Horseman v. Mercy Health-Lorain Hosp.

2024 Ohio 1518
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 2024
Docket22CA018894, 22CA011898
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 Ohio 1518 (Horseman v. Mercy Health-Lorain Hosp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horseman v. Mercy Health-Lorain Hosp., 2024 Ohio 1518 (Ohio Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

[Cite as Horseman v. Mercy Health-Lorain Hosp., 2024-Ohio-1518.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF LORAIN )

ZACHARY HORSEMAN C.A. Nos. 22CA011894 22CA011898 Appellee

v. APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT MERCY HEALTH-LORAIN HOSPITAL, ENTERED IN THE et al. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF LORAIN, OHIO Appellants CASE No. 19CV199157

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: April 22, 2024

FLAGG LANZINGER, Judge.

{¶1} In Case No. 22CA011894, David M. Yin, M.D. appeals from the judgments of the

Lorain County Court of Common Pleas. In Case No. 22CA011898, Mercy Health – Regional

Medical Center, LLC dba Mercy Regional Medical Center (“Mercy Health”) appeals from the

same judgments. This Court consolidated the parties’ appeals for purposes of the record, oral

argument, and decision. For the following reasons, this Court reverses and remands the matter for

further proceedings.

I.

{¶2} This appeal involves a medical malpractice case that centered around whether Dr.

Yin, an emergency room physician at Mercy Health, breached the standard of care, and whether

such breach proximately caused the death of Carole Horseman. While the record in this case is

voluminous, this Court will limit its recitation of the facts and procedural history to those relevant

to the disposition of this appeal. 2

{¶3} The record reflects that Ms. Horseman had a history of chronic and severe neck

pain for which she received treatment. Relevant to this appeal, Ms. Horseman presented to the

emergency room at Mercy Health four times in early September 2018: once on September 7th,

once on September 9th, and twice on September 11th. On September 7th and 9th, Ms. Horseman

presented with complaints of neck pain. On September 11th, Ms. Horseman presented with

complaints of vomiting, nausea, and continued neck pain. Ms. Horseman was discharged after

each visit.

{¶4} On the morning of September 12, 2018, Ms. Horseman collapsed in her home while

getting dressed. Her son, Zachary Horseman, called 911. EMS transported Ms. Horseman to the

hospital, and she died that morning. An autopsy subsequently confirmed that Ms. Horseman died

of community-acquired MRSA pneumonia. The death certificate listed the “Approximate Interval

Onset and Death” as “DAYS[.]”

{¶5} Zachary Horseman (individually and in his capacity as the administrator of Ms.

Horseman’s estate) (“Plaintiff”) sued Mercy Health and Dr. Yin for wrongful death and

negligence. In short, Plaintiff alleged that Dr. Yin breached the standard of care by failing to order

certain tests that would have confirmed that Ms. Horseman had pneumonia and sepsis while she

was in the ER on September 11th, which could have been successfully treated with MRSA

antibiotics. Conversely, Dr. Yin argued that he did not breach the standard of care because there

was no indication that Ms. Horseman had pneumonia or sepsis (and, therefore, no reason to order

certain tests) while she was in the ER on September 11th, and that Ms. Horseman acquired MRSA

pneumonia after her discharge from the ER. Additionally, Dr. Yin argued that, even if Ms.

Horseman had been diagnosed with pneumonia and sepsis while in the ER, she would not have

survived. 3

{¶6} Relevant to this appeal, the record reflects that Plaintiff’s counsel filed motions in

limine two weeks before trial, including a motion in limine to exclude any evidence related to its

infectious disease expert, John J. Cascone, M.D.’s, history of substance abuse from 2009. Plaintiff

asserted that, in September 2010, the Missouri Board of Registration for the Healing Arts placed

Dr. Cascone’s medical license on probation, which ended in September 2014. Plaintiff asserted

that Dr. Cascone admitted to his past issues with substance abuse, and that it was not relevant to

his qualifications or bias in this case.

{¶7} Dr. Yin responded in opposition, arguing that Dr. Cascone’s past unlawful acts of

fraud and dishonesty that led to his medical license being put on probation directly related to his

credibility and character for truthfulness. Dr. Yin argued that this evidence was admissible under

Evid.R. 608(B) and that its probative value was not substantially outweighed by the danger of

unfair prejudice. As a result, Dr. Yin argued, he should be allowed to rely on such evidence to

impeach Dr. Cascone at trial. Dr. Yin also argued that Plaintiff’s assertions regarding Dr.

Cascone’s past substance abuse downplayed Dr. Cascone’s past misconduct, which–per publicly

available documents from the Missouri Division of Professional Registration and/or the Missouri

State Board of Registration for the Healing Arts–included: (1) possessing and using controlled

substances, including cocaine, methamphetamine, and other prescription drugs without a valid

prescription; (2) failure to “document the suppliers’ or recipients’ DEA number and date of receipt

on his controlled substances receipt records and did not maintain complete controlled substance

receipt records[;]” (3) failure to maintain a record of all controlled substances prescriptions; (4)

prescribing “controlled substances in the absence of good faith, in the absence of properly

established physician-patient relationship;” and (5) discovering in February 2008 that his wife

“had been purchasing controlled substances and billing them to his account[,]” but failing to 4

“report the loss or diversion” to the appropriate board. Dr. Yin also asserted that Dr. Cascone

violated the terms of his probation by using controlled substances and cocaine, which resulted in

further disciplinary action and an additional term of probation. Dr. Yin argued that “Dr. Cascone’s

misconduct regarding controlled substances and fraudulent record keeping practices is directly

relevant to his credibility, qualifications, and character for truthfulness as a purported medical

expert witness * * *.” (Emphasis omitted.) Dr. Yin also argued that the probative value of such

evidence was not substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, and that the jury

should be permitted to evaluate the impeachment evidence and weigh Dr. Cascone’s testimony

accordingly.

{¶8} The trial court granted Plaintiff’s motion in limine regarding Dr. Cascone’s past

misconduct and licensure issues prior to trial without explaining its reasoning.

{¶9} Additionally, two weeks before the scheduled trial date, Dr. Yin filed numerous

motions in limine, including a motion in limine to exclude Dr. Cascone’s report and testimony

during Plaintiff’s case-in-chief at trial.1 Dr. Yin based his motion on the fact that Plaintiff only

identified Dr. Cascone as an expert after Dr. Yin had identified his experts, rendering Dr.

Cascone’s expert report untimely under the trial court’s scheduling order. Dr. Yin also based his

motion on the fact that neither the trial court’s scheduling order nor the court’s local rules provided

for rebuttal reports.

1 Several months before trial, the record also reflects that Dr. Yin moved to strike Dr. Cascone’s expert report and to exclude Dr. Cascone from testifying at trial, which the trial court denied. 5

{¶10} Trial began as scheduled on March 28, 2022. According to Dr. Yin, the trial court

denied his motion in limine on the morning of the start of trial.2 Then, on the third day of trial,

prior to Plaintiff calling Dr. Cascone as a witness, Dr. Yin renewed his objection to Dr. Cascone

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2024 Ohio 1518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horseman-v-mercy-health-lorain-hosp-ohioctapp-2024.