EVERSON Et Al. v. PHOEBE SUMTER MEDICAL CENTER, INC. Et Al.; JORDAN v. EVERSON Et Al.

798 S.E.2d 667, 341 Ga. App. 182
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 14, 2017
DocketA16A1709; A16A1710
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 798 S.E.2d 667 (EVERSON Et Al. v. PHOEBE SUMTER MEDICAL CENTER, INC. Et Al.; JORDAN v. EVERSON Et Al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
EVERSON Et Al. v. PHOEBE SUMTER MEDICAL CENTER, INC. Et Al.; JORDAN v. EVERSON Et Al., 798 S.E.2d 667, 341 Ga. App. 182 (Ga. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

McFADDEN, Presiding Judge.

These related appeals arise from the tragic death of 27-year-old Benjamin Everson. On April 29, 2008, Everson went to Sumter Regional Hospital, Inc., now known as Phoebe Sumter Medical Center, Inc. (“the hospital”), complaining that he was hallucinating and hearing voices. Dr. Brian Jordan, the emergency room physician who attended to Everson, diagnosed him with obsessive compulsive disorder and discharged him with an appointment to see a mental health care provider two days later at a nearby facility Instead, Everson’s father made an appointment for him with a different facility out of state. On May 1, 2008, en route to that appointment, Everson leapt from a moving car driven by his father and ran in front of another vehicle, which struck and killed him.

Everson’s parents, on behalf of themselves, and Everson’s estate (collectively, “the plaintiffs”) brought this wrongful death action alleging medical malpractice claims against the hospital and Jordan. The trial court granted summary judgment to the hospital and denied summary judgment to Jordan.

In Case No. A16A1709, the plaintiffs appeal from the trial court’s order granting summary judgment to the hospital. The plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in denying their motion to strike the hospital’s answer and enter a default judgment against it as a sanction for alleged discovery abuses, but the trial court was authorized to find that the sanction was not appropriate because the hospital did not intentionally falsify its discovery response. The plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in excluding the opinion testimony of an expert witness, but the trial court did not abuse his discretion in concluding that the expert’s opinion did not satisfy the admissibility requirements of OCGA § 24-7-702 (b). Finally, the plaintiffs argue that the trial court should not have granted summary judgment on their claims for ordinary negligence, but the trial court ruled that the statute of limitation and the statute of repose barred those claims, and the plaintiffs offer no argument or citation to auth *183 ority to show that the trial court erred in that ruling. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment in Case No. A16A1709.

In Case No. A16A1710, Jordan appeals from the denial of his motion for summary judgment. We find that genuine issues of material fact preclude summary judgment and, accordingly, we affirm the denial of summary judgment to Jordan.

1. Facts and procedural history.

We review a ruling on a summary judgment motion de novo, “construing] the evidence most favorably towards the nonmoving party, who is given the benefit of all reasonable doubts and possible inferences.” Doctors Hosp. of Augusta v. Alicea, 299 Ga. 315 (1) (788 SE2d 392) (2016) (citation omitted). Consequently, we construe the evidence in both of these cases in the light most favorable toward the plaintiffs.

So viewed, the evidence showed that in late April 2008, Everson, a law school graduate who had been working as a judicial law clerk in Americus, was preparing to move back to his home state of Connecticut, and his mother had arrived to help him. For some time, Everson had been under a physician’s care for depression and anxiety, for which he sometimes took medication. In the two weeks preceding his death, Everson had begun hallucinating and hearing voices. For several nights in a row, Everson woke his mother in the middle of the night and spoke to her in a rambling, accelerated manner. On the third such occasion, in the early morning of April 29, 2008, Everson’s mother called Everson’s father, a medical doctor, and put Everson on the telephone. Everson’s father was concerned about the way his son sounded and suggested to Everson’s mother that he get a psychiatric evaluation. Everson’s father contacted the hospital and spoke with a person he understood to be the hospital’s on-call psychiatrist, who recommended that Everson go to the hospital’s emergency room to be evaluated. Everson’s father also made plans to travel to Georgia.

Consequently, on April 29, 2008, Everson and his mother went to the hospital’s emergency room. There, Everson told a hospital triage nurse that he had been hearing voices and experiencing hallucinations and that his head felt “heavy,” and the nurse noted much of this information on a triage form. A different emergency room nurse interviewed Everson and made notes in his medical chart about his complaints.

Everson and his mother saw Jordan, a physician who was staffing the emergency room that day as an independent contractor, not a hospital employee. Jordan reviewed the triage form, spoke with Everson, and examined him. Everson appeared somewhat anxious to Jordan, with accelerated, rambling speech, and he had an elevated pulse and blood pressure. Jordan noted Everson’s chief complaint to *184 be hallucinating. Everson told Jordan that he was hearing his own voice “rambling inside his head,” which confused him, and that his symptoms had begun two weeks earlier. Jordan described Everson as fixated on having racing thoughts about himself.

Jordan discharged Everson from the hospital with a diagnosis of obsessive compulsive disorder; he also underlined “psychosis” on Everson’s paperwork. At the request of Everson’s mother, Jordan had another emergency room nurse schedule an appointment for Everson with Middle Flint Behavioral HealthCare (“Middle Flint”), a regional state-run mental health facility The nurse scheduled that appointment for May 1, 2008, two days later.

Everson and his mother returned to Everson’s apartment, and his father arrived later that afternoon. His parents decided that, instead of taking Everson to Middle Flint for treatment, they would arrange to have Everson evaluated at a facility associated with Duke University, where one of Everson’s brothers attended medical school and where Everson’s father had professional connections.

On April 30, Everson and his father began the drive to Duke University, stopping overnight at a hotel near Atlanta and resuming their drive the next morning. While they were traveling on an interstate highway that morning, Everson began fidgeting with the electronic door locks of the car. Then Everson’s father, who was driving, noticed that Everson was not wearing his seat belt. Everson put his seat belt back on at his father’s request but then, suddenly, he took the seat belt off, opened the car door, and leapt out of the moving car. Everson’s father stopped the car and got out to attend to his son, who was lying on the ground, unconscious, next to the highway. Everson regained consciousness, and the two men stood up. At that point, Everson appeared to his father to be in “a totally psychotic state.” Everson began running down the side of the highway He ran approximately half a mile, with his father chasing him. He then stepped into the path of a large vehicle, which struck him, killing him instantly

The plaintiffs brought an action for medical malpractice against the hospital and Jordan, alleging that the defendants failed to properly evaluate and treat Everson’s condition when he went to the emergency room, misdiagnosed him, and failed to recognize that he needed a psychiatric evaluation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
798 S.E.2d 667, 341 Ga. App. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/everson-et-al-v-phoebe-sumter-medical-center-inc-et-al-jordan-v-gactapp-2017.