Hess v. St. Francis Regional Medical Center

869 P.2d 598, 254 Kan. 715, 1994 Kan. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 4, 1994
Docket68,785
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 869 P.2d 598 (Hess v. St. Francis Regional Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hess v. St. Francis Regional Medical Center, 869 P.2d 598, 254 Kan. 715, 1994 Kan. LEXIS 41 (kan 1994).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

*716 Lockett, J.:

Plaintiff Ralph Hess appeals the jury's finding for the defendant, St. Francis Regional Medical Center (St. Francis), in a negligence action, claiming the trial court erred in: (1) allowing into evidence his pretrial settlement with other defendants, and (2) ruling his workers compensation benefits could be considered as collateral source benefits in determining damages. Defendant asserts that the plaintiff failed to properly designate the ruling appealed from in his notice of appeal.

Hess, an employee of Vulcan Materials (Vulcan), was injured on the job. After Hess settled his workers compensation claim, Vulcan terminated Hess’ employment. Hess sued Vulcan, his former employer, for retaliatory discharge and for negligently failing to properly notify medical personnel of the caustic nature of the liquid that caused his burns. He also sued Chris Cookson, the plant nurse for Vulcan, and St. Francis for failing to act on the information from his employer that he had been burned by a caustic liquid. Without admitting liability for its conduct or action, Vulcan paid Hess $15,000 and waived its light to subrogate medical expenses and other workers compensation benefits previously paid to Hess. After the settlement, all the defendants except St. Francis were dismissed as parties to the action. However, at trial, the jury could still assess the fault of the defendants that had been dismissed.

In the pretrial order the parties stipulated to the facts of the settlement but did not agree to the admissibility into evidence of Hess’ settlement with Vulcan and Vulcan’s waiver of its right to subrogation for the workers compensation benefits paid. At trial, Hess alleged St. Francis was negligent in its treatment of his burn injuries and that its negligent treatment of the burns had aggravated his injuries. St. Francis claimed that Hess and the dismissed parties were at fault.

The pertinent facts are as follows. Hess was attempting to unplug a saltwater saturator by steam pressure. The saturator erupted, spraying him with liquid chlorine; hydrogen; and sodium hydroxide, a caustic substance; and salt water. Hess immediately went to a safety shower and rinsed off as much of the chemicals as possible.

*717 After assisting in the control room, Hess began a second safety shower until emergency medical services (EMS) personnel arrived. The EMS personnel transported Hess to St. Francis for treatment. Hess claimed he informed the EMS personnel he had been burned with a superheated brine of heavy salt and caustic. An EMS employee who responded to the emergency call testified Hess told him he (Hess) had been burned with scalding salt water and had denied being burned with anything else.

Hess asserted that even though he informed the hospital personnel he had been exposed to caustic chemicals, which react violently with salt water, they treated him with a chlorine solution bath. When Hess attempted to get out of the chlorine solution, Dr. Jost, one of the treating physicians, ordered the nurses to let Hess out of the chlorine bath. Hess was then treated with a non-chlorine bath.

On cross-examination, Hess admitted that when the accident occurred he did not know what the liquid solution that had burned him contained. When the initial safety shower did not work as he hoped, Hess determined a caustic liquid was involved. Hess could not recall much of what had occurred after he arrived at the hospital.

Eric Phillips, an industrial hygienist for Vulcan, testified that when a worker is injured Phillips’ responsibility is to inform the hospital of “primary information” such as the type and cause of injury. Phillips stated he initially telephoned and informed Doctor Winegar and the St. Francis hospital emergency room personnel that Hess had been burned with hot brine. Phillips then phoned the plant and found out there could have been trace amounts of caustic, or hydrochloric acid, in the solution that burned Hess.

After learning a caustic solution was involved, Phillips went to the hospital. He arrived at the hospital at the same time as the ambulance. Phillips identified himself to people wheeling Hess into the hospital on a gurney. Phillips testified that when he heard Hess tell the nurse he had been burned with hot brine, Phillips interjected, “[Tjhere could be a trace amount of caustic or HCl.” Phillips stated tire nurse did not acknowledge his comment. Hess’ wife and stepdaughters testified that Phillips told them at the hospital that Hess had been burned with brine and did not mention the solution contained caustic chemicals. Phillips *718 did not remember this conversation. The nurse did not remember Hess saying he had been burned by a caustic liquid. Phillips later talked to Dr. Jost but did not remember discussing the contents of the solution Hess was using when burned.

Cookson testified that the day after the accident a Vulcan manager told her to call Dr. Jost to confirm the doctor was aware of the fact that a caustic substance was involved in the accident. According to Cookson, later that day, when he informed Dr. Jost that Hess had been burned with a caustic liquid, the doctor replied he wished he had known that sooner. Dr. Jost testified he was not informed the first evening that a caustic burn was involved. If he had known caustic was involved, a different treatment would have been followed. The doctor’s notes reflected he was not told until three days after Hess’ admission that caustic was involved. If this fact had been known within six hours of the accident, the amount of scarring and disfigurement could have been reduced. Dr. Jost did not recall Hess telling the hospital personnel, when Hess was first placed in the tank, that he had been burned with caustic.

The jury found Vulcan 100% at fault. The trial court entered judgment in favor of St. Francis. Hess appealed to the Court of Appeals. This court, on its own motion, transferred the case to its docket.

APPELLANT’S NOTICE OF APPEAL

It is a fundamental proposition of Kansas appellate procedure that an appellate court only obtains jurisdiction over the rulings identified in the notice of appeal. Hess’ notice of appeal challenged “the following portions of the jury verdict and judgment” entered by the trial court:

“1. The jury’s determination of comparative fault. (Special questions one and two).
2. The jury’s determination of the period of time over which payment of future economic loss would be needed. (Special question five).
3. The jury’s determination of net amount of collateral source benefits received to date. (Special question six).
4. The jury’s determination of net amount of collateral source benefits to be received in the future. (Special question seven).”

St. Francis contends K.S.A. 60-2103(b) requires the notice of appeal to designate the judgment or part thereof appealed from. *719

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
869 P.2d 598, 254 Kan. 715, 1994 Kan. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hess-v-st-francis-regional-medical-center-kan-1994.