Eastley v. Volkman

2010 Ohio 4771
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 23, 2010
Docket09CA3308 09CA3309
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2010 Ohio 4771 (Eastley v. Volkman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastley v. Volkman, 2010 Ohio 4771 (Ohio Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

[Cite as Eastley v. Volkman, 2010-Ohio-4771.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT SCIOTO COUNTY

PAULA EASTLEY, Administrator of : Case Nos. 09CA3308 the Estate of Steven Hieneman, : 09CA3309 : Plaintiff-Appellee, : : DECISION AND v. : JUDGMENT ENTRY : PAUL HOLLAND VOLKMAN, M.D.,1 : : Defendant, : : Released 9/23/10 : DENISE HUFFMAN, : d/b/a Tri-State Health Care, : : Defendant-Appellant, : : and : : STATE FARM FIRE AND : CASUALTY COMPANY, : : Intervenor. : ______________________________________________________________________ APPEARANCES:

Mark H. Gams and M. Jason Founds, GALLAGHER, GAMS, PRYOR, TALLAN & LITTRELL, L.L.P., Columbus, Ohio and James L. Mann, MANN & PRESTON, L.L.P., Chillicothe, Ohio, for Appellant Denise Huffman, d/b/a Tri-State Health Care.

Thomas M. Spetnagel, SPETNAGEL & McMAHON, Chillicothe, Ohio, and Stanley C. Bender, Portsmouth, Ohio, for Appellee Paula Eastley, Administrator of the Estate of Steven Hieneman.

John F. McLaughlin, RENDIGS, FRY, KIELY & DENNIS, L.L.P., Cincinnati, Ohio, for Intervenor State Farm Fire and Casualty Company. ______________________________________________________________________ Harsha, J.

{¶1} The estate of Steven Hieneman sued Denise Huffman, owner of the Tri- 1 Volkman has not entered an appearance or otherwise participated in this appeal. Scioto App. Nos. 09CA3308 & 09CA3309 2

State Healthcare pain management clinic, and Paul Volkman, M.D., a physician at the

clinic, for Hieneman’s wrongful death. While a patient at the clinic, Hieneman received

treatment from Volkman, who gave him prescriptions for oxycodone, xanax, and valium.

The next day, Hieneman died due to the acute combined effects of these drugs. A jury

found that Volkman’s medical malpractice and Huffman’s ordinary negligence

proximately resulted in Hieneman’s death.

{¶2} Huffman contends that the jury’s verdict finding her negligent was against

the manifest weight of the evidence and must be reversed. Although a majority of this

panel agrees with Huffman’s contention, a judgment resulting from a trial by jury cannot

be reversed on the weight of the evidence except by the concurrence of all three judges

hearing the cause. Because one judge on the panel dissents from the majority’s

determination, the verdict against Huffman survives the manifest weight of the evidence

challenge.

{¶3} Huffman also argues that the trial court erred when it refused to instruct

the jury on the doctrine of comparative negligence. However, she failed to offer any

evidence that would allow reasonable minds to conclude that Hieneman negligently

contributed to his own death. Therefore, the court properly refused to instruct the jury

on this doctrine.

{¶4} Next, Huffman claims that the trial court erred when it denied her motion

for judgment on the pleadings based on the estate’s failure to attach an affidavit of merit

to its complaint or amended complaint. But because the estate did not allege that

Huffman qualified as one of the enumerated medical providers in R.C. 2305.113(E)(3),

its ordinary negligence claim against her does not qualify as a “medical claim” under Scioto App. Nos. 09CA3308 & 09CA3309 3

that section. Thus, an affidavit was not necessary for that claim.

{¶5} Based on her Fifth Amendment privilege against compulsory self-

incrimination, Huffman also contends that the trial court abused its discretion when it

denied her motion to stay the civil matter pending the resolution of criminal proceedings

against her. However, this privilege does not prohibit civil litigation while the possibility

of criminal prosecution exists; the fact that a civil defendant may lose a suit if she

chooses to exercise the privilege does not raise a claim of compulsion by the state.

Thus, the court’s decision to deny the motion was not unreasonable, arbitrary, or

unconscionable.

{¶6} Intervening defendant State Farm Fire and Casualty Company (“State

Farm”) contends that the trial court erred in denying its motion for summary judgment

and granting the estate’s motion for summary judgment in State Farm’s declaratory

judgment action against Huffman. The trial court found that Huffman’s negligence fell

within the liability coverage of the business insurance policy State Farm issued her.

However, all the facts indicate that Hieneman’s death was caused at least in part by

Volkman’s rendering of medical services and that Huffman was engaged in the

business of providing those services to Hieneman. Thus as a matter of law, the

unambiguous language of the policy’s professional services exclusion bars coverage.

Accordingly, the court erred when it granted the estate’s motion for summary judgment

and when it denied State Farm’s motion.

I. Facts

{¶7} The estate filed a complaint for Hieneman’s wrongful death, alleging that

Volkman committed medical malpractice and that Huffman “breached a duty she owed Scioto App. Nos. 09CA3308 & 09CA3309 4

to [Hieneman] not to negligently cause him harm[,]” proximately resulting in his death.

The estate also alleged that Huffman and Volkman were “vicariously responsible for

each other’s conduct.” State Farm intervened as a third-party defendant because it had

issued a business insurance policy, which was in effect on the date of Hieneman’s

death, to Denise Huffman, dba Tri-State Healthcare. It filed a complaint for declaratory

judgment, asking the court to declare that State Farm had no obligation to defend or

indemnify Volkman or Huffman against the estate’s claims. The trial court bifurcated the

declaratory judgment claim from the underlying wrongful death action. A summary of

the evidence introduced at the wrongful death trial follows.

{¶8} Russell Steven, M.D., a pain medicine specialist, testified that on February

22, 2005, Volkman wrote Hieneman a prescription for 360, five milligram percocet

tablets, instructing him to take 12 pills daily. If taken as prescribed, Hieneman would

have been out of this medication for almost one month before his next appointment with

Volkman on April 19, 2005. At the follow-up visit, Volkman wrote Hieneman

prescriptions for: 1) Oxycodone – 360, 15 milligram tablets; 2) Valium – 120, 10

milligram tablets; 3) Xanax – 30, 2 milligram tablets. An autopsy report showed that

Hieneman died the next day, i.e, April 20, 2005, from the acute combined effects of the

latter three drugs.

{¶9} On cross-examination, Dr. Steven admitted that the autopsy did not reveal

what amount of the prescription medications Hieneman took between the time the

prescriptions were filled and his death. However, Dr. Steven testified that even if

Hieneman took the medications as Volkman prescribed, they could have caused his

death because the drugs are synergistic, i.e. when taken together the efficacy of each Scioto App. Nos. 09CA3308 & 09CA3309 5

drug is enhanced, and Hieneman’s opioid receptors would have reset during the nearly

one month he was out of percocet, i.e. his tolerance level for opioid pain medications

would have decreased. Dr. Steven testified that Volkman fell below the standard of

care in writing these prescriptions.

{¶10} Paula Eastley, Hieneman’s mother and administrator of his estate,

testified that her son took pain medication after injuring his hand. At some point,

Eastley learned that Hieneman received treatment at Tri-State Healthcare. In August

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Bluebook (online)
2010 Ohio 4771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastley-v-volkman-ohioctapp-2010.