Ridgecrest Community Hospital) 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
Cubit v. Ridgecrest Community Hospital, 194 Cal. App. 3d 1552, 240 Cal. Rptr. 346, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 2154 (Cal. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Opinion

BEST, J.

Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment dismissing their complaint pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 583, subdivision (a) (discretionary dismissal for failure to bring the action to trial within two years). 1 Plaintiffs contend the trial court abused its discretion in dismissing their complaint. We agree and reverse the judgment.

Facts

Arthel Cubit died on January 20, 1980, survived by his wife and 12 children who are the plaintiffs in this action. On January 19, 1981, plaintiffs filed a medical malpractice action in Kern County Superior Court against, among others, defendant Ridgecrest Community Hospital (Ridgecrest), defendants Drummond Medical Group, Inc., Dr. Ralph J. Langsjoen, Dr. Richard P. Karoll, and Dr. Vernon Shull (Drummond defendants), and defendant Dr. M. M. Clark.

Arthel Cubit had been hospitalized at Ridgecrest once in December 1979 and released. He was then readmitted on January 9, 1980, with a fever and jaundice and was diagnosed as having type A hepatitis. Cubit’s consulting and treating physicians while at Ridgecrest, defendants Langsjoen and Shull and Dr. D. P. Welcome, diagnosed Cubit as having type A hepatitis, although the lab tests never confirmed it. Within 24 hours of Cubit’s death on January 20, 1980, Dr. Langsjoen ordered an autopsy. Langsjoen testified in his deposition that he ordered an autopsy so quickly because he suspected that Cubit’s problems may have been caused by some toxic substance.

Dr. Karoll, a pathologist, performed the first autopsy on Cubit’s body. At the time Dr. Karoll performed the autopsy, he did not suspect there was a toxic cause to Cubit’s disease process and did no toxicological studies. Dr. Karoll only had in mind that the clinicians at the hospital believed Cubit had died from hepatitis. Dr. Karoll determined that Cubit died because of acute hepatic necrosis of undetermined etiology. Basically, this means Cubit *1556 died because his liver was diseased and failed, but Dr. Karoll could not determine what caused the liver to become diseased in the first place. Dr. Karoll testified in his deposition that based on the autopsy, he could not rule out the possibility that Cubit had type A hepatitis as diagnosed by Cubit’s treating physicians, but the acute nature of Cubit’s liver failure and the devastating nature of his disease were not consistent with type A hepatitis.

Dr. Karoll also stated that he took tissue samples of all of Cubit’s organs and made microscopic slides to study. He did not, however, keep any hair for analysis. Dr. Karoll further testified he removed the liver from Cubit’s body during the autopsy but did not recall if he replaced it. If the liver was not replaced, it would have been pulverized or incinerated.

Because there was still suspicion that Cubit had died from exposure to a toxic substance (Cubit had been employed by the Kerr-McGee chemical plant), his body was turned over to the Kern County Coroner’s office. On January 28, 1980, Dr. Ambrosecchia of the Kern County Coroner’s office performed a second autopsy on Cubit’s body. Dr. Ambrosecchia also concluded that Cubit had died due to liver failure, but he was equally unable to determine the cause.

Dr. Ambrosecchia testified in his deposition that he had a difficult time making any findings in his examination because not only had the body already been autopsied and the organs cut up, but the body had been embalmed by a mortuary. He testified that embalming changes the appearance of the organs, and in the process, powder is placed into body cavities making it difficult to find and identify specific tissues. He could not take sections of organs and preserve them himself because the organs had already been dissected. Basically, in his autopsy, he merely examined the tissue slides made by Dr. Karoll and apparently examined some liver sections that were sent by Dr. Karoll. (It is not clear whether Dr. Ambrosecchia examined the slides, the tissue samples or both.) Dr. Ambrosecchia also stated he was unable to do any toxicology studies because there was no blood or urine left with which to perform any such studies.

Although this autopsy was performed on January 28, 1980, Dr. Ambrosecchia’s final determination from his studies was not reached until March 1980.

On March 27, 1980, William Kropach, an attorney, filed a workers’ compensation claim against the Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation in San Bernardino County on behalf of Cubit’s heirs, plaintiffs in this case. The claim, which was filed before plaintiffs had any information from Cubit’s *1557 hospital records or Dr. Ambrosecchia’s autopsy, was based on the allegation that Cubit had died due to exposure to a toxic substance at work. On April 2, 1980, Kropach received a copy of Cubit’s hospital records. The records appeared to affirm plaintiffs’ belief that Cubit had been poisoned through work. Dr. Welcome reported in the records that Cubit’s rapid downhill course indicated some sort of toxic reaction. Plaintiffs thereafter began pursuing their workers’ compensation claim against Kerr-McGee in San Bernardino County.

On January 19, 1981, plaintiffs filed a complaint against defendants for medical malpractice to toll the statute of limitations. 2 Plaintiffs had not yet received a copy of the coroner’s autopsy report, although the report was requested as early as February 1980. While plaintiffs were pursuing their claim against Kerr-McGee, they also were attempting to procure the autopsy report from the Kern County Coroner’s office. Kropach wrote to the Kern County Coroner’s office on February 20, 1981, on July 29, 1981, and on February 15, 1982, to inquire about the report. Plaintiffs were only able to get the information by subpoenaing Dr. Ambrosecchia and taking his deposition on August 20, 1982.

On August 12, October 4 and October 12, 1982, plaintiffs consulted with Dr. Reuben Merliss. Dr. Merliss reviewed Cubit’s hospital records and the autopsy reports of Drs. Ambrosecchia and Karoll. Dr. Merliss submitted three reports indicating that the initial autopsy performed by Dr. Karoll may have ruined chances of accurately determining the actual cause of death. Dr. Merliss also rendered the emphatic opinion that Cubit’s death must have been caused by some toxic chemical at the Kerr-McGee plant.

On or about December 29, 1982, plaintiffs associated in the law firm of Thomas T. Anderson on the medical malpractice case in Kern County. On January 5, 1983, plaintiffs retained Dr. Lowell Somers, who reviewed the hospital records and doctors’ reports regarding Cubit’s stay at Ridgecrest. It was his opinion that Cubit probably died from a toxic substance rather than hepatitis type A.

On March 18, 1983, Dr. Somers and Don Mantón, an investigator for the Anderson law firm, went to Ridgecrest to interview several witnesses. They learned from Dan Stubbert of the embalming practices of Hall & Lyons Mortuary and also learned of the first autopsy performed by Dr. Karoll.

On March 30, 1983, plaintiffs received information from Dr. Robert Weissman, hired by the Kerr-McGee chemical plant, that in his opinion, *1558

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 Cal. App. 3d 1552, 240 Cal. Rptr. 346, 1987 Cal. App. LEXIS 2154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cubit-v-ridgecrest-community-hospital-calctapp-1987.