Kristine Smotherman v. Cass Regional Medical Center

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 10, 2015
DocketWD78111
StatusPublished

This text of Kristine Smotherman v. Cass Regional Medical Center (Kristine Smotherman v. Cass Regional Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kristine Smotherman v. Cass Regional Medical Center, (Mo. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

KRISTINE SMOTHERMAN, ) ) Appellant, ) ) WD78111 v. ) ) OPINION FILED: ) November 10, 2015 CASS REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER, ) ) Respondent. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cass County, Missouri The Honorable William B. Collins, Judge

Before Division Three: Joseph M. Ellis, Presiding Judge, and Karen King Mitchell and Gary D. Witt, Judges

Kristine Smotherman appeals a verdict in favor of Defendant, Cass Regional Medical

Center. Smotherman alleged that she slipped and fell while on the Medical Center’s property

and was injured due to the Medical Center’s negligence.1 Smotherman argues that the trial court

should have granted a new trial due to juror misconduct. We reverse and remand.

1 The Petition also alleged claims on behalf of Smotherman’s husband, Brian, who has not filed a notice of appeal or participated in the briefing. Facts

Smotherman was at the Medical Center for a follow-up visit with her doctor six weeks

after having knee surgery. Following her appointment, Smotherman approached a nurses’

station and asked where the closest restroom was. One of the nurses escorted Smotherman to the

nearest restroom, which they discovered was dark because the Medical Center was operating at

the time on emergency generators that did not supply power to every room. The nurse then led

Smotherman to another, smaller, restroom that was lit.

Smotherman testified that, as she was about to stand up after using the toilet, the lights

went out. She then testified that, as she was getting up, her “feet just went completely out from

underneath” her. She testified that it was “just – like [she] was on rollerskates.” Smotherman

slipped and fell, hitting her head, back, and arm. A nurse found Smotherman on the floor and

took her to the emergency room. Smotherman testified that, while in the emergency room, she

heard a nurse or doctor state that “she slipped and fell in the hall bathroom on soap.” On

cross-examination, Smotherman admitted that she did not look to see what she had slipped on,

and did not recall seeing anything on the restroom floor or any stains, other than blood, on her

clothing. Smotherman received injuries from the accident and experienced severe complications

due to an infection caused by a type of bacteria that entered Smotherman’s arm through a cut she

received in the fall.

Smotherman’s theory at trial was that the soap dispenser next to the sink in the small

restroom had been leaking soap, as evidenced by a strip of rust on the heating element directly

below the dispenser and the sink. Smotherman argued that, because a person entering the

restroom had to pass very close to the sink due to the location of the door, soap on the floor

2 could have made its way onto Smotherman’s shoes as she entered the restroom or found its way

to the floor by the toilet, causing the floor to be slick.

In its closing argument, the Medical Center focused on Smotherman’s credibility, noting

her evolving story and multiple criminal convictions, as well as the lack of direct evidence of

soap on the floor. The Medical Center argued that the rust on the heating element was more

likely from people dripping water when they reached for the soap dispenser with wet hands, and

discussed:

the improbability that a person with sneakers that she had on, Nike tennis shoes, I believe, with rubber soles, both of them were such that both her feet slipped out from under her as she tried to stand up. Her feet slid out, she hit her back, she came up and hit her head, then she hit a register and then she ended up in a sitting position. That doesn’t make much sense either.

The Medial Center argued that it was more likely that Smotherman simply fell, due to problems

with her knee: “We know she has had falls, we know she had a bad knee that she just had

surgery on, we know she’s had that problem since she was 12 she said. We know she has had

several falls before this, a couple that caused her to fall and hit her eye.”

The Medical Center also noted that, during a visit with a doctor roughly a week after the

fall, Smotherman told the treating physician that “she stumbled and maybe slipped on some

water or something on the floor and fell.” The following day, however, while visiting a second

physician, Smotherman reported “that she slipped on some soap on the floor.” The Medical

Center argued to the jury:

Before this lawsuit happened, [Smotherman] went to see a doctor, and the doctor states, this is Dr. Hafer, Exhibit 108, you see that the patient states she stumbled, maybe slipped on something, some water or something on the floor and fell. The next day, the exhibits they talked about, Dr. Queenan states, [w]ell, the patient states she slipped on some soap on the floor. What is her evidence of soap on the floor?

3 At the close of evidence, the court instructed the jury that, to find the Medical Center

liable, it must find that “there was soap on the bathroom floor, and as a result [the Medical

Center’s] bathroom was not reasonably safe.” The court also gave the jury MAI 2.01(8), which

prohibits juror communication or research. The jury returned with a verdict assessing zero

percent fault against the Medical Center, with eleven jurors joining the verdict.

Following trial, two jurors agreed to speak with Smotherman’s counsel about the trial.

When asked what led to their verdict, the first juror indicated that she “didn’t feel like you could

prove more likely than not that there was soap on the floor in the bathroom.” The second juror

noted that the rust on the heating element “could have happened at any time, that hospital had

been there since 1963.” The second juror then offered that he had “checked the weather forecast

for th[e] day [of the accident] and the forecast was for eight to ten inches of snow.”

Smotherman moved for a new trial, alleging juror misconduct, based on the juror’s

gathering of extraneous information. Nine jurors, eight of whom signed the verdict, testified at

the post-trial hearing on Smotherman’s motion. Five of the jurors, including the juror who had

not signed the verdict, testified that they did not remember hearing anyone mention the weather

during deliberations. The others testified that they recalled a juror mention that the forecast had

been for snow on the date in question, and that the comment was made once with no further

discussion. The Medical Center offered affidavits of the remaining three jurors, who all testified

that they did not hear the comment. All of the jurors testified that the weather, and extraneous

evidence based on the weather, did not have any effect on their determination.

Following the hearing, the trial court determined that a juror had engaged in misconduct

by looking up the weather forecast for the day of the accident and relaying the information to the

jury. The court afforded no weight to the offending juror’s testimony that the extraneous

4 evidence was not a factor in his decision. The trial court found credible the other jurors’

testimony that they had either not heard, or paid no attention to, the extraneous evidence. The

court overruled the motion for new trial, holding that “[e]ven if the court were to disregard the

offending juror’s vote, the verdict would still be supported by ten qualified jurors, who diligently

executed their civil duty.” Smotherman timely appealed.

Standard of Review

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Kristine Smotherman v. Cass Regional Medical Center, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kristine-smotherman-v-cass-regional-medical-center-moctapp-2015.