Hondroulis v. Schumacher

533 So. 2d 1221, 1988 La. LEXIS 2906
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 1, 1988
DocketNo. 88-C-0600
StatusPublished

This text of 533 So. 2d 1221 (Hondroulis v. Schumacher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hondroulis v. Schumacher, 533 So. 2d 1221, 1988 La. LEXIS 2906 (La. 1988).

Opinion

DENNIS, Justice,

dissenting.

I respectfully dissent.

[1222]*1222I believe that the court has misinterpreted the informed consent statute so as to place limitations not legislatively intended upon a patient’s right to determine what shall be done with her own body. First, the majority opinion telescopes the so called statutory “presumption” into a requirement that the plaintiff must prove her whole case prima facially at the motion for summary judgment stage, although the defendant has failed to contest most of the elements of her case in his motion and attachments. 531 So.2d 450. Second, the opinion of the court incorrectly interprets the statute so as to relieve a doctor of the duty to communicate specific information to a patient as to the particular nature and chances of material risk involved in the proposed surgery when the exigencies of reasonable care call for it. Third, the court’s opinion incorrectly assumes that the statute creates, upon the patient’s execution of a consent form, a presumption that all risks, however abstractly or vaguely alluded to, have been adequately communicated and consented to, rather than a presumption that the patient merely has consented to the acceptance of whatever material risks have been adequately communicated to him by the information in the consent form.

The doctrine of informed consent is far broader than the rights and duties encompassed by the statute pertinent to this case or brought into play by the facts of this litigation. The root premise of the doctrine is the concept, fundamental in American jurisprudence, that every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body. LaCaze v. Collier, 434 So.2d 1039 (La.1983); e.g., Schloendorff v. Society of New York Hospital, 211 N.Y. 125,105 N.E. 92 (1914). See also, W. Prosser, Torts § 18 at 102 (3rd ed. 1964). True consent to what happens to oneself is the informed exercise of a choice, and that entails an opportunity to evaluate knowledgeably the options available and the risks attendant upon each. The average patient has little or no understanding of the medical art, and ordinarily has only his physician to whom he can look for enlightenment with which to reach an intelligent decision. From these almost axiomatic considerations springs the need and in turn the requirement, of a reasonable divulgeance by physicians to make such a decision possible. See Canterbury v. Spence, 464 F.2d 772 (D.C.Cir. 1972).

Accordingly, this court has recognized that, as part of the physician’s overall obligation to the patient, the doctor owes a similar duty of reasonable disclosure of the choices with respect to proposed medical or surgical treatment and the dangers inherently or potentially involved. LaCaze v. Collier, supra. Because it is prohibitive and unrealistic to expect physicians to discuss with their patients every risk of proposed treatment — no matter how small or remote — , however, most courts have adopted a test of materiality, i.e., the test for determining whether a particular peril must be divulged as its materiality to the patient’s decision: all risks potentially affecting the decision must be unmasked. In other words, in broad outline, “[a] risk is thus material when a reasonable person, in what the physician knows or should know to be the patient’s position, would be likely to attach significance to the risk or cluster of risks in deciding whether or not to fore-go the proposed therapy.” Canterbury v. Spence, supra, at 787.

As in malpractice actions generally, there must be a causal relationship between the physician’s failure to adequately divulge and damage to the patient. Following Canterbury and the national trend, this court has decided to resolve the causality issue on an objective rather than subjective basis: in terms of what a prudent person in the patient’s position would have decided if suitably informed of all perils bearing significance. If adequate disclosure could reasonably be expected to have caused that person to decline the treatment because of the revelation of the kind of risk or danger that resulted in harm, causation is shown, but otherwise not. LaCaze v. Collier, supra; Canterbury v. Spence, supra.

Although this court has not specifically addressed the issue, it is well settled elsewhere that, in the context of a trial on the [1223]*1223merits of a suit claiming inadequate disclosure of risk information by a physician, the patient has the burden of going forward with evidence tending to establish prima facie the essential elements of the cause of action, and ultimately the burden of proof — the risk of non-persuasion — on those elements. Canterbury v. Spence, supra, at 791; Harbeson v. Parke Davis, Inc., 746 F.2d 517 (9th Cir.1984); Woolley v. Henderson, 418 A.2d 1123 (Me.1980); Kohoutek v. Hafner, 383 N.W.2d 295 (Minn.1986). The burden of going forward with evidence pertaining to a privilege not to disclose (e.g., because of an emergency or therapeutic reasons), however, rests properly upon the physician. Canterbury v. Spence, supra, at 791; Small v. Gifford Memorial Hospital, 133 Vt. 552, 349 A.2d 703 (1975); Trogun v. Fruchtman, 58 Wis. 2d 569, 207 N.W.2d 297 (1973).

Because this court has followed the modern trend of imposing a legal standard of reasonable care of disclosure upon physicians, rather than adopting the professional standard, recovery in non-disclosure lawsuits should not hinge solely upon the patient’s ability to prove through expert testimony that the physician’s performance departed from medical custom. Medical facts are for medical experts and other facts are for any experts having sufficient knowledge and capacity to testify to them. Many of the issues typically involved in nondisclosure cases do not reside peculiarly within the medical domain. Lay witness testimony can competently establish a physician’s failure to disclose particular risk information, the patient’s lack of knowledge of the risk, and the adverse consequences following the treatment. Experts are unnecessary to a showing of the materiality of a risk to a patient’s expectable effect of risk disclosure on the decision. Canterbury v. Spence, supra, at 792; Small v. Gifford Memorial Hospital, supra; Trogun v. Fruchtman, supra.

The informed consent statute, La.R.S. 40:1299.40, is similar to acts passed in at least eight other states and obviously was borrowed from the same common law sources. See Comment, Recent Medical Malpractice Legislation — A First Checkup, 50 Tul.L.Rev. 655, 676 (1976). This type of statute is part of a substantial nationwide effort directed toward modifying tort doctrines in medical malpractice cases. Id. at 655, 666. Consequently, the Louisiana consent statute must be construed in light of the considerable informed consent doctrine both within the state and nationally.

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Bluebook (online)
533 So. 2d 1221, 1988 La. LEXIS 2906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hondroulis-v-schumacher-la-1988.