IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2021-CA-00493-SCT
JALENA TAYLOR AND BRIAN TAYLOR
v.
PREMIER WOMEN’S HEALTH, PLLC, AND DONIELLE DAIGLE, M.D.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/09/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. LISA P. DODSON TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: STEPHEN GILES PERESICH WILLIAM E. WHITFIELD, III KIMBERLY DAWN SAUCIER ROSETTI VICTORIA M. CHAMBERLAIN NICOLE WALL SULLIVAN WILLIAM FRANKLIN LONGWITZ DAVID A. BOWLING WHITMAN B. JOHNSON, III AMANDA B. SEYMOUR COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: DAVID A. BOWLING WILLIAM FRANKLIN LONGWITZ ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: WHITMAN B. JOHNSON, III AMANDA B. SEYMOUR NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - MEDICAL MALPRACTICE DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 07/21/2022 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE KITCHENS, P.J., BEAM AND ISHEE, JJ.
BEAM, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT: ¶1. This case involves a medical-malpractice suit brought by Jalena and Brian Taylor
against Jalena’s OB/GYN, Dr. Donielle Daigle, and her clinic, Premier Women’s Health,
PLLC.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. Plaintiffs filed suit in the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Harrison
County, Mississippi, on June 4, 2018, alleging medical negligence against Dr. Daigle and
Premier. On February 17, 2017, Jalena was admitted to Memorial Hospital of Gulfport in
active labor preparing to give birth. After pushing for two and a half hours, the baby’s head
became lodged in the mother’s pelvis, and it was determined that a caesarean section was
necessary.
¶3. Following delivery of the child, Jalena’s blood pressure dropped, and her pulse
increased. The nurses worked to firm Jalena’s uterus post delivery, but she continued to
have heavy clots and bleeding. Jalena was given a drug to tighten the uterus, and an OR team
was called to be on standby in the event surgery became necessary.
¶4. Dr. Daigle called the OR team off after Jalena’s bleeding was minimal, and her uterus
remained completely firm. But Jalena’s heart rate remained extremely elevated. Dr. Daigle
allowed Jalena to go back to her room, and she checked her again, and the uterus was firm.
A minute or two later, Jalena sat up and felt a gush of blood.
¶5. It was documented that Dr. Daigle performed a sterile vaginal examination, although
she does not recall exactly what she did. Another doctor, Dr. Alicia Ware, arrived at the
hospital and performed a sterile vaginal examination to determine how much blood was
2 involved. At this point, Jalena’s blood pressure dropped significantly, and her heart rate
remained extremely elevated.
¶6. Dr. Daigle initiated an incision for exploratory laparotomy, and the uterus was
exteriorized. There were only small points of bleeding noted from the uterine incision. The
operative report notes:
her uterus was still very atonic. The third dose of Methergine was given in the operating room and a dose of Hembate was injected into her uterus. Her uterus remained atonic even after massage. At this point we cannot see any further lacerations and decided that the only choice was to perform a hysterectomy if we cannot stop the atony and the bleeding.
¶7. Dr. Daigle and Dr. Ware made one last attempt directed at the uterine atony before
proceeding with a hysterectomy by placing a liquid-filled balloon vaginally. While doing
this, Dr. Daigle saw blood coming from a laceration in the cervix. Dr. Daigle attempted to
repair the cervical laceration with sutures, but there was still bleeding. At this point, there
was significant concern that given all the fluid and blood products Jalena had received, she
would die of the bleeding, which now included blood from the completely flaccid uterus.
¶8. The balloon was unsuccessful, and the abdominal approach was resumed. Originally
intended as a supracervical hysterectomy, it was found that the removal of the uterus did not
stop the bleeding. There was still bleeding from the cervical area, which doctors decided
they needed to amputate. Even after doing so, there was still bleeding because the laceration
extended into the vagina. When the vagina was sutured and incorporated into the repair of
the vaginal cuff, the bleeding finally stopped.
