Dennis H. Hagenow and Rosalee A. Hagenow v. Betty L. Schmidt

842 N.W.2d 661, 2014 WL 497267, 2014 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 11
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 7, 2014
Docket12–1192
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 842 N.W.2d 661 (Dennis H. Hagenow and Rosalee A. Hagenow v. Betty L. Schmidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dennis H. Hagenow and Rosalee A. Hagenow v. Betty L. Schmidt, 842 N.W.2d 661, 2014 WL 497267, 2014 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 11 (iowa 2014).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Justice.

In this appeal, we revisit the doctrine of legal excuse and the sudden emergency defense, as applied to a rear-end collision the jury could have found was caused by defendant’s stroke and resulting partial loss of vision. Plaintiffs’ truck was *664 stopped at a red light in good weather when it was struck by defendant’s car. Defendant saw the red light but denied seeing plaintiffs’ vehicle. At the emergency room she noticed she could not see to her left. Testing confirmed she had suffered a stroke that caused a partial loss of vision. Defendant’s treating neurologist initially noted that it was unclear whether the stroke occurred before or after the accident. Two months before trial, defendant disclosed the neurologist would testify the stroke preceded the accident.

Over plaintiffs’ objections, the district court allowed defendant’s neurologist to testify and submitted the defense of sudden emergency. The jury found the defendant was not negligent. The court of appeals concluded the evidence supported a defense of legal excuse, but reversed the judgment and remanded the case for a new trial based on erroneous wording in the sudden emergency instruction. We granted defendant’s application for further review and ordered supplemental briefing on the applicability of the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical and Emotional Harm, sections 9, 11, and 15— which address sudden emergency, physical incapacitation, and legal excuse — and on whether the jury instructions given were consistent with those provisions.

For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the district court acted within its discretion in allowing the defendant’s expert medical testimony and that the evidence was sufficient to submit a legal-excuse defense based on defendant’s sudden medical emergency. We further conclude any error in the wording of the instruction was harmless. We therefore defer to future cases our consideration of the foregoing provisions of the Restatement (Third). We vacate the decision of the court of appeals and affirm the district court judgment for defendant.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

We view the evidence in the light most favorable to the jury verdict. Condon Auto Sales & Serv., Inc. v. Crick, 604 N.W.2d 587, 593 (Iowa 1999). On November 10, 2008, Betty Schmidt, then age seventy-five, was in her first car accident, which ended her driving career. Schmidt was returning home alone from grocery shopping, driving her 1999 Buick LeSabre east on University Avenue in Cedar Falls at about 1:30 p.m. The weather was clear and the roads were dry. Schmidt, who wore trifocals, had perceived no problem with her vision or health that would impair her driving. She was feeling fine and had no trouble shopping or driving before she reached the intersection with Cedar Heights Drive. She planned to turn right there and saw the traffic light was red. But, she did not see the pickup truck stopped in the right turn lane, Dennis Hagenow’s 2008 GMC Sierra. Schmidt drove into the rear of Hagenow’s truck, lodging her vehicle under his. The impact deployed Schmidt’s airbags. Both vehicles suffered disabling damage — Hagenow’s truck was later deemed totaled — and were towed from the scene. A responding police officer asked Schmidt at the scene if she had been drinking, and she answered “no.” She submitted to a Breathalyzer test, which detected no alcohol. The officer cited Schmidt for failing to stop in an assured clear distance.

Schmidt was taken by ambulance to the Sartori Hospital Emergency Room. An hour after arriving, while lying on an emergency room cart, Schmidt realized she was unable to see someone who was speaking to her. She alerted medical staff that she could not see to her left side. After a CT scan at 3:15 p.m. and an MRI at 4:44 p.m., Dr. Daniel Miller diagnosed *665 Schmidt’s condition as left homonymous hemianopsia, which is the absence of vision in the left side of each eye. This condition is a result of an injury to the brain that affects how a person processes visual information. Dr. Miller referred Schmidt to a neurologist, Dr. Ivo Bekavac, who concluded Schmidt suffered an acute ischemic infarct, commonly referred to as a stroke, in the right occipital lobe of her brain and that this stroke caused Schmidt’s vision loss. Dr. Bekavac noted in Schmidt’s chart, “It is not clear whether [the stroke] happened before or after the accident.” Schmidt had never previously suffered a stroke.

Schmidt remained at Sartori Hospital until November 18, when she was transferred to Covenant Hospital for stroke rehabilitation services. That day, her rehabilitation doctor, Dr. Barbara Malicka-Rozek, noted in Schmidt’s file, “It was believed she probably had [a transient is-chemic attack] versus [a] stroke during driving, and this is how she lost control of her vehicle.” Dr. Malicka-Rozek also commented, “Betty was admitted ... following a motor vehicle accident that likely occurred following a [transient ischemic attack] or a stroke.” Schmidt was discharged from Covenant on November 26. Because of her vision loss, she was no longer able to drive.

Dennis and his wife, Rosalee Hagenow, filed a personal injury action against Schmidt on November 1, 2010. On February 9, 2011, Schmidt filed an answer denying negligence and pleading these affirmative defenses:

1. Defendant was confronted by a sudden medical emergency, not of her own making, providing her with a legal excuse for any failure to observe the requirements of any statute, ordinances, or common law duties concerning the operation of her vehicle.
2. The sole cause of the accident was an act of God in the form of an unexpected medical emergency.

On April 6, Schmidt served answers to the Hagenows’ interrogatories that described her limited recollection of the accident. She answered the “expert” interrogatory by stating, “We have not retained any expert witnesses for purposes of testifying at the time of trial. We do expect the need to call as an expert witness my treating physicians who will testify to my medical condition at the time of the accident.” She named Dr. Bekavac as one of her physicians. Meanwhile, the district court entered a scheduling order that set the jury trial for May 1, 2012. The order required the plaintiffs to disclose experts no later than 210 days before trial and defendant to do so 150 days before trial.

On November 29, 2011, Schmidt served a “Designation of experts” that stated her intent to call as an expert at the time of trial, “[t]reating physician, Dr. Ivo Beka-vae.” The designation also stated she “reserve[d] the right to call [her] other treating physicians and elicit expert testimony from them ... at trial.”

The Hagenows received Dr. Bekavac’s medical records that autumn. The Hage-nows’ counsel wrote to Schmidt’s counsel asserting Dr. Bekavae’s comment, “It is not clear whether [the stroke] happened before or after the accident,” established Schmidt would be unable to prove her stroke occurred prior to the accident. Schmidt’s counsel responded on February 21, 2012, explaining:

When I asked Dr.

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842 N.W.2d 661, 2014 WL 497267, 2014 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dennis-h-hagenow-and-rosalee-a-hagenow-v-betty-l-schmidt-iowa-2014.