Kim Wyatt Vs. Iowa Department Of Human Services And/or Iowa Department Of Inspections And Appeals

CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 18, 2008
Docket139 / 06-0351
StatusPublished

This text of Kim Wyatt Vs. Iowa Department Of Human Services And/or Iowa Department Of Inspections And Appeals (Kim Wyatt Vs. Iowa Department Of Human Services And/or Iowa Department Of Inspections And Appeals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kim Wyatt Vs. Iowa Department Of Human Services And/or Iowa Department Of Inspections And Appeals, (iowa 2008).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA No. 139 / 06-0351

Filed January 18, 2008

KIM WYATT,

Appellee,

vs.

IOWA DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES and/or IOWA DEPARTMENT OF INSPECTIONS AND APPEALS,

Appellants.

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County, Douglas

S. Russell, Judge.

Nurse sought judicial review of finding of dependent adult abuse

and inclusion of name on the dependent adult abuse registry.

DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT

COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, and John R. Lundquist,

Assistant Attorney General, for appellants.

Vernon P. Squires and Nikki J. Johnson of Bradley & Riley, PC,

Cedar Rapids, for appellee. 2

APPEL, Justice.

In this case, the central issue is whether a nurse who seeks to

muffle the screams of a distressed patient in order to protect the health

of another seriously ill patient commits an assault under Iowa’s

dependant abuse statute and as a result, has earned a place on Iowa’s

dependent adult abuse registry. This case has caromed through the

legal system, suffering a seemingly unending series of reversals and

appeals.

We now settle the matter. No assault occurred under the facts of

this case. Therefore, the decision of the court of appeals is vacated and

the decision of the district court, including expunging Wyatt’s name from

the dependent adult abuse registry, is affirmed.

I. Factual and Procedural History.

Kim Wyatt is a registered nurse employed by the University of Iowa

Hospitals and Clinics. On May 12, 2004, Wyatt was assigned to the

neuroscience unit, a stressful unit for medical staff under even the best

of circumstances. On that day, Wyatt attended to a patient who suffered

from a subarachnoid hemorrhage, a neurological condition that rendered

the patient highly susceptible to stimuli such as light and noise.

Patients with this condition who are exposed to excess stimuli can suffer

ruptured aneurysms so severe as to cause paralysis or death. As a

result, such patients are typically kept in darkness in private rooms

without television, radios, telephones, or other sources of stimulation.

Wyatt believed her patient’s condition was particularly acute in light of

the level of pain medication that had been prescribed by physicians. The

level was twice as high as normally prescribed.

In a room adjacent to Wyatt’s patient, E.W. was hospitalized. E.W.

was an eighty-two-year-old man admitted for evaluation as a possible 3

candidate for brain surgery to remove a tumor from his frontal lobe.

E.W. also suffered from a heart condition, hypertension, and was prone

to bouts of dementia. This combination of ailments made E.W. a difficult

patient who resisted all invasive medical procedures. As a result, he was

often placed in restraints for his own protection and the safety of hospital

staff.

While Wyatt was attending her patient, two nurses and a nursing

assistant attempted to administer an IV to E.W. E.W. resisted, and

began screaming, “Help me, help me.” Wyatt and another nurse,

responding to the commotion, ran into the room. By the time she

entered, Wyatt found four staff members attempting to restrain E.W.

Faced with the chaotic situation, Wyatt became concerned that the

commotion could harm her subarachnoid patient in the next room.

Seeking to abate the threat and protect her patient by muffling the

shouts, Wyatt grabbed a pillow and placed it over E.W.’s mouth, below

his nose.

One of the nurses present in E.W.’s room objected to the use of the

pillow and asked Wyatt to discontinue her efforts. Upon a second

request, Wyatt removed the pillow. No one ran a stopwatch in the room,

but those present estimated that the incident lasted between ten and

thirty seconds. There were no signs that the pillow caused E.W. physical

or respiratory distress. The patient had no memory of the incident, and

thus voiced no complaint as to this course of treatment.

Another treating nurse, however, filed a report with Melissa Gross,

the nurse manager of the unit, the following morning. After investigating

the matter, Gross concluded that dependent adult abuse had not

occurred. Gross’s conclusion rested on her belief that Wyatt did not

intend to abuse E.W. and that no harm resulted from her actions. Based 4

on her investigation, Gross found that Wyatt’s sole intent was to protect

her subarachnoid patient, not to harm E.W. The associate director of

clinical practice, Ellen Cram, agreed with Gross’s assessment. Although

Wyatt received a favorable performance review by her supervisors after

the incident, the hospital elected to file a report with the Iowa

Department of Inspections and Appeals (DIA) as a possible instance of

dependent adult abuse.

DIA investigated the matter and determined that Wyatt had

committed dependent adult abuse by unreasonably punishing and

assaulting E.W. DIA thus released Wyatt’s name to the Department of

Human Services (DHS) for placement on the dependent adult abuse

registry. Wyatt appealed her inclusion on the registry.

After an evidentiary hearing, an administrative law judge (ALJ)

issued a comprehensive proposed decision. In the proposed decision, the

ALJ made findings of fact and conclusions of law. In the findings of fact,

the ALJ found that Wyatt was not trying to hurt, punish, harm, cause

fear, or offensively contact E.W. when she placed the pillow over his

mouth. He concluded that Wyatt’s only concern was for the safety of her

patient.

In the conclusions of law, the ALJ noted that under Iowa Code

section 235B.2(5)(a)(1)(a) (2003), dependent adult abuse includes

“assault of a dependent adult.” The ALJ further noted that under the

applicable administrative rule, assault under this Code provision is the

same as criminal assault defined in Iowa Code section 708.1. Iowa

Admin. Code r. 441—176.1. He went on to note that while language in

Bacon v. Bacon, 567 N.W.2d 414 (Iowa 1997), suggested that assault

might be a general intent crime, this court overruled such an approach

and declared assault a specific intent crime in State v. Heard, 636 5

N.W.2d 227, 231 (Iowa 2001). In light of Heard, the ALJ determined that

negligent assault is not recognized by Iowa law. Based on the evidence

in the record, the ALJ concluded that Wyatt did not commit dependent

adult abuse and ordered that the report be expunged.

The March 10, 2005 decision of the ALJ was not mailed to the

attorney for DIA. The decision itself notes that it was copied to the

attorney through local delivery. The attorney for DIA, however, stated

that she did not receive a copy of the proposed decision by mail or by

hand delivery and was unaware of the decision until March 29, 2005,

when counsel received a phone inquiry from the appeals division asking

whether an appeal had been filed. Subsequently, counsel for DIA filed an

appeal of the ALJ’s decision to DIA’s director on the following day.

The administrative rules of the department require that appeals be

filed within fifteen days of the issuance of a proposed decision. Wyatt

thus sought dismissal of the appeal as untimely, noting that a copy of

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Related

State v. Bedard
668 N.W.2d 598 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2003)
Bacon Ex Rel. Bacon v. Bacon
567 N.W.2d 414 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1997)
State v. Keeton
710 N.W.2d 531 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2006)

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