3 ¶9. The Taylors allege that Dr. Daigle failed to adequately treat Jalena and, as a result, she
cannot have any more children. A five-day jury trial was held in January 2021, and the jury
returned a twelve-to-zero verdict in favor of Dr. Daigle and Premier. Final judgment was
entered on February 8, 2021.
¶10. The Taylors moved for a new trial and or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict on
February 17, 2021. The trial court entered its order denying the motion on April 13, 2021.
On May 3, 2021, the Taylors filed their notice of appeal.
¶11. On appeal, the Taylors assert that the trial court committed reversible error by (1)
refusing to grant their cause challenges of patients of Dr. Daigle and Premier, thus failing to
give them a right to a fair and impartial jury; and (2) failing to find a deviation from the
standard of care for failing to perform a proper inspection of a genital tract laceration.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶12. “Since the determination of whether to grant or deny a new trial, on motion of a party
or by order entered on the initiative of the court, is within the sound discretion of the trial
court, [the Supreme Court] reviews such orders for abuse of discretion.” White v. Stewman,
932 So. 2d 27, 33 (Miss. 2006) (citing White v. Yellow Freight System, Inc., 905 So. 2d 506
(Miss. 2004)).
¶13. An order granting a new trial gives the trial court “the discretionary authority to set
aside a jury verdict and resubmit questions of fact to another jury[.]” Id. In ordering a new
trial, the trial court determines that “the jury verdict is in error, and that due to mistakes made
4 in conducting the trial, mistakes made in applying the law, or due to a jury verdict that is
against the great weight of the evidence, a new trial is necessary.” Id.
DISCUSSION
I. Whether the trial court’s refusal to strike jurors for cause as requested by Plaintiffs resulted in a prejudiced jury entitling them to a new trial.
¶14. The question here is whether the trial court’s denial of challenges for cause of two
prospective jurors numbers 8 and 14, Omera Lofton and Carol Camp, were proper.
According to the Taylors, if the trial court had simply granted those two challenges, a jury
unconnected to Dr. Daigle or Premier could have been assured without denying The Taylors
their fair allotment of peremptory challenges.
¶15. On voir dire, several prospective jurors identified themselves as patients of Dr. Daigle
and/or Premier. The Taylors exercised challenges for cause on two prospective jurors who
were then patients of Dr. Daigle. Although they expressed an ability to be fair, the court
granted the cause challenges, acknowledging the physician-patient relationship.
¶16. Juror number 8, Omera Lofton, was a former patient of Dr. Daigle’s. When asked if
she could be fair, she replied that she could be. The Taylors’ counsel did not ask Lofton any
follow-up questions to better ascertain the extent of any treatment she received from Dr.
Daigle. She was not asked if she would be going to Dr. Daigle anytime in the future. Lofton
indicated that she could be fair and impartial.
¶17. The Taylors raised a cause challenge as to Lofton, but it was denied because Lofton
said that she could be fair. The Taylors exercised a peremptory challenge to excuse her.
5 ¶18. Juror Number 14, Carol Camp, explained that she had been to Premier in the past and
had seen a colleague of Dr. Daigle’s back in 2019 but could not remember his name. The
Taylors’ counsel did not question Camp about her experience with that colleague. Camp
stressed that although she might go back to Premier in the future, this fact would not affect
her one way or the other. The Taylors raised a cause challenge on Camp, but it was denied
because Camp never had been a patient of Dr. Daigle herself. The Taylors’ final peremptory
challenge was used.
¶19. The Taylors allege that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to grant the
challenges for cause even though they had a treatment relationship with Dr. Daigle and
Premier, thus denying them an impartial jury. Had they been removed for cause, they
claimed a jury could have easily been formed without costing the Taylors half of their
peremptory strikes.
¶20. Rule 47(c) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure states that “in actions tried
before a 12-person jury, each side may exercise four peremptory challenges.” Miss. R. Civ.
P. 47(c). This rule is in furtherance of a constitutional guarantee of the right of trial by an
impartial jury, which is inviolate. Miss. Const. art. 3, §§ 26, 31. Under these constitutional
provisions, “[it] is the duty of the court to see that a competent, fair and impartial jury is
empaneled.” Marshall Durbin, Inc. v. Tew, 381 So. 2d 152, 154 (Miss. 1980) (internal
quotation marks omitted) (quoting Miss. Power Co. v. Stribling, 3 So. 2d 807, 845 (Miss.
