Fetters v. St. francis/st. George Hospital, Unpublished Decision (3-17-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 17, 2000
DocketTrial No. A-9701505. Appeal No. C-990410.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Fetters v. St. francis/st. George Hospital, Unpublished Decision (3-17-2000) (Fetters v. St. francis/st. George Hospital, Unpublished Decision (3-17-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Fetters v. St. francis/st. George Hospital, Unpublished Decision (3-17-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION
Plaintiff-appellant, Luceva Fetters,1 appeals the judgment entered by the Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas in favor of defendants-appellees, St. Francis/St. George Hospital and Dr. S. Zubair Haq, in a medical malpractice case. For the following reasons, we reverse the trial court's judgment and remand the cause for a new trial.

For many years, ninety-one-year-old Sudie Reed suffered from periodic fainting spells. The spells were brought on by what is described in the record as sick sinus syndrome, meaning that, periodically, Reed's heart would beat too slowly. Between 1988 and 1996, Reed had been admitted to a hospital emergency room on several occasions because she had fainted and fallen.

On May 13, 1996, Reed experienced a fainting episode, during which she fell and injured her shoulder. The following day, her granddaughter took her to the emergency room of St. Francis/St. George. It is undisputed that St. Francis/St George was chosen because it was the hospital nearest to where Reed resided with her daughter, Fetters.

At the emergency room, it was determined that Reed had broken her shoulder as a result of the fall. Further examination revealed that Reed had fluid on her lungs. She was admitted to the hospital and was examined by the cardiologist on call, Dr. S. Zubair Haq.

Because Reed's family physician, Dr. Martinez, was licensed only in Kentucky, he referred her to Dr. Alvin Huesman. According to St. Francis/St. George, Dr. Huesman, in turn, selected Dr. Haq to treat Reed. Reed executed several hospital forms that stated,inter alia, that the physicians practicing at St. Francis were not its employees.

Dr. Haq determined that Reed was a proper candidate for a permanent pacemaker operation. By inserting this device into Reed, Dr. Haq intended to regulate her heart, thereby reducing the risk of further fainting episodes and the resulting falls.

The pacemaker implantation procedure began at 9:45 a.m. on June 3, 1996, three weeks after Reed's admission to St. Francis/St. George. The procedure required Dr. Haq to thread the pacemaker leads, the ends of which were tined, through the ventricle and place them in contact with the heart wall. Because he could not properly position the leads, Dr. Haq withdrew them several times and reinserted them. Dr. Haq did not realize until about ten minutes after the final reinsertion that he had perforated the right ventricle of Reed's heart during the insertion procedure.

At 10:30 a.m., Dr. Haq noted that Reed's systolic blood pressure had dropped from 180 to 90, and that her heart rate had lowered to thirty beats per minute. He suspected that he had perforated the heart and that Reed was suffering from tamponade, a condition in which the pericardium sac around the heart fills with blood and impedes the heart's ability to pump blood through the body. An echocardiogram and a Swan-Ganz catheter both confirmed tamponade.

At approximately 11:20 a.m., Dr. Haq summoned another cardiologist, Dr. Mark Workman, and a thoracic-cardiovascular surgeon, Dr. Saeed Esmaili, to the catheterization lab, where the pacemaker was being implanted.2 Dr. Haq informed the other physicians that he had perforated the ventricle and that his attempts at pericardiocentesis3 were unsuccessful. At 11:30, Dr. Esmaili also performed pericardiocentesis, and, on his second attempt, he drained some dark red blood from the heart. Dr. Esmaili also inserted a catheter into the heart. However, Dr. Haq told Dr. Esmaili to remove it because Dr. Haq did not think that it was in the pericardium. At 11:40, Dr. Esmaili instructed Dr. Haq to perform another echocardiogram in thirty minutes and to call him if Reed's condition deteriorated. Esmaili then left to perform a previously scheduled surgery on another patient.

At 1:30 p.m., Dr. Haq alerted Dr. Esmaili that he was sending Reed to surgery. Dr. Haq testified at trial that the reason he did not send Reed to surgery earlier was because he mistook the pressure readings in Reed's heart to be normal when in fact they were not. Additionally, the record reveals that Reed had briefly stopped breathing at 11:20 and was revived with oxygen.

Despite these circumstances, Dr. Haq did not check the oxygen levels of Reed's blood until 12:50. At that time, she had a pH level of 7.1 due to the fact that the tamponade condition was preventing the blood from being properly oxygenated, a condition described in the record as acidosis. By the time that Reed was taken to surgery, her blood pH level had dropped to 6.9. According to an expert witness, Dr. Thomas O'Grady, only five percent of patients with that pH level can be resuscitated.

Dr. Esmaili received Mrs. Reed in the operating room at approximately 2:00 p.m. He first performed a procedure known as a pericardial window and was able to drain one hundred cubic centimeters of blood away from the heart. At that time, the bleeding stopped, and Mrs. Reed's blood pressure began to rise.

Unfortunately, the bleeding resumed, and Dr. Esmaili attempted to stop it by placing pressure with his hand directly on the heart. When this failed, Dr. Esmaili opened Reed's chest bone and exposed the heart. He then tried to suture the perforation, but the sutures would not hold, and the wound continued to bleed. Reed's blood pressure continued to drop, and her heart went into fibrillation and stopped. According to Dr. O'Grady, the fibrillation was brought on by the acidotic condition.

Fetters initiated this medical malpractice action against Dr. Haq and Dr. Esmaili on January 24, 1997. She also sued St. Francis/St George under a theory of vicarious liability, as well as negligent failure to supervise the physicians that had rendered care to Reed. The matter proceeded to a jury trial beginning in April 1999.

At the conclusion of Fetters's case-in-chief, St. Francis/St. George moved for a directed verdict. The trial court granted the motion, and the case proceeded against the only remaining defendant, Dr. Haq. The jury returned a verdict in favor of Dr. Haq, and judgment on that verdict was entered on May 18, 1999.

In this timely appeal,4 Fetters asserts four assignments of error. In her first assignment of error, she argues that the lower court erred by overruling her motion to exclude the opinion of Dr. Haq's expert witness concerning Reed's cause of death, or, in the alternative, by overruling her motion for a mistrial. She contends that counsel's failure to inform her of the change in the expert's opinion between the time of his deposition and the date of trial rendered the trial unfair. We find this argument to be persuasive.

Civ.R. 26, governing the duty to supplement discovery, provides the following:

(E) Supplementation of responses. A party who has responded to a request for discovery with a response that was complete when made is under no duty to supplement his response to include information thereafter acquired, except as follows:

(1) A party is under a duty seasonably to supplement his response with respect to any question directly addressed to (a) the identity and location of persons having knowledge of discoverable matters, and (b) the identity of each person expected to be called as an expert witness at trial and the subject matter on which he is expected to testify. [Emphasis added.]

The purpose of Civ.R. 26(E)(1)(b) is to prevent "trial by ambush."5

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Bluebook (online)
Fetters v. St. francis/st. George Hospital, Unpublished Decision (3-17-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fetters-v-st-francisst-george-hospital-unpublished-decision-ohioctapp-2000.