Lanam v. Promise Regional Med. Ctr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 8, 2015
Docket113430
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lanam v. Promise Regional Med. Ctr. (Lanam v. Promise Regional Med. Ctr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanam v. Promise Regional Med. Ctr., (kanctapp 2015).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 113,430

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

JACLAN LANAM, Appellant,

v.

PROMISE REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER-HUTCHINSON, INC., Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Reno District Court; TIMOTHY J. CHAMBERS, judge. Opinion filed January 8, 2016. Affirmed.

Melinda G. Young and Matthew L. Bretz, of Bretz & Young, L.L.C., of Hutchinson, for appellant.

Rachel E. Lomas, of Hite, Fanning & Honeyman L.L.P., of Wichita, for appellee.

Before MALONE, C.J., HILL and STANDRIDGE, JJ.

Per Curiam: Dropping a patient onto a driveway is one thing, but claiming a nurse assistant must examine a patient's chart and make an informed professional decision about how many people it will take to safely transfer a patient to her car is another. Everyone knows you should not let someone leaving the hospital after a knee operation drop to the pavement. That is a matter of ordinary negligence. On the other hand, only experts in the medical field can legally establish the standard of care a nurse assistant must follow in safely transferring a patient from the hospital to her car. Such a professional standard of care is not common knowledge.

1 Jaclan Lanam had her right knee replaced at Promise Regional Medical Center- Hutchinson, Inc., in October 2009. She was discharged from the hospital 3 days later. Kelly Zoglman, a certified nurse assistant, transferred Lanam from her hospital chair to a wheelchair. Zoglman then rolled Lanam out to the car waiting to take her home. Zoglman was the sole assistant assigned to transfer Lanam from her wheelchair to the car. What happened next is disputed.

Lanam claimed that Zoglman used a restraint belt to help her stand up next to the car. Then, Zoglman began talking to other people while Lanam was standing up next to the car. After some time, Zoglman said, "[O]kay," which Lanam understood to be her cue to turn and sit in the car. Lanam turned to sit, but Zoglman let go of the restraint belt and Lanam fell to the ground. Zoglman said, "I knew I should have brought somebody else with me." Lanam suffered a variety of injuries because of the fall.

For her part, Zoglman claimed that she had explained to Lanam that she would help her scoot back towards the car, sit her rear on the car seat, and then Zoglman would swing Lanam's legs into the car and turn her to the position she would ride in the car. Instead, Lanam lifted her left leg, placing all of her weight onto the right knee that was the subject of surgery, and then she fell. Zoglman testified that she did not use a restraint belt.

In order to understand the issues raised in this appeal, we must recount, in some detail, the pretrial conference order, the denial of the hospital's summary judgment motion, the court's limiting order, and Lanam's opening statement. They illustrate the dramatic shift in the claims brought by Lanam.

2 We repeat the agreed pretrial conference order.

A pretrial order reflects the refinement of the parties' issues and contentions. The court entered an agreed pretrial conference order in July 2013. Both sides listed their contentions:

"Plaintiff was an elderly woman who had a total knee replacement surgery at Defendant's facility. Following the knee replacement a single CNA took Plaintiff to the car even though the CNA knew and admitted after the fall that she should have taken a second person to assist in the transfer. The sole CNA got Plaintiff to her feet and then made her stand there for a number of minutes while she carried on a conversation with someone else, and then let go of the restraint and dropped Plaintiff to the ground. "Defendant argues that Plaintiff needs an expert in the obvious. Plaintiff submits that no expert testimony is necessary to establish that you should not drop nitroglycerine, a baby, or an elderly woman just out of knee replacement surgery, and that no expert testimony is necessary given the hospital employee's admission that she knew she should have brought someone with her to help with the transfer."

Before trial, the court denied the hospital's motion for summary judgment.

Lanam filed suit against the hospital for negligence. The hospital moved for summary judgment seeking dismissal of the case because Lanam had failed to designate a standard of care expert. In her response, Lanam contended that she needed no expert because it is common knowledge that one should not drop an elderly woman who has just had knee replacement surgery and that a second person should have assisted with the transfer.

At the hearing on the motion, Lanam's counsel contended that Lanam

"didn't fall because of the way that she was placed in the car. Rather the testimony is that the CNA let go, let go of the Gait belt. It wasn't the technique being carried out, rather

3 she just let go and dropped Miss Lanam . . . . [T]his particular CNA in her sound judgment made an admission after the fact where she said that she knew that she should have brought someone with her to help with the transfer."

The district court denied the motion for summary judgment, concluding that "[i]f the jury finds the facts as alleged by the Plaintiff (CNA dropping the Plaintiff), then the 'common knowledge' exception would apply."

The court issued an order in limine.

Just before the trial started, the district court issued a limiting order and ruled that at trial Lanam could not refer to the hospital's policies and procedures as "safety rules." The district court further ruled that evidence of whether Lanam, within 2 hours of her discharge, "had received insulin, was under the influence of any type of drugs, and if she is, in fact, diabetic whether she had eaten or not" was admissible. The district court ruled such evidence was relevant "to show her ability to comprehend what was going on."

The court stopped the trial after Lanam's opening statement.

Trial commenced the same day. Lanam's counsel gave an opening statement which began:

"[W]hat brings us to this courtroom today . . . are the safety requirements that protect patients when they go to the hospital; requirements that protect patients like Miss Lanam only if they're followed. ". . . If it's safer to have two people transfer a lady who has just had a knee replacement then that's how it needs to be done."

Highly summarized, counsel described Lanam's condition on the day of discharge: for pain, she was given hydrocodone in the morning and percocet in the afternoon; she

4 was measured by physical therapy to have zero degrees of extension, meaning the leg would go all the way straight, but only 67 degrees of flexion; she was not at full strength; 3 days after surgery, she could walk 130 feet with a front wheel walker; and her pain was 10 out of 10.

Counsel also told the jury that before moving the patient, Zoglman did not look at Lanam's patient chart to see what medications she had taken, her strength, physical therapy requirements, or pain level. The hospital made no objection during Lanam's opening statement. After the hospital gave its opening statement, the jury was dismissed for the day. Afterwards, the hospital argued that Lanam had violated the court's in limine order by using the term "safety requirements" in her opening statement.

The next morning, the court ruled that Lanam's use of the term "safety requirements" indeed violated the order in limine, but that there was no contemporaneous objection by the defense. The district court went on to state that the case presented in Lanam's opening statement was not one of simple negligence but, rather, one of medical malpractice.

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