1941)).
6 ¶21. The Taylors aver that these constitutional provisions provide the grounds for granting
a new trial in a medical-malpractice case relying on Hudson v. Taleff, 546 So. 2d 359 (Miss.
1989). In Taleff, the plaintiff challenged the jury members because certain members of the
jury panel or their families had been patients of Dr. Taleff or his medical partners or
represented by Dr. Taleff’s attorneys or his partners. Id. at 361.
Of the 40,338 qualified voters of Lauderdale County, ninety-two people were summoned for jury duty during the week of the trial of February 2, 1987; however, there was only a jury pool of twenty-five from which a jury could be selected. Of these twenty-five, twelve, or 48 percent, had some connection with Dr. Taleff, his medical partners or his attorney.
Id. at 361-62.
¶22. The plaintiff challenged thirteen of the twenty-five member jury pool, and the trial
judge excluded two of the thirteen prospective jurors challenged. Id. at 362. On appeal, the
plaintiff argued that the trial judge’s failure to exclude more jurors required plaintiff to
exhaust all peremptory challenges on persons who should have been removed for cause. Id.
¶23. This Court found “because of the ‘statistical aberration’ of the makeup of the venire
and the strong likelihood that the opportunity for undue influence over other jurors in this
case was too great, this Court holds that the trial jury was not impartial. This case should be
remanded for a new trial.” Id. at 363.
¶24. The Taylors aver that, unlike in Taleff, in which a statistical aberration would have
required summoning other jurors or a significant expansion of the peremptory challenges in
order to empanel a jury without connection to the defendant, here, no such aberration was
present because plenty of jurors were available who had no connection to Dr. Daigle or
7 Premier. Yet they were required to exercise two peremptory challenges on patients who had
either been seen by Premier or by Dr. Daigle personally.
¶25. According to the Taylors, there was no assurance that these patients would not be
returning for treatment to Premier or to Dr. Daigle, where the patients would be put in the
awkward position of having to explain any verdict against these care providers.
¶26. The Taylors contend that Lofton and Camp had a relationship with Dr. Daigle that was
significantly closer than that of the prospective juror in Scott v Ball, 595 So. 2d 848, 851
(Miss. 1992). Although the Scott Court did not find an abuse of discretion for failing to grant
a challenge for cause of the juror whose son had been treated by the defendant physician, the
Court did find that a challenge for cause for another juror should have been granted where
members of the juror’s family had been treated by the physician over the course of ten years.
Id.
¶27. The Taylors argue the mere existence of relationships between the family members
and the defendant physician was enough to justify granting the challenge. Id. at 849. The
Scott Court noted that the court should give deference to an assurance of impartiality and also
noted the court’s discretion in managing challenges for cause. Id. at 850. However, where
other available jurors unconnected are available, a rational cause challenge should be
granted. Id.
¶28. The Taylors also rely heavily on Brown ex rel. Webb v. Blackwood, 697 So. 2d 763,
769 (Miss. 1997), in which defendant physician asked the court to remove all prospective
8 jurors with whom the physicians’ clinic had a treatment relationship. The court obliged, and
that decision was affirmed on appeal. Id. at 771.
¶29. However, this Court has held that “[t]he selection of jurors is ‘a judgment call
peculiarly within the province of the circuit judge, and one we will not on appeal second
guess in the absence of a record showing a clear abuse of discretion.’” Id. (quoting Scott, 595
So. 2d at 850).
¶30. Dr. Daigle avers that the Taylors have no valid claim to a fair and impartial jury
because they were able to use their peremptory challenges with some left over to ensure there
was no person on the panel with any connection to Dr. Daigle and Premier. Further, cases
cited by the Taylors generally deal with situations in which the jury pool was such that even
with all available challenges, a patient of the defendant was left on the jury, which was not
the case here.
