HOLT, EX REL. HOLT v. Wagner

43 S.W.3d 128, 344 Ark. 691, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 286
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 10, 2001
Docket00-817
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 43 S.W.3d 128 (HOLT, EX REL. HOLT v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
HOLT, EX REL. HOLT v. Wagner, 43 S.W.3d 128, 344 Ark. 691, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 286 (Ark. 2001).

Opinion

ROBERT L. BROWN, Justice.

Appellant James Holt, as administrator of the estate of Sheryl Holt, deceased, appeals from an order of summary judgment in favor of appellee Dr. Taylor Dan Wagner. He raises one issue on appeal — that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because there remain genuine issues of fact regarding whether this state has adopted the theory of lost chance of survival in wrongful-death cases and whether the actions of Dr. Wagner deprived Sheryl Holt of this lost chance. We affirm the order of summary judgment.

The facts are that on April 30, 1996, Sheryl Holt was a patient of Dr. Wagner, and she had elected to have Dr. Wagner perform gallbladder surgery on her. On that date, Dr. Wagner ordered a routine chest x-ray exam prior to surgery. The x-ray was performed by Dr. Donald A. Harper, and the report following the x-ray made reference to a “right apical mass, infiltrate and/or plural thickening[,]” which is an abnormal condition. It was recommended in the report that if previous x-rays were available, they be obtained for comparison purposes or if not, that a chest CT scan be performed. Neither action was taken.

On May 2, 1996, Dr. Wagner performed the gallbladder surgery on Sheryl Holt. Dr. Wagner did not recall seeing the x-ray report or communicating its findings to her. In October 1996, Mrs. Holt was diagnosed with lung cancer, and ultimately died due to that condition on February 5, 1998.

On April 28, 1998, Holt sued Dr. Wagner and alleged in the complaint that the doctor had:

failed to utilize that degree of skill and learning ordinarily possessed and used by other members of [his] profession in good standing engaged in the same type of practice or speciality in the locality in which the practice or in a similar locality in the following manner:
a. Failure to provide follow-up care and/or refer for follow-up care per the x-ray report dated 4/30/96 that he received in preparation for surgery;
b. That the Defendant was negligent in notifying Mrs. Flolt of the findings so that she might seek further evaluation of the findings;
c. Refusal and/or failure to further investigate the mandate of the x-ray reports of 4/30/96.
As a direct result of the above negligence, five months time lapsed before a diagnosis was made of lung cancer. This critical five month period allowed the cancer to grow and spread to lymph nodes causing the tumor to become inoperable and necessitating chemotherapy and radiation therapy instead.
7. As a direct and proximate result of the Defendant’s negligence, the deceased was at a greater risk for continued cancer, spread of cancer, and death and other comphcations associated with the different treatment regime as well as the additional pain and mental anguish associated with the delay in diagnosis.

Discovery ensued, and Dr. Wagner’s counsel deposed Mr. Holt’s expert witness, a medical doctor named William Stein, III. In the deposition, Dr. Stein said that in his opinion, in April of 1996, Mrs. Holt’s tumor was “in all likelihood ... a stage IIIA or better[,]” and that “[i]n October she was almost assuredly a IIIBf.]” 1 He later confirmed that within a reasonable degree of medical probability or certainty, “she was a IIIA or better.” He also testified that it was his belief that “in April [of 1996] there was a good chance she would have been able to have been operated on for cure and in October she could not have been.”

Dr. Stein went on to say that a stage IIIB squamous cell carcinoma for all practical purposes “would be inoperable” and “that patient is going to die of that cancer regardless of what treatment is given.” He added:

So the worst thing would have been a IIIA. If she had been operated on appropriately for cure and given the best adjuvant therapy available, it is my opinion not that she would have had what some studies show would have been a 40 plus percent chance of survival to five years. I am going to temper that somewhat and say it’s my impression she would have had approximately a 30 percent chance of being alive at five years. Because I am leaving some room on both sides. As I said before, this is a very difficult subject.

The essence of his conclusions was this:

ATTORNEY: Okay. So if the tumor had been diagnosed and treated in April of 1996, can you say within a reasonable degree of medical certainty or probability that it is more likely than not she would have survived up to five years?
STEIN: No. Because if she only had a 30 percent chance, it’s not more likely than not she would have survived five years. It’s more likely than not that she would have had a 30 percent probability of being alive at five years.
ATTORNEY: And can you say that she would have been within the 30 percent that made it to five years?
STEIN: I don’t know which side she would have fallen on. It doesn’t matter. For an individual patient, it’s either all or none. They are alive or not. My opinion she [sic] would have had a 30 percent chance of being in that group that survived five years.
....
ATTORNEY: In all fairness, I am trying to look at the best possible case scenario in the range of your opinion.
STEIN: My opinion is she was more than likely a IIIA. She could have been a II. That is less likely. Had she in any way for [sic] six months earlier, I don’t think the chance of survival went from 0 to 50 percent. I think the chance of survival, if found in April, would have been less than 50 percent at five years. What you are getting there is what is her chance of cure. I don’t think that it was 50 percent. I don’t think it was. It may have been.

As to the survival rate, given appropriate treatment, for a stage IIIB cancer, Dr. Stein testified:

It’s going to be less than five percent. As a general rule. Now, if you come up with a paper that says seven percent, I am not going to argue with that. I can come up with one that says zero. I am going to say five percent is probably way overstating it to just leave some room. I will tell you that if you have a IIIB lung cancer and you are not operated on, you are almost surely going to die of that cancer.

Following Dr. Stein’s deposition, Dr. Wagner moved for summary judgment and alleged that the undisputed evidence showed that he had committed no acts of negligence which could be a proximate cause of the injuries allegedly sustained by Sheryl Holt, or her death. In his response, Mr. Holt responded that he was suing Dr. Wagner “for medical malpractice for the deceased’s lost chance of survival” and Dr. Wagner had deprived Mrs. Holt “of at least a forty percent (40%) chance of survival[.]” The trial court, following a hearing, issued a letter opinion granting the summary-judgment motion.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W.3d 128, 344 Ark. 691, 2001 Ark. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-ex-rel-holt-v-wagner-ark-2001.