Hager v. Shanmugham

441 S.E.2d 720, 190 W. Va. 703, 48 A.L.R. 5th 927, 1993 W. Va. LEXIS 174
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1993
DocketNo. 21663
StatusPublished

This text of 441 S.E.2d 720 (Hager v. Shanmugham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hager v. Shanmugham, 441 S.E.2d 720, 190 W. Va. 703, 48 A.L.R. 5th 927, 1993 W. Va. LEXIS 174 (W. Va. 1993).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

The jury in this medical malpractice action returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, Dr. N.T. Shanmugham. The appellants, Homer R. Hager, and his wife, Nancy Hager, who were the plaintiffs below, moved, at various times, for a directed verdict, for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and to have the verdict set aside. The trial court denied the appellants’ motions and entered judgment for Dr. Shanmugham.

On appeal, the appellants claim that the evidence adduced during trial clearly demonstrated that Dr. Shanmugham violated the applicable standard of care and was negligent in performing a urological procedure on the appellant, Homer R. Hager, and that, in fact, Dr. Shanmugham admitted that he violated the standard of care. They also claim that the trial court improperly allowed Dr. Shan-mugham’s attorney to cross-examine their medical expert by using learned treatises. Under the circumstances, the appellants claim that they were entitled to a malpractice award and that the trial court erred in entering judgment for Dr. Shanmugham.

After reviewing the evidence adduced during trial as well as the questions presented, this Court is of the view that the trial court did not err in denying the appellants’ motions and in entering judgment for Dr. Shanmug-ham. Accordingly, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County is affirmed.

In December, 1988, the appellant, Homer Hager, was examined by Dr. Kyle Fort, a urologist in Lewisburg, West Virginia, who had previously treated him for prostate problems. Dr. Fort, as a result of his examination, concluded that Mr. Hager’s prostate was constricting around his urethra and that a surgical procedure known as a transureth-ral resection of the prostate was indicated. Dr. Fort, however, was unwilling to perform the procedure until Mr. Hager, who had had a history of cardiovascular problems, was examined by a cardiologist.

On December 12 or 13, 1988, Mr. Hager was admitted to St. Francis Hospital in Charleston, West Virginia, where he underwent a complete cardiac examination. While he was in the hospital the urological problems caused by the constricting of his urethra worsened, and a urologist, Dr. N.T. Shan-[705]*705mugham, the defendant in the present case, was called in for a consultation.

Dr. Shanmugham, like Dr. Fort, concluded that a transurethral resection of Mr. Hager’s prostate was indicated, and on December 14, 1988, discussed it with Mr. Hager and his wife. During the discussion, it appears that Dr. Shanmugham advised the Hagers of the risks and complications of the procedure and indicated that the risks and complications included incontinence and impotence. Dr. Shanmugham subsequently documented this conversation regarding the possible risks and complications of the surgery in a progress note dated December 14, 1988.

Mr. Hager decided to undergo the transur-ethral resection surgery, and on December 15, 1988, Dr. Shanmugham performed it on him.

Following the surgery, Mr. Hager developed persistent incontinence and ultimately consulted Dr. Fort about it. Following the evaluation, Dr. Fort concluded that Mr. Hag-er’s external urinary sphincter, a muscle which plays a significant role in controlling continence, had been injured during the transurethral resection surgery. Dr. Fort subsequently recommended the implantation of an artificial sphincter, and the artificial sphincter was inserted on July 12,1990. Mr. Hager, who had sometime prior to the tran-surethral resection surgery had an impotency problem, also suffered a recurrence of that problem. He subsequently had a penile implant for that condition.

Sometime after the development of the post-surgical incontinence and impotency problems, Mr. Hager and his wife instituted the present medical malpractice • action against Dr. Shanmugham. They, in essence, claimed that Dr. Shanmugham had damaged Mr. Hager’s external urinary sphincter during the prostate surgery and that that damage had resulted from medical malpractice.

The case was tried before a jury on September 8, September 9, September 10, and September 11, 1992.

During trial, the Hagers introduced evidence which showed that prior to the transurethral resection surgery, he had not suffered incontinence and that for at least two years prior to the operation he and his wife had had a satisfying sex life. He also introduced evidence showing that following the procedure he suffered chronic incontinence and impotence.

The Hagers called as an expert witness Dr. Ralph Emerson Duncan, III, a Board certified urologist who was the author of several articles in the field of urology. Dr. Duncan had performed over 1,000 transur-ethral resection procedures. Dr. Duncan, who had examined Mr. Hager, had observed damage to Mr. Hager’s urinary sphincter. Dr. Duncan, who did not have an opinion as to the cause of Mr. Hager’s impotency, testified that Mr. Hager’s sphincter had been cut on multiple occasions and that the damage caused by those cuts kept it from closing completely, thereby resulting in his incontinence.

Dr. Duncan, who had also reached the conclusion that Dr. Shanmugham had cut and damaged Mr. Hager’s sphincter during the transurethral resection, testified that national standards for performance of the transur-ethral resection procedure indicate that the performing physician is not supposed to cut past an anatomical landmark called the veru-montanum. If a doctor does not cut past the verumontanum, then the external sphincter cannot be cut. He concluded that in Mr. Hager’s case, Dr. Shanmugham had cut past the verumontanum and cut Mr. Hager’s external sphincter and that by so doing, Dr. Shanmugham had violated the applicable standard of care.

The Hagers also introduced the testimony of Dr. Kyle Fort, Mr. Hager’s treating urologist in Lewisburg, West Virginia. Dr. Fort, who, like Dr. Duncan, believed that damage to Mr. Hager’s external urinary sphincter had caused his incontinence, but who, like Dr. Duncan, had no opinion as to the cause of his impotence, testified that after Dr. Shan-mugham’s surgery, he had examined Mr. Hager on two occasions and that on each he had found multiple cuts in Mr. Hager’s external urinary sphincter. He further testified that approximately one week prior to the surgery by Dr. Shanmugham, he had examined Mr. Hager and had actually visualized his external sphincter and that at that time [706]*706no damage existed. Given the fact that the damage existed after Dr. Shanmugham’s performance of the procedure, Dr. Fort testified that to a reasonable degree of medical certainty or probability, Mr. Hager’s external sphincter was actually cut by Dr. Shanmug-ham during the procedure in December, 1988.

Dr. Fort testified that a physician who was trained and skilled in the performance of a transurethral resection was not supposed to cut the external urethral sphincter, and that based upon his examination of Mr. Hager, there was no medical reason why Dr. Shan-mugham. should have found cutting the sphincter to be necessary. He concluded that the damage to Mr. Hager’s sphincter was caused by a mistake and that it should not have occurred if the procedure had been properly performed.

To rebut the Hagers’ testimony, Dr. Shan-mugham called Dr. Jonathan Jarrow, a Board certified urologist and an associate professor of medicine at Bowman-Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
441 S.E.2d 720, 190 W. Va. 703, 48 A.L.R. 5th 927, 1993 W. Va. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hager-v-shanmugham-wva-1993.