¶31. The trial court’s decision not to strike Lofton and Camp for cause was clearly not an
abuse of discretion. The Taylors had a fair and impartial jury with no juror connected to Dr.
Daigle. There is no per se rule of disqualification due to a personal or professional
relationship between party and proposed juror. Toyota Motor Corp. v. McLaurin, 642 So.
2d 351, 358 (Miss. 1994).
¶32. Each of the two prospective jurors in question stated they could be fair and impartial.
“[J]urors take their oaths and responsibilities seriously, and when a prospective juror assures
the court that, despite the circumstance that raises some question as to his qualification, this
will not affect his verdict, this promise is entitled to considerable deference.” Scott, 595 So.
9 2d at 850 (citing Harding v. Est. of Harding, 185 So. 2d 452, 456 (Miss. 1966); Howell v.
State, 65 So. 641, 642 (Miss. 1914)).
¶33. “[T]rial judges must scrupulously guard the impartiality of the jury and take corrective
measures to insure an unbiased jury.” Id. (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks
omitted) (quoting Taleff, 546 So. 2d at 363; Stribling, 3 So. 2d at 810).
¶34. The trial court went to great lengths to analyze the jurors, their demeanors, and their
reactions to all questions posed to them during voir dire. It carefully exercised its discretion
and studied the issue of impartiality. The court struck two other jurors who were current
patients of Dr. Daigle, even though they assured the court they could be fair. Therefore, we
find the trial court did not err by refusing to strike prospective jurors 8 and 14.
II. Whether the jury’s verdict was so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence that it must be reversed and remanded for a new trial.
¶35. This Court has explained that “in deciding a motion for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict, the trial court must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-
moving party, giving that party the benefit of all favorable inferences that reasonably may
be drawn therefrom.” Solanki v. Ervin, 21 So. 3d 552, 565 (Miss. 2009) (quoting Corley v
Evans, 835 So. 2d 30, 36 (Miss. 2003)). If the moving party is not entitled to JNOV, the trial
judge may grant a new trial if the verdict “is against the overwhelming weight of the
evidence[.]” Bobby Kitchens Inc. v. Miss. Ins. Guar. Ass’n, 560 So. 2d 129, 132 (Miss.
1989) (citing Adams v. Green, 474 So. 2d 577, 581 (Miss. 1985)).
10 ¶36. A motion for new trial “is addressed to the discretion of the [trial judge.]” Amiker
v. Drugs For Less, Inc., 796 So. 2d 942, 947 (Miss. 2000). The appellate court will affirm
a trial court’s denial of a motion for JNOV “if there is substantial evidence to support the
verdict.” Adcock v. Miss. Transp. Comm’n, 981 So. 2d 942, 948 (Miss. 2008) (citing
Johnson v. St. Dominics-Jackson Mem’l Hosp., 967 So. 2d 20, 22 (Miss. 2007)).
¶37. The Taylors contend that the evidence was uncontroverted that not doing a vaginal
inspection in a particular manner prior to taking Jalena to the operating room was a deviation
from the standard of care. Their expert, Dr. Jeffrey Koren, testified that the standard of care
requires an obstetrician, when confronted with postpartum bleeding, to perform a careful
examination through the vagina to rule out laceration of the genital tract.
¶38. Dr. Koren based his testimony on Williams Obstetrics and found that Dr. Daigle did
not perform the required thorough inspection of Jalena Taylor’s vagina until her last-ditch
effort to insert a balloon to control uterine atony in the midst of the exploratory laparotomy.
The Taylors argue that Dr. Daigle’s expert, Dr. Shoemaker, did not refute that a vaginal
inspection is a frontline response to every case of postpartum hemorrhage. Dr. Daigle argues
that she was under no obligation to challenge Dr. Koren’s expert opinions with contrary
expert testimony. McCaffery v. Puckett, 784 So. 2d 197, 205-06 (Miss. 2001).
¶39. Rather, the Taylors contend that Dr. Shoemaker simply made the generic statement
at the outset of his testimony that Dr. Daigle’s performance was “exemplary.” The Taylors
rely on Butler v. Chadwick Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, 223 So. 3d 835 (Miss. Ct.
