Hooper v. The County of Cook

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 15, 2006
Docket1-03-1842 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Hooper v. The County of Cook (Hooper v. The County of Cook) 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.

Bluebook
Hooper v. The County of Cook, (Ill. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

FIRST DIVISION May 15, 2006

No. 1-03-1842

KENNETH HOOPER, Special Adm'r of the Estate of ) Appeal from Louise Hooper, Deceased, ) the Circuit Court ) of Cook County Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) v. ) ) No. 98 L 8589 THE COUNTY OF COOK and DEEPAK KAPOOR, ) ) Defendants-Appellants ) ) (Glenda Edmond-Nolla, ) Honorable ) Daniel J. Locallo, Defendant). ) Judge Presiding.

PRESIDING JUSTICE CAHILL delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal arises from a medical negligence action filed by plaintiff Kenneth Hooper,

special administrator of the estate of his mother, Louise Hooper (Hooper), and against Cook

County, Deepak Kapoor, M.D., a physician at Cook County Hospital, and Glenda Edmond-

Nolla, R.N., a nurse at the hospital. Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that defendants were

negligent in failing to treat and care properly for Hooper, who committed suicide while she was

a patient at the hospital. The jury found in favor of Nolla and against Dr. Kapoor and Cook

County, awarding $1,212,000 to plaintiff.

Plaintiff appealed the exclusion of Nolla from the jury's negligence findings and the 1-03-1842

amount of the award but later withdrew that appeal. Defendants Cook County and Dr. Kapoor

also appealed, raising a single claim: the trial court erred in its refusal to submit their special

interrogatory to the jury. We agree and reverse and remand for a new trial as to Dr. Kapoor and

Cook County.

We are asked to decide whether the foreseeability of a hospital patient's suicide was the

dispositive jury question in this medical negligence case. Defendants claim that the jury had to

believe Hooper's injury was foreseeable to find that defendants' conduct was the proximate cause

of her death. Defendants argue the trial court committed reversible error in denying a special

interrogatory to test the jury's position on the foreseeability of Hooper's injury. The special

interrogatory proposed by defendants and denied by the court was: "Prior to the death of

[Louise] Hooper, was it reasonably foreseeable that she would commit suicide or act in a self-

destructive manner on or before December 6, 1997? Yes ___ No___."

The parties disagree on whether the foreseeability of Hooper=s suicide was the ultimate

fact on which the rights of the parties depended. See DiMarco v. City of Chicago, 278 Ill. App.

3d 318, 322, 662 N.E.2d 525 (1996) (a special interrogatory to a jury is proper when it concerns

the ultimate fact on which the rights of the parties depend). Defendants claim that unless

Hooper=s suicide was foreseeable, their actions cannot be deemed the proximate cause of

Hooper's death. Plaintiff argues that the foreseeability of Hooper=s suicide was but one of the

facts that had to be determined by the jury in deciding whether defendants' actions were the

proximate cause of Hooper's death.

These pertinent facts emerged at trial. Hooper was admitted to Cook County Hospital on

2 1-03-1842

December 2, 1997, for medical treatment unrelated to this case. At 2 a.m. on December 5, 1997,

while Hooper was a patient in the intensive care unit (ICU), she developed symptoms of a form

of delirium known as ICU psychosis. She became paranoid, combative and uncontrollable.

Betty Shamley, a psychiatric nurse, examined Hooper and found her to have "paranoid ideation"

as shown by Hooper=s comments that people were trying to hurt her and invade her privacy.

Shamley spoke by telephone to Dr. Kapoor, the attending psychiatrist. They developed a

treatment plan that included administering the antipsychotic medication Haldol and transferring

Hooper to Ward 24, a medical-surgical ward with a calmer atmosphere than the ICU. The plan

called for placing Hooper on "one-to-one nursing p.r.n. for unpredictable behavior." There was

testimony that "p.r.n." stands for "if necessary." An earlier order of "bed rest" was changed to

"ambulatory," meaning Hooper was allowed to walk around in the ward. Dr. Kapoor did not talk

to or examine Hooper.

In the evening of December 5, 1997, Hooper reported seeing green and purple lights and

movement in the ceiling to a patient who shared her room. At 3:55 a.m. on December 6, 1997,

Hooper was found in the bathroom by another patient. Hooper had hung herself by knotting her

hospital gown. Although Hooper had a slight pulse, she was unresponsive and unconscious. She

later died.

At trial, plaintiff's theory was Dr. Kapoor's failure to conduct a complete mental status

examination of Hooper and his failure to order one-to-one nursing care for her caused or

contributed to her injury and death. Defendants responded that a medical negligence claim

cannot succeed where the defendant fails to guard against something that cannot be foreseen.

3 1-03-1842

Defendants argued that because the medical experts could not identify the cause of

Hooper's suicide even after her death, Hooper=s suicide must have been unforeseeable. Dr. Alex

John Spadoni, a physician specializing in psychiatry, testified as plaintiff's expert witness. He

said that a person who was suffering from delirium or ICU psychosis would be at risk of causing

harm to herself, including suicide. He opined that defendants' conduct was a contributing factor

in Hooper's death. Dr. Carl Martin Wahlstrom, a forensic psychiatrist, testified as defendants=

expert witness. He opined that Hooper's act of hanging herself was an intentional act, not an

accident where she hurt herself because of delirium. Dr. Wahlstrom said Hooper=s act involved

"a substantial degree of planning." He answered "no," over plaintiff's objection, to defendants'

question of whether "the suicide in this case was reasonably foreseeable."

Near the end of the trial, during the jury instruction conference outside the presence of

the jury, defendants proposed a special interrogatory to the jury that was discussed by the judge

and counsel for the parties:

"MR. DESIERTO [defense counsel]: Judge, we have also given counsel

copies *** [of] some special interrogatories.

First one we're proposing is[:] prior to the death of *** Hooper was it

reasonably foreseeable that she would commit suicide or act in a self-destructive

manner on or before December 6th.

Judge, proximate cause is a question of fact and foreseeability is part of

the proximate cause and yesterday *** you allowed the testimony ofB

THE COURT: Sure.

4 1-03-1842

MR. DESIERTO: BDr. Wahlstrom as to the foreseeability aspect of the

act.

And therefore this is a question of fact that the jury has a right to consider.

MR. ROGERS, JR. [plaintiff's counsel]: Such a favorable finding on that

question[,] though[,] wouldn't be inconsistent with a verdict for the plaintiff, your

honor.

It has to challenge the entirety of proximate cause.

THE COURT: Anything else at this time?

MR. DESIERTO: No.

MR. ROGERS, SR. [plaintiff's counsel]: Doesn't addressBthe language

doesn't address the suicide being unpredictable behavior.

THE COURT: All right. The Court will refuse as tendered."

Defendants' sole argument on appeal is that the trial court's refusal to tender their special

interrogatory to the jury was an error that caused prejudice and denied defendants a fair trial.

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