Fatima E. Belhak and Abdellatif Elfila v. Denice Smith, M.D., and Women's Care Specialists, P.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMay 8, 2024
Docket22-2048
StatusPublished

This text of Fatima E. Belhak and Abdellatif Elfila v. Denice Smith, M.D., and Women's Care Specialists, P.C. (Fatima E. Belhak and Abdellatif Elfila v. Denice Smith, M.D., and Women's Care Specialists, P.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Fatima E. Belhak and Abdellatif Elfila v. Denice Smith, M.D., and Women's Care Specialists, P.C., (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 22-2048 Filed May 8, 2024

FATIMA E. BELHAK and ABDELLATIF ELFILA, Plaintiffs-Appellees,

vs.

DENICE SMITH, M.D., and WOMEN’S CARE SPECIALISTS, P.C., Defendants-Appellants. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Jeffrey D. Bert, Judge.

A doctor and her employer appeal a jury verdict finding them liable for

medical malpractice. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Troy L. Booher and Beth E. Kennedy of Zimmerman Booher, Salt Lake City,

Utah, and Nancy J. Penner of Shuttleworth & Ingersoll, P.C., Cedar Rapids, for

appellants.

Anthony J. Bribriesco and William J. Bribriesco of Bribriesco Law Firm,

PLLC, Bettendorf, for appellees.

Heard by Bower, C.J., and Badding and Langholz, JJ. 2

LANGHOLZ, Judge.

Fatima Belhak and her husband sued her doctor, Denice Smith, and the

doctor’s employer for medical malpractice over the care that she received following

an episiotomy performed during the birth of her first child.1 The court instructed

the jury on three alternative specifications of negligence. And the jury returned a

general verdict that Smith was negligent and her negligence caused damages to

Belhak—awarding $3.25 million in damages.

Smith seeks a new trial, arguing that the court should not have submitted

one of the specifications of negligence—that Smith used the wrong size of

sutures—to the jury because Belhak had failed to present any expert evidence

supporting causation for that theory. She also argues that a new trial is warranted

because Belhak’s counsel made improper statements in closing argument and

asked more than fifty improper leading questions throughout the trial.

Because Belhak’s expert did not testify that the use of smaller sutures was

more likely than not a cause of Belhak’s harm, that specification should not have

been submitted to the jury. And Smith properly preserved error on this issue by

moving for a directed verdict and raising it again in her posttrial motion for a new

trial. It matters not that she agreed to the jury instruction. So she is entitled to a

new trial on this basis alone, and we need not address whether the conduct of

Belhak’s counsel would also warrant a new trial. We thus reverse and remand to

the district court for a new trial.

1 Because the arguments on appeal do not vary between the coplaintiffs and codefendants, we will generally refer only to Belhak and Smith for simplicity. But both defendants appealed the verdict against them and both plaintiffs were awarded damages and have participated in the appeal as the appellees. 3

I.

Belhak and her husband, Abdellatif Elfila, welcomed their first child in

January 2014. Belhak’s regular obstetrician with Women’s Care Specialists was

unavailable when she went into labor, so Smith covered the delivery. As the baby’s

head began crowning, Smith decided she needed to perform an episiotomy

because Belhak’s skin around her vagina was “very tight around the baby’s head,”

impeding the baby’s outward progress. To perform an episiotomy, a doctor makes

a small incision with a special pair of scissors from the vagina into the mother’s

perineum—the area between the vagina and the anus. After performing the

episiotomy, the baby was successfully delivered without issue. And there appears

to be little dispute about the need for the episiotomy or the way it was performed.

The parties’ dispute starts with what happened next.

After the birth, Smith conducted a vaginal examination, which included

checking out the episiotomy incision to see how far it went and how deep it went

towards the anus and rectum. Smith diagnosed a second-degree laceration with

an extension up into the vaginal area. And Smith repaired the laceration with 4-0

vicryl sutures—the suture she “typically” used for vaginal laceration repairs—rather

than larger 3-0 or 2-0 sutures. Smith did not perform a rectal exam. And she did

not diagnose that Belhak had a fourth-degree laceration—an extension of the

laceration into the lining of the rectum.

While still in the hospital, Belhak felt pain in her rectum and noticed small

pieces of stool and blood on her postpartum pad after birth. She reported this to

her medical providers. After a nurse conducted a visual examination and saw

nothing out of the ordinary, the nurse gave her an ice pack to ease the pain. 4

Belhak went home. And a few days later, she self-inspected her vaginal

area. She was still in pain and saw stool coming from her vagina. After calling

Smith and her regular medical provider, she went to the emergency room, which

sent her to the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. The University doctors

diagnosed Belhak with a fourth-degree laceration. They also diagnosed a

rectovaginal fistula—essentially a hole between the rectum and the vagina that

allowed stool and gas to pass from the rectum to the vagina and then come out of

Belhak’s body either or both ways. Because the area became infected—as

typically happens if not repaired within twenty-four hours of the injury—Belhak had

to wait about five months to repair the injuries with reconstructive surgery.

From February until the reconstructive surgery in June, Belhak had to bathe

for thirty minutes in a sitz bath after every bowel movement to disinfect the wound.

Even after her reconstructive surgery, she suffers pain. She has trouble walking,

carrying heavy objects, and sitting or sleeping in certain positions. Sometimes this

pain radiates from her pelvis down her legs. She does physical therapy and at-

home exercises to alleviate the pain as much as possible. She cannot be around

other people too long for fear of uncontrollable bowel movements and gas, and

she has to restrict her diet to avoid accidents. Her relationship with her husband

has struggled because of her injury. And he has taken on more responsibilities in

raising their children, caring for Belhak, taking her to appointments, and helping

her with therapy. 5

In 2016, Belhak and her husband sued Smith and Smith’s employer over

her care following the episiotomy.2 Belhak claimed that Smith’s care was medical

malpractice that caused her physical and mental injury and pain and suffering. And

her husband claimed loss of consortium.

The case was eventually tried to a jury in March 2022—after the first attempt

a couple of years earlier ended with a mistrial during jury selection. Over seven

days, the jury heard from Belhak and her husband, Belhak’s original obstetrician

who could not make the birth, and Smith. The jury also heard from two competing

expert witnesses—one testifying for Belhak and the other for Smith. Belhak’s

expert was Dr. Gregory Chen, an experienced obstetrician and gynecologist who

also served on the clinical faculty of Northwestern University.

After the close of Belhak’s case, Smith moved for a direct verdict on the

specification of negligence that Smith used the wrong size of sutures, arguing that

“there has not been any testimony that the use of 4-0 vicryl sutures caused any of

the injuries to the plaintiffs.”3 The court denied the motion, reasoning that Smith

“has put forth sufficient evidence on both of those issues to make this a jury

question.”

The court then submitted the case to the jury with a marshaling instruction

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Fatima E. Belhak and Abdellatif Elfila v. Denice Smith, M.D., and Women's Care Specialists, P.C., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatima-e-belhak-and-abdellatif-elfila-v-denice-smith-md-and-womens-iowactapp-2024.