Garcia v. Seneca Nursing Home

2011 IL App (1st) 103085, 2011 WL 3667553
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 16, 2011
Docket1-10-3085
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2011 IL App (1st) 103085 (Garcia v. Seneca Nursing Home) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia v. Seneca Nursing Home, 2011 IL App (1st) 103085, 2011 WL 3667553 (Ill. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

ILLINOIS OFFICIAL REPORTS Appellate Court

Garcia v. Seneca Nursing Home, 2011 IL App (1st) 103085

Appellate Court PHILEMON GARCIA, Special Administrator of the Estate of Roberto Caption A. Garcia, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SENECA NURSING HOME, d/b/a Lee Manor, Defendant-Appellee.

District & No. First District, Second Division Docket No. 1-10-3085

Filed August 16, 2011

Held In a wrongful death action arising from the suicide of a nursing home (Note: This syllabus resident where a verdict was returned for plaintiff but the jury, in constitutes no part of response to a special interrogatory, found the suicide was not foreseeable, the opinion of the court the answer was irreconcilable with the verdict and judgment was properly but has been prepared entered for defendant. by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.)

Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 06-L-004015; the Review Hon. John Grogan, Judge, presiding.

Judgment Affirmed. Counsel on Steven M. Levin, Patricia L. Gifford, and Jason E. Hammond, all of Appeal Levin & Perconti, and Stephen A. Gorman, both of Chicago, for appellant.

Omar J. Fayez, Hugh C. Griffin, and Krista D. Luzio, all of Hall, Pringle & Schoonveld, LLC, of Chicago, for appellee.

Panel JUSTICE CONNORS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Karnezis and Harris concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Roberto Garcia died after he ejected himself from a fifth-floor window while he was in the care of defendant Seneca Nursing Home for various physical and mental illnesses. Plaintiff Philemon Garcia, Roberto’s son and the administrator of his estate, brought the instant wrongful death and survival action against defendant. Following a jury trial, the jury returned a general verdict in plaintiff’s favor and awarded $1 million in damages. The jury, however, also answered in the negative a special interrogatory that dealt with the foreseeability of Roberto’s death. The trial court entered judgment in favor of defendant based on the special interrogatory answer. Plaintiff appeals, arguing that the jury’s answer to the special interrogatory was not irreconcilable with the general verdict or, alternatively, that the special interrogatory should never have been given. We affirm.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND ¶3 This appeal follows an 8-day jury trial during which 18 witnesses testified, including 4 expert witnesses. However, the facts relevant to this appeal are straightforward and relatively uncontested. ¶4 Roberto suffered from paranoid schizophrenia. He also suffered from a number of other physical ailments, including blindness, dystonia (abnormal muscle tone), akathisia (a type of chronic restlessness), and tardive dyskinesia, which manifests as involuntary twitching and grimacing. Roberto’s wife cared for him as long as she could, but in July 2003 she placed Roberto in the care of defendant, a nursing home licensed under the Illinois Nursing Home Care Act (210 ILCS 45/1-101 et seq. (West 2010)). ¶5 Roberto was eventually placed in a room on the fifth floor of the facility, which is the secured floor for mentally ill patients. At the time of his death in 2004, the fifth floor housed 42 patients under the care of 6 staff members. The doors to the floor were secured and alarmed, and the elevators required a secure access device in order to operate them. The floor was also equipped with windows, but these only opened slightly over eight inches and were

-2- covered with a screen. ¶6 While at defendant’s facility, Roberto was largely confined to a wheelchair and had difficulty walking or even moving his wheelchair at times. Roberto also exhibited a significant amount of delusional behavior, including wandering away, hiding, taking off his clothes at inappropriate times, and hallucinations. Roberto apparently did not enjoy living at defendant’s facility, and he expressed to at least two witnesses on multiple occasions that he wanted to “go home” or “get out of [the facility].” Although there was ample testimony about Roberto’s mental infirmities, behaviors, and his various psychological evaluations, he was never found to be at risk of suicide, self-harm, or escape. ¶7 On at least two occasions, defendant’s staff noticed Roberto exploring the window in his room. A chart notation on November 2, 2003, noted that Roberto “tried to climb the window,” but the staff member who made the notation explained at trial that Roberto appeared to be merely feeling the window. The staff member did not notify her superiors or other staff and she did not ask Roberto what he was doing at the time, but she mentioned the behavior to Roberto’s psychologist. The next day, November 3, 2003, the psychologist visited Roberto and noted that he was again “trying to climb the window” and appeared to have “his hip up on the window.” ¶8 The psychologist notified Roberto’s psychiatrist of this behavior, but no significant action was taken and no care plan was ever created. According to Roberto’s psychologist and psychiatrist, they were unaware that the windows on the fifth floor could open at all. Had they been aware of this fact, they testified that they would have been much more proactive in creating a treatment plan for Roberto’s behavior. ¶9 On April 21, 2004, a nurse noticed that the window in Roberto’s room was open and the screen was pushed out. After a brief search, Roberto was discovered lying on the ground, five stories below the window. At the time the paramedics arrived Roberto was still responsive, but he died of his injuries on the way to the hospital. Roberto’s death was later ruled a suicide by the Cook County medical examiner. ¶ 10 Roberto’s administrator filed the instant action against defendant and several of its staff members, including Roberto’s psychiatrist. Among other causes of action not relevant to this appeal, the complaint alleged negligence against defendant for Roberto’s death. At the jury instruction conference, defendant asked the court to submit a special interrogatory to the jury regarding the foreseeability of Roberto’s actions. The interrogatory read as follows: “Prior to Roberto Garcia’s death, was it reasonably foreseeable to [defendant] that he would commit suicide or act in a self-destructive manner on or before April 21, 2004?” Defendant drew the wording of the interrogatory verbatim from the case of Hooper v. County of Cook, 366 Ill. App. 3d 1 (2006). Plaintiff objected to the interrogatory, but following argument the trial court agreed to submit the interrogatory to the jury. ¶ 11 The jury returned a general verdict finding defendant liable in negligence and awarding $1 million for Roberto’s pain and suffering prior to his death. However, the jury also answered the special interrogatory in the negative, meaning that the jury found that it was not foreseeable to defendant that Roberto would commit suicide or act in a self-destructive

-3- manner. Defendant moved for entry of judgment in its favor based on the jury’s answer to the special interrogatory. After extensive argument about the proper procedure to follow in this situation, the trial court decided to enter judgment on the general verdict in plaintiff’s favor, but to enter and continue defendant’s motion in order to consider it as part of defendant’s posttrial motion. ¶ 12 Defendant timely filed a posttrial motion, arguing that the general verdict was irreconcilable with the special interrogatory answer and required judgment in defendant’s favor. Defendant also moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or a new trial based on other grounds and alleged errors not relevant here.

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Bluebook (online)
2011 IL App (1st) 103085, 2011 WL 3667553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garcia-v-seneca-nursing-home-illappct-2011.