Indiana Department of Insurance v. Everhart

960 N.E.2d 129, 2012 Ind. LEXIS 10, 2012 WL 169777
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 20, 2012
Docket84S01-1105-CV-282
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 960 N.E.2d 129 (Indiana Department of Insurance v. Everhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indiana Department of Insurance v. Everhart, 960 N.E.2d 129, 2012 Ind. LEXIS 10, 2012 WL 169777 (Ind. 2012).

Opinion

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.

Robin Everhart filed suit against the Indiana Patient’s Compensation Fund (PCF) to recover excess damages after settling a wrongful death claim against an emergency room physician in whose care her husband died. The PCF asked the trial court to reduce its award of damages to account for the twenty percent chance that Robin’s husband would have died anyway, even in the absence of the physician’s negligence. The trial court declined to do so, awarding Robin the statutory maximum $1 million in excess damages. We affirm, but on slightly different grounds.

Facts and Procedural History

Around 2 p.m. on October 4, 2004, James K. Everhart, Jr. was riding his motorcycle on Margaret Avenue in Terre Haute, Indiana. Tragically, Larry B. Perkins, an employee of Standard Forwarding Company, Inc., crashed his semi-truck into Everhart’s motorcycle and ran over Ever-hart.

Because the accident occurred so close to a fire station and a bystander ran in to personally alert the paramedics, the paramedics arrived on the scene almost exactly as the first call came into the emergency dispatch. Paramedic James Henderson and EMT Norm Loudermilk both testified that Everhart sustained massive injuries but that they were able to control his bleeding. (Appellant’s App. at 16.)

Henderson and Loudermilk both later came to expect Everhart would survive. (Appellant’s App. at 17.) Although Ever-hart appeared unconscious when the paramedics loaded him into the ambulance, he opened his eyes and started speaking to Loudermilk after receiving an intravenous drip and oxygen. (Appellant’s App. at 16.) Initially, Everhart registered only a six on the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), but he improved to an eleven and then a thirteen on the GCS during the ambulance ride to the hospital. (Appellant’s App. at 17.) Although the paramedics could not pick up a blood pressure reading for Everhart, Henderson testified that their equipment would not have been sensitive enough to pick up a blood pressure of less than 80/40 mmHg. (Appellant’s App. at 18.)

The paramedics transferred Everhart to the care of Dr. C. Bilston Clarke, a physician in the emergency room at Terre Haute Regional Hospital. Despite Ever-hart’s severe bleeding at the scene, Dr. Clarke did not immediately administer a blood transfusion to Everhart. Everhart later died of a cardiac arrest while still in Dr. Clarke’s care. Everhart left behind his wife and son, Robin and Troy Ever-hart.

*132 Robin filed a wrongful death suit against Perkins and Standard Forwarding in October 2004. The parties settled for $1.9 million. Robin amended her complaint in October 2005, adding a wrongful death claim against Dr. Clarke. Again, the parties settled out of court, this time for a lump-sum payment and future payments with a total present value of $187,001. Robin then filed a third amended complaint on June 17, 2008, adding a claim against the PCF that sought to recover excess damages over and above her settlement with Dr. Clarke.

At trial, the parties disputed whether Everhart suffered a cardiac arrest in the ambulance or after arriving at the hospital. Robin’s expert witness, Dr. Frank Miller, testified that if Everhart had suffered a cardiac arrest after arriving at the hospital, then he would still have stood an eighty percent chance of surviving his injuries if he had received proper medical care. (Appellant’s App. at 19-20.) By contrast, the PCF’s expert witness, Dr. Geoffrey L. Billows, testified that if Ever-hart had suffered a cardiac arrest before arriving at the hospital, then he would only have stood a zero to three percent chance of surviving his injuries even with proper medical care. (Appellant’s App. at 17.)

Finding that Everhart did not suffer a cardiac arrest until after arriving at the hospital, the trial court accepted Dr. Miller’s opinion that Everhart stood an eighty percent chance of recovering had he received proper medical care. (Appellant’s App. at 19-20.) It accepted Henderson’s testimony that the equipment in the ambulance would not have been sensitive enough to pick up some blood pressure readings and Dr. Billows’ testimony that it would have been physically impossible for anyone suffering a cardiac arrest to exhibit a GCS of thirteen. (Appellant’s App. at 18.)

Relying on our holdings in Atterholt v. Herbst, 902 N.E.2d 220 (Ind.2009), Cahoon v. Cummings, 734 N.E.2d 535 (Ind.2000), and Mayhue v. Sparkman, 653 N.E.2d 1384 (Ind.1995), the PCF argued that it should not be responsible for the portion of Everhart’s injuries he probably would have sustained even in the absence of any medical negligence. (Appellant’s App. at 82-85.) The PCF therefore urged the trial court to reduce any award of damages by twenty percent to account for the chance that Everhart would have died anyway, even if Dr. Clarke had rendered proper medical care. (Appellant’s App. at 21.) The PCF further argued that it was entitled to a set-off in an amount equal to the payments Robin received in settlement from Standard Forwarding and Dr. Clarke’s insurance company. (Appellant’s App. at 85.)

Instead, after finding that the plaintiffs’ losses exceeded $3.15 million, the trial court held that our Mayhue line of cases applied only when a patient initially stood a fifty percent or worse chance of avoiding any injury. (Appellant’s App. at 31.) The court refused to reduce its overall finding on injuries by twenty percent and therefore awarded Robin and Troy the remaining $1 million of the statutory cap. (Appellant’s App. at 21, 32.) Because the court found that Robin and Troy’s actual losses exceeded their recoveries from Standard Forwarding and Dr. Clarke’s insurance company plus the maximum amount of excess damages the trial court could impose on the PCF, the court found it unnecessary to address the PCF’s argument that it was further entitled to a set-off in the amount equal to what Robin and Troy already recovered in settlements. (Appellant’s App. at 28, 31.) It further declined to address Robin’s response that it should reduce the amount of any set-off *133 to account for Robin’s attorneys’ fees and expenses. (Appellant’s App. at 28, 31.)

On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed based on our Mayhue line of cases and therefore remanded for further findings of fact as to the damages owed Robin, Troy, and Everhart’s estate. Indiana Dep’t of Ins. v. Everhart, 932 N.E.2d 684 (Ind.Ct.App.2010). We granted transfer. Indiana Dep’t of Ins. v. Everhart, 950 N.E.2d 1208 (Ind.2011) (table).

Standard of Review

On an appeal from a final judgment, we review conclusions of law de novo. Johnson v. Johnson, 920 N.E.2d 253 (Ind.2010). When a trial court has entered separate findings of fact and conclusions of law, we review findings of fact for clear error. Ind. Trial Rule 52(A).

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Bluebook (online)
960 N.E.2d 129, 2012 Ind. LEXIS 10, 2012 WL 169777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indiana-department-of-insurance-v-everhart-ind-2012.