Day v. Ocean Springs Hospital System

923 So. 2d 246, 2006 Miss. App. LEXIS 159, 2006 WL 539422
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMarch 7, 2006
DocketNo. 2004-CA-02066-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 923 So. 2d 246 (Day v. Ocean Springs Hospital System) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Ocean Springs Hospital System, 923 So. 2d 246, 2006 Miss. App. LEXIS 159, 2006 WL 539422 (Mich. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

CHANDLER, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. Jeanne Salter Day sued Ocean Springs Hospital System (OSHS) pursuant to the Mississippi Tort Claims Act, Mississippi Code Annotated § 11-46-1 to 23 (Rev.2002). Day alleged that, when visiting a patient at the hospital, she slipped and fell on a puddle of water, injuring her wrist. After a bench trial, the lower court found that Day had failed to prove that the hospital was negligent. Day appeals, arguing (1) that the lower court improperly disregarded competent and uncontroverted evidence that Day’s fall was caused by a dangerous condition created by OSHS; and (2) the lower court improperly disregarded competent and uncontroverted medical expert opinion testimony that Day’s wrist injury was causally connected to her fall at the hospital.

¶ 2. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 3. Day’s son, Jason Hollingsworth, was a patient at OSHS for two weeks in October 1996. Hollingsworth had a stomach virus. Day visited Hollingsworth almost every day of his stay at OSHS. On October 21, 1996, Hollingsworth underwent an endoscopy. That morning, Day visited Holl-ingsworth in his hospital room. Day stated that, just before entering the room, she noticed a woman with a yellow rolling mop bucket a few rooms down from Hollings-worth’s. Day stated that she did not see any caution signs.

¶4. Day testified that, as she entered the doorway of Hollingsworth’s room, she slipped and fell on some water on the floor. Day stated that she landed on her outstretched right hand. She stated that, upon arising from the fall, she noticed that her pants were wet with water. Day further testified that, after the fall, she observed a puddle of water stretching from the door to the air conditioning unit on the other side of the room. She wiped up the water with a towel which she found in the room. However, an OSHS employee testified that the air conditioning unit actually was located just inside the doorway, not [248]*248across the room from the doorway as alleged by Day.

¶ 5. Day was unable to recall whether Hollingsworth was in the room at the time of her fall or whether he was in surgery. Day stated that Hollingsworth was absent during the surgery for forty-five minutes to án hour. However, hospital records revealed that Hollingsworth was absent from the room for five hours. On direct examination, Hollingsworth stated that, when his mother came into his room, he warned her that the floors had just been mopped and were wet. On cross-examination, Hollingsworth testified that he had been heavily sedated on the day of the surgery and, in fact, he could not recall whether he had warned his mother about wet floors on the day of the surgery or on some other day. Hollingsworth expressed certainty that, on the day of the surgery, his mother told him that she had fallen and hurt her wrist while coming in the door to his room.

¶ 6. Hollingsworth stated that, when he returned from surgery, Day showed her injured wrist to him and to two nurses. Hollingsworth stated that Day’s wrist appeared swollen. He advised Day to go to the emergency room to get the wrist examined. Day stated that she went to OSHS’s emergency room, showed her wrist to a doctor, and told him that she had fallen in a patient’s room. Day stated that the doctor examined her wrist, but no incident report or admittance record was generated. According to Day, the doctor opined that her wrist was badly sprained and told her to return in a week to ten days if there was no improvement.

¶ 7. That afternoon, Day’s friend Bobby Wilson gave Day a ride home from the hospital. Day told Wilson about the fall and complained of pain in her wrist. Wilson observed that Day’s wrist was puffy and that Day could hardly use it.

¶ 8. On October 30, 1996, Day visited the emergency room at OSHS, complaining of pain in her wrist. She saw a triage nurse and a doctor. The doctor did not note any swelling or bruising, and x-rays revealed no fracture. In the next few months, Day continued to have difficulty with her wrist and saw several physicians. Dr. Harold Hawkins diagnosed Day with avascular necrosis of the navicular bone. Dr. Harold Stokes concurred in this diagnosis. Dr. Stokes performed two surgeries on Day’s wrist and stated that at least one more surgery was required. Dr. Stokes opined that Day’s wrist condition was the result of her having fallen at OSHS on October 21, 1996. Dr. Stokes stated that Day’s condition had been caused by trauma to the wrist. However, Dr. Stokes stated that his opinion as to how the wrist trauma had occurred was based solely on the history provided by Day.

¶ 9. Kathy Dier worked in the risk management department at OSHS in 1996. She stated that OSHS’s policy was to generate an incident report for any accidents occurring at OSHS. She stated that all OSHS employees were educated on the policies and procedures governing incident reports. Dier stated that, had Day informed a nurse of her fall, the nurse would have informed her supervisor, who would have generated an incident report. Then, the nurse would have offered to take Day to the emergency room, where Day would have been registered before being seen by a physician. Dier testified that federal regulations required OSHS to screen all patients admitted to the emergency room. Dier testified that no incident report existed for October 21, 1996. Dier further testified that Day’s description of her October 21 emergency room visit contravened OSHS’s policies and procedures for registering all emergency room patients.

[249]*249¶ 10. A photograph of a large gray cleaning cart with two mop buckets and four detachable caution signs was admitted into evidence. OSHS employees testified that this cart was used to clean Hollings-worth’s room and the surrounding patient rooms. Deborah Lawler, a housekeeping aide, testified that OSHS had been unable to identify the person who had cleaned Hollingsworth’s room on October 21, 1996. Lawler stated that she usually cleaned the room, but that she was absent from work on October 21. Lawler testified that OSHS employees adhere to a strict procedure for wet mopping halls and patient rooms. Each room is mopped with a damp mop and then a caution sign is placed in each doorway. She stated that, since the mop is only damp, water never collects on the floor. After four or five rooms are mopped, the employee returns to the first room, performs a visual check, and removes the caution sign only if the floor is dry. Joseph Barlow, OSHS’s Director of Environmental Services, stated that it took between five and ten minutes for a room’s floor to dry, and that a caution sign remained in place for twenty-five to thirty minutes after a room was mopped.

¶ 11. The trial court found that Day had failed to prove the negligence elements of breach of duty and causation, and entered a judgment in favor of OSHS. In so finding, the court stated:

The court finds that [OSHS] does owe a duty to [Day] to use reasonable care to prevent injury. Even under the highest burden placed upon a property owner, an owner is not an insurer of all injuries which occur on its property. The highest burden placed upon a property owner is to exercise reasonable or ordinary care to keep its premises in a reasonably safe condition or warn of dangerous conditions not readily apparent, which the owner knows of, or should know of, in the exercise of reasonable care. Taylor v. Biloxi Regional Med. Ctr., 737 So.2d 435, 437(¶ 5) (Miss.Ct.App.1999) (citing Fulton v. Robinson Ind., Inc., 664 So.2d 170, 175 (Miss.1995)).

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Bluebook (online)
923 So. 2d 246, 2006 Miss. App. LEXIS 159, 2006 WL 539422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-ocean-springs-hospital-system-missctapp-2006.