Haines v. Tabor Hills Healthcare Facility, Inc.

2024 IL App (3d) 220448-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 22, 2024
Docket3-22-0448
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (3d) 220448-U (Haines v. Tabor Hills Healthcare Facility, Inc.) 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.

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Haines v. Tabor Hills Healthcare Facility, Inc., 2024 IL App (3d) 220448-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

2024 IL App (3d) 220448-U

Order filed February 22, 2024 ____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

THIRD DISTRICT

JOYCE HAINES, ) Appeal from the Circuit Court ) of the 18th Judicial Circuit, Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Du Page County, Illinois, ) v. ) Appeal No. 3-22-0448 ) Circuit No. 17-L-445 TABOR HILLS HEALTHCARE ) FACILITY, INC., an Illinois corp.; ) Honorable ANTHONY HARVAT, as administrator of ) Neal W. Cerne, Tabor Hills Health Care Facility, Inc.; ) Judge, Presiding. GLORIA PINDIAK, as administrator of ) Tabor Hills Health Care Facility, Inc.; ) DEBBIE HARVAT, individually and as ) Director of Nursing of Tabor Hills Health ) Care Facility; EDNA EUGENIO, R.N.; ) DONNABELLE BESAS, R.N.; BOHEMIAN ) HOME FOR THE AGED; BOHEMIAN ) HOME FOR THE AGED d/b/a/ Tabor Hills ) Health Care Facility; RATISH KAURA, M.D.; ) EDWARD-ELMHURST HEALTHCARE, ) an Illinois corp., ) ) Defendants ) ) (Raish Kaura, M.D., Tabor Hills ) Health Care Facility, Inc. and ) Bohemian Home for the Aged, ) ) Defendants-Appellees). ) ____________________________________________________________________________ JUSTICE ALBRECHT delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice McDade and Justice Brennan concurred in the judgment. ____________________________________________________________________________

ORDER

¶1 Held: The court did not abuse its discretion by ordering a response to defendants’ motions for summary judgment before all plaintiff’s requested depositions had occurred; plaintiff did not properly preserve for review the court’s denial of her filing an expert affidavit the day of hearing; the court did not err in granting defendants’ motions for summary judgment.

¶2 Plaintiff, Joyce Haines, filed a multiple-count complaint against healthcare facilities and

providers alleging damages related to a fall while Haines was a patient at Tabor Hills Health

Care Facility, Inc. (Tabor Hills). She appeals the circuit court’s order for summary judgment in

favor of defendants Dr. Ratish Kaura, Tabor Hills, and Bohemian Home for the Aged (Bohemian

Home) for the counts of medical negligence against Kaura and vicarious liability against Tabor

Hills and Bohemian Home for Kaura’s negligence. On appeal, Haines argues that the court erred

in making several discovery rulings and in granting defendants’ motions for summary judgment.

For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 On or about April 15, 2015, Haines fractured her left leg and was admitted to Silver

Cross Hospital. On April 21, 2015, Haines was discharged from Silver Cross Hospital and

transferred to Tabor Hills for further care. She met with Kaura, who was the attending physician.

Kaura entered orders for Haines’s care for her stay at Tabor Hills.

¶5 On April 23, 2015, Haines received assistance from a nurse’s aide to move from her bed

to the bathroom. On this day, Haines was able to move around with help from a walker. The aide

accompanied Haines into the bathroom, and after Haines was standing in front of the toilet, the

aide left the room. Haines then grabbed the handles attached to the raised toilet seat in an effort 2 to help herself turn around and sit down on the seat. While using the handles to turn around, the

toilet seat broke away from the toilet, and Haines fell backward against the wall and then to the

floor. This fall resulted in a longer recovery time and another surgery on Haines’s leg.

¶6 Haines filed suit against the defendants on April 13, 2017. Relevant to this appeal, the

complaint included a medical negligence claim against Kaura and vicarious liability claims

against Tabor Hills and Bohemian Home for Kaura’s actions. The complaint alleged that Kaura

deviated from the standard of care for patients in Haines’s situation and that Kaura negligently

failed to properly assess her fall risk and to order proper fall protections. Instead of ordering

Haines to receive one-person assistance when walking, Haines argued Kaura should have

ordered more constant supervision to monitor her movements.

¶7 Haines sat for a deposition on August 21, 2018. At her deposition, Haines testified that

she did not slip or fall in the bathroom due to any imbalance. She stated that the reason for the

fall was because the toilet seat broke.

¶8 When responding to written interrogatories, Kaura listed himself as a potential lay

witness. He later sat for a deposition on February 26, 2019. At the deposition he testified that he

ordered Haines to continue to be weightbearing as tolerated and to have one-person assistance

for transfers. These were the same orders that applied during her stay at Silver Cross Hospital.

Kaura also testified that he had provided Haines with treatment and care that met the standard of

care for a reasonably careful family practice doctor. Haines’s attorney objected to this line of

questioning on the basis that Kaura was present as a lay witness and had not been disclosed as an

expert witness. As a result, Haines’s attorney did not question Kaura further regarding his

opinion on the standard of care.

3 ¶9 On March 19, 2019, Kaura filed a motion for summary judgment. The motion argued that

Haines failed to establish that Kaura deviated from the standard of care. It further argued that

Haines could not establish that her fall was caused by Kaura’s alleged negligence. Haines herself

testified at her deposition that it was the toilet seat that caused her fall, which Kaura argued was

not linked to Kaura’s orders for care. The next week, Tabor Hills and Bohemian Home filed a

motion for summary judgment as to the vicarious liability claim against them and adopted

Kaura’s arguments. On April 12, 2019, Kaura supplemented his answers to Haines’s Rule 213

interrogatories identifying himself as an expert witness. Ill. S. Ct. R. 213(f)(3) (eff. Jan. 1, 2018).

¶ 10 On May 9, 2019, the circuit court instructed Haines to file an affidavit under Illinois

Supreme Court Rule 191(b) to provide information on any additional discovery she believed she

needed to conduct in order to respond to the motions for summary judgment. Ill. S. Ct. R. 191(b)

(eff. Jan. 4, 2013). The affidavit that was filed stated that Haines needed further depositions on

Kaura as an expert witness, the nurse on duty at the time of the incident, the nurse that performed

her admission assessment, the nurse that assisted her to the bathroom on the day of the incident,

several therapists and nurses that had evaluated her or were present for her assessments at Tabor

Hills, the former administrator of Tabor Hills, the Tabor Hills CEO, and an undisclosed expert

witness. The court granted Haines request and ordered the depositions listed in the affidavit be

completed by September 13, 2019.

¶ 11 In January 2020, Tabor Hills filed a motion for a protective order requesting that the

court hold the deposition for its nursing director in abeyance due to her current medical issues.

The nursing director was not listed as a necessary witness in Haines’s Rule 191(b) affidavit. The

court granted the protective order in March 2020. In addition, the court granted Haines’s motion

to extend the time to complete depositions for the nursing director, the Tabor Hills administrator,

4 and a Dr. Lazar. On June 17, 2020, the court vacated the protective order on the nursing

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