Curtis N. Robinson v. Baptist Memorial Hospital - Lauderdale

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 15, 2007
DocketW2006-01404-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Curtis N. Robinson v. Baptist Memorial Hospital - Lauderdale (Curtis N. Robinson v. Baptist Memorial Hospital - Lauderdale) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis N. Robinson v. Baptist Memorial Hospital - Lauderdale, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON April 18, 2007 Session

CURTIS N. ROBINSON, ET AL. v. BAPTIST MEMORIAL HOSPITAL - LAUDERDALE

A Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Lauderdale County No. 5710 The Honorable Joe H. Walker, III, Judge

No. W2006-01404-COA-R3-CV - Filed August 15, 2007

This appeal arises from a medical negligence case in which a jury verdict was entered in favor of Plaintiffs/Appellees and against Defendant/Appellant Hospital. The Hospital appeals on numerous grounds including: (1) whether the trial court erred in allowing certain evidence in alleged contravention of Tenn. R. Civ. P. 26.05 and 37.03, (2) whether the trial court erred in not granting the Hospital’s motion for new trial on the grounds of alleged inappropriate and inflammatory comments and arguments by opposing counsel; and (3) whether there is material evidence to support the jury’s verdict. Finding no error, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court is Affirmed

W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, J. and HOLLY M. KIRBY , J., joined.

James L. Kirby and Timothy D. Patterson of Memphis, Tennessee for Appellant, Baptist Memorial Hospital-Lauderdale

Charles M. Agee, Jr. of Dyersburg, Tennessee for Appellees, Curtis N. Robinson and Shirley Robinson

OPINION

Curtis N. Robinson (together with his wife, Shirley Robinson, the “Robinsons,” “Plaintiffs,” or “Appellees”) became totally disabled and began drawing Social Security disability in 1990. Mr. Robinson suffers from numerous medical problems including: (1) diabetes, (2) severe neuropathy (nerve pain), including a nearly complete loss of feeling in his legs and feet, (3) dizziness and balance problems, (4) toe, feet, heel, and ankle sores, blisters, decubitus ulcers dating as far back as 1990, (5) vision problems, which required three surgeries to his right eye and approximately five surgeries to his left eye, (6) osteomyletis (weakness in the bones) and severe osteoporosis, (7) heart problems, including at least three heart attacks. On February 11, 2002, Dr. Carl Huff admitted Mr. Robinson to Baptist Memorial Hospital–Lauderdale (the “Hospital,” “Defendant,” or “Appellant”) to perform surgery for a fractured left hip. Dr. Huff discharged Mr. Robinson from the Hospital on February 25, 2002. Dr. Huff’s discharge orders indicate that Mr. Robinson’s condition is “good,” that Mr. Robinson should undergo outpatient physical therapy, and that Mr. Robinson should see Dr. Huff for follow-up in approximately four weeks

Following his discharge from the Hospital, Mr. Robinson did not follow Dr. Huff’s orders to undergo physical therapy. Rather, Mr. Robinson testified that he spent approximately eighty percent (80%) of his post-operative time in his recliner and approximately twenty percent (20%) of his time in bed. Mr. Robinson’s next scheduled appointment with Dr. Huff was on March 15, 2002. Dr. Huff’s medical record for that visit states that “patient reports decubiti on both heels.” Although Dr. Huff testified that he first noticed the pressure sores on Mr. Robinson’s heels the day of discharge from the Hospital, there are no written notes in the discharge summary concerning Mr. Robinson’s heels. The first notation concerning the ulcers is that contained in the medical record of March 15, 2002. On or about April 5, 2002, Dr. Huff dictated a discharge summary for Mr. Robinson’s hospital stay, which ended on February 25, 2002. In his dictation, Dr. Huff notes that, despite normal precautions, Mr. Robinson developed decubiti while in the Hospital.

On or about March 12, 2002, Mr. Robinson saw his primary care physician, Dr. Scrivastava. Dr. Scrivastava diagnosed Mr. Robinson with bilateral decubitus ulcers, which were gangrenous. Dr. Scrivastava referred Mr. Robinson to Dr. Roy Chu at the Wound Care Center in Dyersburg, Tennessee. Dr. Chu testified that the Wound Care Center deals with difficult wounds that a primary care physician may not have the expertise or the facility to treat as an outpatient. Dr. Chu testified that Mr. Robinson had developed necrotic, infected ulcers on the posterior aspects of both heels as a result of his February 2002 Hospital stay. Dr. Chu treated Mr. Robinson with an antibiotic to protect him from systemic bacteria invasion and scheduled him for outpatient surgery to remove the dead tissue on March 21, 2002. The follow-up care required several visits to the Wound Care Center for additional surgical debridements of the dead tissue, antibiotic therapy, and pain management.

In June 2002, Mr. Robinson suffered a calcaneus fracture of his right heel. Dr. Huff treated Mr. Robinson for this injury. In Dr. Huff’s office note of December 12, 2002, he reports that Mr. Robinson’s ulcers are healed; however, Dr. Huff could not testify as to the exact date that the wounds were healed.

On January 27, 2003, the Robinson filed their Complaint against the Hospital. The Complaint reads, in pertinent part, as follows:

(5) While plaintiff, Curtis N. Robinson, was a patient in the hospital, the agents, servants and/or employees of defendant...failed to provide the proper care and treatment for the plaintiff, and failed to follow proper hospital policy and protocol so as to reduce or eliminate the risk of the plaintiff having bed sores and circulation problems. As a

-2- result of their failure to properly care and provide for the plaintiff, Curtis N. Robinson, the pressure on his heels caused blisters and later an infection, which almost turned into gangrene.

(6) As a result of the negligence of the servants, agents and/or employees of the defendant, plaintiff, Curtis N. Robinson, was required to undergo additional surgeries on his feet at the Methodist Hospital of Dyersburg on or about March 21, 2002, by Dr. Roy Chu and on or about June 20, 2002, and June 27, 2002, by Dr. Carl Huff.

(7) The plaintiffs allege that the defendant was negligent and its servants, agents and/or employees deviated from the standard of care and skill expected and required of them in the same or similar community and that it was this negligence, which was the direct and proximate result of the injuries and damages caused to the plaintiff....

Mr. Robinson sought $500,000.00 in damages; Mrs. Robinson sought $100,000.00.

On March 21, 2003, the Hospital filed its Answer, in which it denies the material allegations of the Complaint. On the same day, the Hospital propounded Interrogatories and Requests for Production of Documents on the Robinsons. The Robinsons served their Answers to Interrogatories and Requests for Production of Documents on the Hospital’s counsel on July 7, 2003. During the course of discovery, the Robinsons identified Dr. Carl Huff as one of their expert witnesses along with the facts and opinions to which he would be called to testify. The Hospital took Dr. Huff’s deposition on April 18, 2005.

Prior to the trial in this case, the Hospital filed a Motion in Limine on February 10, 2006, seeking to exclude certain testimony, including:

Any testimony, evidence, questioning or argument from the plaintiffs and their witnesses concerning any deviation from the standard of care or concerning the cause of any injuries to the plaintiff, other than the opinions previously disclosed in the discovery deposition of the plaintiff’s expert witnesses, Dr. Carl Huff and Dr. Roy Chu. This includes any new opinions of Dr. Huff concerning the cause of the plaintiff’s calcaneus fracture, which were not disclosed in his discovery deposition on April 15, 2005 [sic], and any other new opinions that were formed after his deposition.

Following arguments, the trial court denied the Hospital’s motion.

The case was tried to a jury from February 27, 2006 until March 1, 2006.

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