Guoth v. Hamilton

615 S.E.2d 239, 273 Ga. App. 435, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 1647, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 534
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 25, 2005
DocketA05A0822
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 615 S.E.2d 239 (Guoth v. Hamilton) 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
Guoth v. Hamilton, 615 S.E.2d 239, 273 Ga. App. 435, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 1647, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 534 (Ga. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

BLACKBURN, Presiding Judge.

In this medical malpractice action, Dr. Janos Guoth appeals a jury verdict awarding plaintiff Teresa Hamilton damages arising out of Dr. Guoth’s allegedly injuring her urethra when he prepared her for the caesarean-section delivery of her child. Among other things, Dr. Guoth argues that the court erred in refusing to disqualify a juror for cause who (a) knew Dr. Guoth from working at the same hospital with him, (b) believed Dr. Guoth was an incompetent physician, and (c) had heard from other hospital employees that Dr. Guoth had acted negligently in injuring Hamilton. We hold that the repeated questioning of this admittedly-biased juror that eventually resulted in her saying she would be impartial did not rehabilitate her, and that therefore the court erred in not disqualifying her for cause. Accordingly, we reverse.

The evidence showed that Dr. Guoth inserted a catheter into Hamilton while preparing her for the caesarean-section delivery of her child. He later discovered a tear in the urethra, which required Hamilton to undergo repair surgery and to suffer pain and incontinence. Hamilton sued Dr. Guoth for malpractice, attaching an affidavit from a physician that Dr. Guoth acted negligently in the insertion of the catheter.

During general voir dire, a juror stated that she knew Dr. Guoth from working with him at the hospital where the incident occurred. When the general panel was asked whether anyone knew anything about the allegations of this case, this same juror responded that she had heard other hospital employees talk of the incident in question. Before being questioned individually, the juror responded to another general question (asking if all the potential jurors could act fairly and justly) by stating: “I don’t know that I could be impartial [and] forget what I’ve heard.”

When she was questioned individually, she stated that her co-workers in the lab at the hospital where she worked had told her: “Dr. Guoth had delivered the baby and had messed her up. Somebody messed her urethra up. I didn’t hear actually what he did to her, just that he messed her up, and I think she ended up having to go to *436 another doctor.” Regarding other medical work of Dr. Guoth, she had heard “some bad things. Yes, I’ve heard some bad things.” One bad thing was “his unsterile technique.” She had heard that “there was a patient in the emergency room, and he started examining her, and he rammed his hand up in her, and he hadn’t washed his hands, put gloves on or anything.” As a result, she conceded, “I don’t have a very high opinion [of him] — I wouldn’t go to him, and I wouldn’t want any of my family to go to him.”

When asked now for a second time if she could be fair and impartial on this case, she stated: “I could try and have a blank slate and forget about what I’ve heard and listen to the evidence and go on that. ... I could — I could try.” Dissatisfied, the court pressed her, asking if she could indeed do it, not just try. She responded: “I can listen to the evidence from the case, because I don’t know.” Seeking to commit her to a stronger position, plaintiffs attorney asked if she could set aside what she had heard and felt and apply the law to the evidence fairly and impartially, to which she stated: ‘Yes, I think I could.” But she then conceded that she came to the case with an understanding that Dr. Guoth may have done something wrong in this particular delivery.

The court tried again to rehabilitate her, asking her whether she was so biased or prejudiced that she could not make a fair and impartial decision. She stated that she thought she could be fair. The court pressed her further, asking the leading question: You are not prejudging [Dr. Guoth] to have done anything wrong?” She stated, “No, sir.” When asked if she had heard anything bad about two of plaintiffs other physician witnesses, she answered that she had heard bad things about both. Dr. Guoth moved that she be struck for cause, which the trial court denied. Dr. Guoth exercised a peremptory challenge to dismiss this juror from the case.

1. The trial court erred. In our 2001 seminal case of Walls v. Kim, 1 we emphasized:

In too many cases, trial courts confronted with clearly biased and partial jurors use their significant discretion to “rehabilitate” these jurors by asking a version of this loaded question: After you hear the evidence and my charge on the law, and considering the oath you take as jurors, can you set aside your preconceptions and decide this case solely on the evidence and the law? Not so remarkably, jurors confronted with this question from the bench almost inevitably say, *437 “yes.” Such biased jurors likely even believe that they can set aside their preconceptions and inclinations — certainly every reasonable person wants to believe he or she is capable of doing so. Once jurors affirmatively answer the “rehabilitation” question, judges usually decide to retain these purportedly rehabilitated jurors, and on appeal such decisions are often found not to be abuses of discretion.

We decried this practice, referring to the “rehabilitation” question as becoming something of a talisman relied upon by trial and appellate judges to justify retaining biased jurors. Id. We admonished trial judges to “err on the side of caution by dismissing, rather than trying to rehabilitate, biased jurors.” Id. at 260.

Abiding by this principle, we reversed the judgment in Walls v. Kim where the potential juror stated she knew the defendant doctor because she had worked in the emergency room of a hospital with him. Because of that relationship, she said that she “probably hoped that the case would come out in favor of [the doctor], and she acknowledged that [the plaintiff] did not start the case on an even footing with the doctor.” Id. Despite her later statement that she could decide the case on the law and facts (followed by her repeated admission that the parties did not start on equal footing), we held that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to dismiss her for cause. Id. at 261.

The Supreme Court of Georgia affirmed this decision in Kim v. Walls, 2 quoting the following language from Cambron v. State: 3

Running through the entire fabric of our Georgia decisions is a thread which plainly indicates that the broad general principle intended to be applied in every case is that each juror shall be so free from either prejudice or bias as to guarantee the inviolability of an impartial trial. If error is to be committed, let it be in favor of the absolute impartiality and purity of the jurors.

(Punctuation omitted.) Kim v. Walls, supra at 178. See Kier v. State. 4 The Supreme Court held that where “a prospective juror has a relationship with a party to the case that is either close or subordinate, or one that suggests bias, the trial court must do more than ‘rehabilitate’ the juror through the use of any talismanic question.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
615 S.E.2d 239, 273 Ga. App. 435, 2005 Fulton County D. Rep. 1647, 2005 Ga. App. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guoth-v-hamilton-gactapp-2005.