App. 2017), arguing that Dr. Shoemaker’s testimony was conclusory. In Butler, the court
11 had granted a directed verdict when the opposing expert presented a conclusory opinion on
the standard of care violation. Id. at 844.
¶40. Dr. Daigle testified that she did not go to the operating room right away to do a
vaginal exam because the medicine she was administering for uterine atony initially stopped
the bleeding. Furthermore, she believed that uterine atony was the sole cause of the bleeding
and that she did not need to search for a laceration because the bleeding was in the form of
clots.
¶41. According to Dr. Daigle, when the blood is in the form of clots rather than bright red
bleeding, this allows an obstetrician to be certain the bleeding has one source and is uterine
atony. She testified that bleeding from a vaginal laceration does not appear in the form of
clots. The Taylors, on the other hand, aver that the literature offers no “clot exception” to
the mandate that an obstetrician must always perform a proper exam to rule out a genital tract
laceration.
¶42. After Jalena experienced a gush, Dr. Daigle admitted that she suspected something
other than uterine atony was present, at which point Dr. Koren testified she should have
performed a genital tract laceration because the uterus was still functioning at that point and
salvageable. However, Dr. Ware testified that the laceration was not significant enough to
cause the bleeding they were seeing and also because of the location of the laceration; the
laceration could not be seen vaginally or through the abdomen without removing the uterus.
¶43. The jury heard evidence from both sides, including expert witness testimony, and then
delivered its verdict on the last day of a week-long trial. “Only when the verdict is so
12 contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence that to allow it to stand would sanction
an unconscionable injustice, will this Court disturb it on appeal.” Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v.
Johnson, 807 So. 2d 382, 389 (Miss. 2002) (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting
Herrington v. Spell, 692 So. 2d 93, 103–04 (Miss. 1997)).
¶44. The jury was instructed on the application of the standard of care to Dr. Daigle’s
actions. They were also instructed on the necessity for finding of proximate cause between
Dr. Daigle’s actions and Taylor’s hysterectomy. The jury decided that Dr. Daigle did not
breach the applicable standard of care and, as a result, none of her actions were the proximate
cause of Taylor’s hysterectomy.
¶45. The jury also considered whether Dr. Koren was to be believed rather than Dr.
Shoemaker. The jury could have chosen to disregard Dr. Koren’s opinions and to accept Dr.
Daigle’s and Dr. Shoemaker’s opinion, which was their right. “The jury . . . may reject the
expert’s testimony just as they might any other witness.” Hollingsworth v. Boviard Supply
Co., 465 So. 2d 311, 314 (Miss. 1985).
¶46. Lastly, the jury was instructed that the Taylors had to prove by a preponderance of the
evidence not just that there was bleeding from trauma to Taylor’s genital tract, either
negligently caused by Dr. Daigle or not timely recognized by Dr. Daigle, but also that, as a
result of this alleged negligence, a hysterectomy was required.
¶47. Drs. Daigle, Ware, and Shoemaker all testified that the cause of Taylor’s hysterectomy
was arterial bleeding from the former placental site on the uterine wall due to uterine atony
13 and not from a genital tract laceration. So the failure to do an earlier vaginal inspection
would not have a bearing on the outcome to Taylor.
¶48. Dr. Daigle presented credible evidence that no vaginal laceration was causing Taylor’s
bleeding that led to her hysterectomy and, as a result, she did not believe that a vaginal exam
should have been performed earlier than she did. Therefore, we find that the trial court
correctly denied the Taylors’ motion for JNOV and a new trial.
CONCLUSION
¶49. We affirm the verdict of the jury because it was reached on factual evidence in favor
of Dr. Daigle and Premier by an impartial jury. All twelve of the jurors agreed on the
verdict, and the verdict was not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. It should
not be disturbed.
¶50. AFFIRMED.
KITCHENS AND KING, P.JJ., COLEMAN, MAXWELL, CHAMBERLIN, ISHEE AND GRIFFIS, JJ., CONCUR. RANDOLPH, C.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.