Hummer v. Levin

673 A.2d 631, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 48, 1996 WL 125973
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 1996
Docket93-CV-721
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 673 A.2d 631 (Hummer v. Levin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hummer v. Levin, 673 A.2d 631, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 48, 1996 WL 125973 (D.C. 1996).

Opinions

WAGNER, Chief Judge:

This case arises out of a claim of dental malpractice filed by appellant, Judith Ann Hummer, against appellees, Drs. Levin, Cohen, Goodman & Siegel, P.A., a professional corporation, for damages resulting from injuries sustained during a procedure performed by Dr. Martin D. Levin in the course of his employment with the corporation. The case was tried twice by a jury. The first trial resulted in a jury verdict for Hummer in the amount of $4,000,000. However, the trial court granted appellees’ motion for new trial on the ground that its ruling excluding certain evidence proffered by appellees prejudiced their rights. In the second trial, the jury returned a verdict for Hummer in the amount of $3,290,000, or $710,000 less than the judgment in the first trial. On appeal, Ms. Hummer challenges the order of the trial court setting aside the first verdict and judgment and granting a new trial, and she seeks to have the original verdict reinstated, We hold that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering a new trial and reverse and remand for reinstatement of the original verdict.

I.

On November 9, 1987, Ms. Hummer went to Dr. Levin, an endodontist, to have a root canal performed. Since the procedure is quite painful, Dr. Levin anesthetized the area with lidocaine by using a technique called a mandibular block.1 When the effect of the lidocaine had worn off, Ms. Hummer discovered that her tongue and jaw were injured severely. As a result of the injection, Ms. Hummer, who was 34 years old at the time, sustained extensive nerve damage to her tongue and mouth which caused her tongue muscle to function improperly and which permanently impaired her speech.2 Ms. Hummer now attends Gallaudet University to learn American Sign Language. She communicates through note writing, electronic devices, and interpreters. She drools uncontrollably and has difficulty swallowing, tasting, chewing and sipping. She cannot perform simple dental hygiene, or undergo general dental care without full general anesthesia in a hospital. She has severe, chronic face and mouth pain, which distorts her facial expressions. She has frequent episodes of severe, stabbing pain in her tongue brought on by swallowing, coughing, or laughing.

Ms. Hummer testified that when Dr. Levin performed the mandibular block, he rapidly inserted the long needle into the tissue on the inner side of her right jaw joint, which caused her such intense pain that she involuntarily lunged forward into an upright posi[634]*634tion. According to Ms. Hummer, Dr. Levin pushed her back into the chair, using the hand that was holding the syringe. She said that Dr. Levin immediately plunged the syringe handle down and injected the first car-pule of lidocaine into her jaw. While the needle was still implanted in her mouth, according to Ms. Hummer, Dr. Levin removed the spent carpule, inserted a second into the syringe, and administered another injection. According to Ms. Hummer’s experts, it was the manner in which Dr. Levin gave the injection which constituted malpractice. Specifically, the experts testified that Dr. Levin breached the standard of care by (1) injecting the needle too rapidly at the risk of causing traumatic injury, (2) failing to withdraw the needle when Ms. Hummer reacted to the shock and the burning sensation on her tongue,3 and (3) changing the carpule with the needle still inserted in the patient’s tissue. The experts testified that these negligent acts or omissions were the proximate cause of the injuries which Ms. Hummer sustained.

Ms. Hummer testified that a dental assistant was present before and during the injection. She specifically remembered that the dental assistant was on her left and that after she reacted to the injection, Dr. Levin was on her right. She also remembered that after she reacted to the injection, the assistant passed the second carpule to Dr. Levin, right in front of her. Dr. Levin testified that he had no recollection of administering the injection to Ms. Hummer. However, he testified that his records have the notation “L2,” which indicates that he administered two car-pules of lidocaine. He testified that he never would continue an injection over a patient’s protests of pain. He further stated that he never would change a carpule with the needle still in the patient’s mouth. On the contrary, he stated that he always extracts the syringe before inserting a new carpule and gives a second injection only after the first has taken effect. Dr. Levin testified that if Ms. Hummer had reacted to the injection as she described, he would have remembered it because it would have been so unusual.

Dr. Levin testified that he had no recollection of whether anyone else was in the room, but that an assistant is usually present during such a procedure, although one is not required to be present. Dr. Levin testified that when assistants are assisting him, they must watch because they hand him the instruments. He denied that any assistant would turn her back during the procedure to prepare trays, take phone calls, or make entries on the patient’s chart. He said only one of three assistants would have been present, Prabhjot Gabri, Renee Strong, or Margaret Mothersole.4

Appellees sought to call all three assistants to testify at the first trial to provide (1) “negative evidence,” ie., evidence that whoever was present at the time of the injection would have been close enough to Dr. Levin and Ms. Hummer to have heard or seen the alleged incident, but did not hear or see it and (2) “habit evidence” — that the witnesses were familiar with Dr. Levin’s general injection practices. The trial court (Judge Salz-man) sustained Ms. Hummer’s objection to Ms. Gabri’s testimony concerning how Dr. Levin administered injections generally or by habit.5 The court permitted Gabri to testify in response to a lengthy, hypothetical question on her “negative knowledge” of the incident. The question posed was as follows:

By MR. KASTANTIN:
Q: I want you to assume that you’re in the room assisting Dr. Levin during the course of a mandibular block injection to Ms. Hummer.
I want you to assume that just as Dr. Levin is about to start the injection, Ms. Hummer raises her arms to stop him and proceeds to relate a story about a prior problem she had a week before with Dr. Savoia.
[635]*635I want you to assume that during the course of the injection, Dr. Levin administers the injection rapidly or quickly, and that Ms. Hummer jumps or sits straight up in her chair in pain.
I want you to assume that Dr. Levin does not withdraw the needle but instead forces her back down into the chair and finishes the injection.
I want you to assume that he did not remove the needle from her mouth and with a needle still in the tissue, I want you to assume that you then handed him a second earpule of anesthetic which he then changed in the syringe with the needle still in the patient’s mouth. He then proceeded to perform a root canal.
Would you remember such an event if it occurred?
MR. BUSCEMI: Objection, Your Honor. WITNESS: Yes, I would.
THE COURT: I will allow it, I will permit it. If that’s the question, I will say that she would remember such an event if it occurred.
MR.

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Hummer v. Levin
673 A.2d 631 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
673 A.2d 631, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 48, 1996 WL 125973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hummer-v-levin-dc-1996.