H. Craig Schweikart v. Franciscan Health System-west

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 24, 2013
Docket42720-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of H. Craig Schweikart v. Franciscan Health System-west (H. Craig Schweikart v. Franciscan Health System-west) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. Craig Schweikart v. Franciscan Health System-west, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED COURT OF APPi= LS . A

2013 SEP 24 PSI 2.34 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF W.

DIVISION II E f q i JA S, I N 3 Old H

H.CRAIG SCHWEIKART, individually and No. 42720 6 II - -

as Personal representative of the ESTATE OF HELENA M. SCHWEIKART; and DARIC M. SCHWEIKART, individually, and as the Attorney in Fact for H. CLINE - - SCHWEIKART,

Appellants,

V.

FRANCISCAN HEALTH SYSTEM WEST, - UNPUBLISHED OPINION db a ST. JOSEPH MEDICAL CENTER, a / / Washington non - profit corporation; NORTHWEST EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS OF TEAMHEALTH, a Washington corporation; RANDALL KAHNG M. .; Da Washington licensed physician; and JOHN DOES 1 -10,

PENOYAR, J. — H. Craig Schweikart and Daric M. Schweikart, individually and as the

respective representatives of Helena and Cline Schweikart (collectively, the Schweikarts),sued

Franciscan Health System West (FHS),operator of St. Joseph Medical Center, claiming -

negligence after Helena died from a fall at St. Joseph. The procedure at trial is somewhat

convoluted because the trial court granted FHS judgment as a matter of law based on the

evidence presented to the jury but let the jury decide whether the Schweikarts had proven

negligence under their alternative theory that FHS spoliated the evidence, triggering an inference

in favor of a negligence finding. The jury did not find spoliation, and the trial court entered

judgment for FHS. 42720 6 II - -

The Schweikarts appeal, arguing that the trial court erred by granting FHS's motion for

judgment as a matter of law on their negligence claim and in instructing the jury on FHS's duty

as owner of the premises and spoliation. But the trial court's judgment as a matter of law and its

instructions on FHS's duty correctly reflected the requirement that the Schweikarts prove that

FHS had notice of the unsafe condition. And because the Schweikarts did not object at trial to

the court's spoliation instruction, we do not consider their argument that the trial court erred by

giving that instruction. Furthermore, the trial court properly exercised its discretion in declining

to give the Schweikarts' proposed spoliation instruction because the instruction the court did

give on spoliation adequately addressed the good faith/ ad faith issue covered by proposed b

instruction. Accordingly, we affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

On April 28, 2005, 83- old Helena Schweikart fell near an elevator at St. Joseph year -

Medical Center. She was taken to the emergency room, treated for a dislocated shoulder, and

released. The next morning, family members found her unconscious. She died on May 3 from

intracranial bleeding.

When Mrs. Schweikart fell near the elevator, security officer Matthew Dunne was sent to

the scene to investigate. When Dunne arrived, he saw emergency room staff placing Mrs.

Schweikart in a wheelchair so they could take her to the emergency room. Dunne did not notice

at that time any hazards on the vinyl composite tile floor where she fell.

Dunne asked if anybody had seen what happened. A woman who had seen the fall gave

Dunne a verbal statement that he did not record because he had left his notebook and witness

N 42720 6 II - -

statement forms at the security desk. Dunne also failed to obtain the witness's name and contact

information.

Dunne returned to the security desk, retrieved witness statement forms, obtained the

incident report number, and then went to the urgent care unit where he recorded Mrs.

Schweikart's statement. Mrs. Schweikart told Dunne that she had slipped on water or some

other liquid and fallen.' Dunne gave her husband a contact card that had the incident report

number and instructions to contact Mike Hill, the security system manger, for a copy of the

report.

Dunne returned to the scene 30 minutes after the fall, finding neither water on the floor

nor the witness who had given Dunne her statement. Dunne began a handwritten report that

same day, but did not finish it. When Dunne could not find his handwritten report the next day, his supervisor told him to write the report as he remembered it. When Dunne asked about

including the witness's statement in the report, his supervisor instructed him to leave the

statement out because, absent her name and address, the witness could not be identified. When one of Mrs. Schweikart's sons, Grant, went to the security desk to ask for a copy of

the report, he was referred to a supervisor, who told Grant that he would have to contact Hill

after the report was reviewed. A May 1, 2005, e mail from a security supervisor to Hill stated -

John Gastelum, an emergency room technician who helped Mrs. Schweikart after her fall, purportedly testified during his deposition that Mrs. Schweikart's shoes and clothing were wet, though he thought this was because it was raining. No evidence was presented that it was raining that day in that area.

2 In Dunne's final report, however, he relates what the unidentified witness told Gastelum: ERT John [ Gastelum] then stated the bystander [witness] told him that Mrs. Shweikart [sic]was running to catch the elevator and fell." s Papers (CP)at 454. At trial, Dunne testified that Clerk' this was what the witness had told him as well, and that the witness had not told him anything else that was not reflected in his final report. 3 42720 6 II - -

that Grant Schweikart was trying to get a copy of the report. Hill did not give any of the

Schweikarts a copy, but referred them instead to risk management, which also declined to

provide them the report. II. PROCEDURE

In March 2006, the Schweikarts sued FHS for negligence. FHS moved for summary

judgment, arguing that it was not liable because it lacked actual or constructive notice of the

condition that caused Mrs. Schweikart's fall. In opposition, the Schweikarts claimed that "the

flooring where Helena Schweikart fell was unreasonably dangerous" and that "St. Joseph Medical Center ... had been notified that the flooring was unreasonably dangerous prior to Mrs.

Schweikart's fall."Clerk's Papers (CP) at 31 32. - The trial court granted FHS's motion and

dismissed the negligence claim with prejudice.

The Schweikarts moved for reconsideration. In their motion, the Schweikarts

emphasized their spoliation of- - evidence argument:

Plaintiffs are entitled to a favorable inference or rebuttable presumption as to the actual existence of a liquid and its duration on the floor given the Defendants[] spoliation of the only independent eye-witness in this case who can testify directly to such a fact. Such an inference or presumption precludes summary judgment in this case as a matter of law.

CP at 91. The Schweikarts also claimed that the trial court had applied the wrong legal duty

when it treated the "presence of liquid"and not the flooring itself as the dangerous condition at issue. CP at 91. FHS countered that there had been no spoliation of evidence because, among

other things, "the information [ the Schweikarts] claim was destroyed ( name and contact information for a witness) was never obtained in the first place." CP at 118. FHS also

maintained that the trial court had applied the correct actual or- - constructive -notice standard

3 After the Schweikarts filed this suit, the defendant produced the incident report. 4 42720 6 II - -

when it granted FHS summary judgment on the issue. The trial court granted the Schweikarts'

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