Dina Cavazos v. Stryker Sales Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2018
Docket13-17-00247-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Dina Cavazos v. Stryker Sales Corporation (Dina Cavazos v. Stryker Sales Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dina Cavazos v. Stryker Sales Corporation, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-17-00247-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

DINA CAVAZOS, Appellant,

v.

STRYKER SALES CORPORATION, Appellee.

On appeal from the 117th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.

DISSENTING MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Contreras, Longoria, and Hinojosa Dissenting Memorandum Opinion by Justice Hinojosa

Appellee Stryker Sales Corporation (Stryker) moved for no-evidence and

traditional summary judgment on appellant Dina Cavazos’s claims of negligence and

assault by Colby Sample, a Stryker employee, and her accompanying request for

personal injuries damages allegedly caused by Sample’s conduct. Stryker’s summary

judgment motions contend that, among other things, Cavazos had no evidence that Sample’s conduct caused her alleged injuries (a no-evidence ground) and that she lacked

competent expert testimony regarding causation (a traditional ground). Cavazos

responded to Stryker’s causation grounds by directing the trial court to excerpts of the

deposition testimony of Jon F. Manjarris, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon who treated

Cavazos before and after her incident with Sample. In two separate filings—a reply and

motion to exclude—Stryker urged the trial court to exclude Manjarris’s opinions. The trial

court granted both of Stryker’s summary judgment motions—and a supplemental

described below—without specifying a basis, and it later rendered a take-nothing final

judgment in favor of appellee Stryker.

In one issue, Cavazos contends that the trial court erred in granting Stryker’s

summary judgment motions. The majority concludes that, among other things,

Manjarris’s opinions constitute competent expert testimony that Sample’s conduct caused

Cavazos’s alleged injuries. It, therefore, concludes that Cavazos presented more than

a scintilla of evidence in response to Stryker’s causation grounds. I, however, conclude

Manjarris’s opinions are legally insufficient, would overrule Cavazos’s sole issue without

addressing the other summary judgment grounds because Cavazos’s failure to present

legally sufficient evidence regarding causation is dispositive, and would affirm the final

judgment rendered by the trial court. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.

I. BACKGROUND

Cavazos was an operating room nurse at Corpus Christi Medical Center, Doctors

Regional Hospital (the hospital). Sample sells interventional spine equipment for Stryker

and attends surgeries performed at the hospital where Stryker products are used.

2 During surgery, Sample would bring products, supply products, or ensure that products

were being used correctly. Through her job, Cavazos became professional

acquaintances with both Manjarris and Sample.

A. Pre-Incident

On one occasion in a hospital hallway, Cavazos complained to Manjarris that her

knee “was aching a little bit and she didn’t know what it was.” Manjarris examined

Cavazos’s knee and recommended that she obtain a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

scan. The April 8, 2011 radiologist report on the MRI scan noted the following

impressions:

(1) Small popliteal fossa Baker’s cyst with no evidence of surrounding edema signal intensity seen to suggest Baker’s cyst rupture.

(2) Lateral discoid meniscus with no evidence of meniscal tear.

(3) Mild chondromalacia of the medial femoral and tibial plateau articular cartilage. No evidence of internal derangement of the knee is seen.

Manjarris reviewed the April 8, 2011 radiologist report but not the actual images.

He advised Cavazos that if her knee continued to hurt, she should have surgery.

However, Manjarris recalled that Cavazos did not seek further treatment from him and

that she instead opted for “massage therapy or maybe some type of chiropractic

manipulation or something and her knee got better.” In 2012, Manjarris participated on

a relay marathon team organized by and with Cavazos.

B. Incident

On Friday, April 19, 2013, Cavazos and Sample were working in the same

operating room. Both described an incident between them very differently.

3 According to Cavazos’s deposition testimony, Sample “kick[ed]” her in the back of

the knee. After it happened, Cavazos felt a “pop” and her knee “buckle[d],” so she

grabbed on to the computer in front of her and sat down on a stool. Cavazos stated that,

at that point, she could not straighten her leg or put any weight on it, so she called for her

supervisor to relieve her. She then “limp[ed]” to the emergency department. Cavazos

stated the “kick” caused her knee to swell “right away”; it caused a bruise to form the next

day; and it caused her to need crutches through the summer of 2013.

According to Sample’s deposition testimony, he was walking into the operating

room holding supplies in one hand and lead aprons in the other hand, while Cavazos was

standing and working at a computer. Sample stated he wanted to get Cavazos’s

attention because he needed a Telfa pad, so he “tapped [Cavazos] in the back of her leg”

with the end of his foot. He stated “it was a very gentle tap.” At that point, Cavazos

grabbed her leg and complained of knee pain. She then told Sample that she had “knee

issues” and showed him that the front of her knee was swollen and bruised. Sample

testified:

And I immediately said, “I did not do that.”

She replied back, “No, you didn’t. I had hurt my knee playing softball a couple of weeks earlier. I knew I wasn’t supposed to. . . . I’ve had knee problems in the past, and the doctor told me not to play, but I went ahead and did. And then a couple days prior to this, I bumped my knee into a patient bed, and that’s why I had the bruise.”

According to Sample, when he later visited Cavazos in the emergency department,

Cavazos told him: “Don’t worry about it. I’m fine. It’s not your fault.”

4 C. Post-Incident

On Tuesday, April 23, 2013, Manjarris evaluated Cavazos for left knee pain in his

clinic. Manjarris ordered a second MRI scan of Cavazos’s left knee. The April 24, 2013

radiologist report on the MRI scan noted the following impressions:

(1) Partial tear of the lateral collateral ligament which appears to be chronic since there is no associated edema soft tissue signal intensity.

(2) Posterior horn medial meniscal degeneration with no evidence of tear.

(3) Lateral discoid meniscus with no evidence of tear.

(4) Tiny popliteal fossa Baker’s cyst.

On May 1, 2013, Manjarris performed arthroscopic surgery on Cavazos’s left knee

based on the April 24, 2013 radiologist report and Cavazos’s complaint of pain.

Manjarris’s May 1, 2013 post-operative report notes that he visualized “an osteochondral

lesion, approximately [the] size of a nickel on the medial femoral condyle with articular

cartilage flap in and out of the joint” and performed a surgical procedure to repair it.

Manjarris also visualized a “discoid lateral meniscus” and performed a surgical procedure

to repair it.

D. Lawsuit

On February 24, 2014, Cavazos sued “Stryker Corporate” and Sample, alleging

that Sample acted negligently or alternatively that he assaulted her. Sample was never

served with citation. In subsequent petitions, Cavazos omitted Sample but substituted

the correct Stryker entity for “Stryker Corporate.” The last scheduling order signed by

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