Appellate Case: 24-3009 Document: 53-1 Date Filed: 02/27/2025 Page: 1 FILED United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS February 27, 2025 FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT _________________________________ Christopher M. Wolpert Clerk of Court KEYNA LEONARD, as the surviving daughter of decedent; as the Administrator of the deceased Arlen Dority,
Plaintiff - Appellant,
v. No. 24-3009 (D.C. No. 2:22-CV-02267-KHV) HMG PARK MANOR OF SALINA, (D. Kan.) LLC, d/b/a Smoky Hill Rehabilitation Center; HMG SERVICES, LLC,
Defendants - Appellees. _________________________________
ORDER AND JUDGMENT* _________________________________
Before HARTZ, KELLY, and FEDERICO, Circuit Judges. _________________________________
This case arises out of the death of an 82-year-old resident in a
nursing home. The decedent, Arlen Dority, fell and fractured his right hip
at HMG Park Manor of Salina, LLC, d/b/a Smoky Hill Rehabilitation Center
* This order and judgment is not binding precedent, except under the
doctrines of law of the case, res judicata, and collateral estoppel. It may be cited, however, for its persuasive value consistent with Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 32.1 and Tenth Circuit Rule 32.1. Appellate Case: 24-3009 Document: 53-1 Date Filed: 02/27/2025 Page: 2
(Smoky Hill), a skilled nursing facility in Salina, Kansas. Tragically, Dority
died in the hospital the day after falling at Smoky Hill.
Following his death, Dority’s surviving daughter and the
administrator of his estate, Keyna Leonard, sued Smoky Hill and several
related corporate entities (Defendants) in the United States District Court
for the District of Kansas. She alleged that Defendants negligently caused
Dority’s fatal fall and are responsible for his wrongful death.
The district court granted summary judgment to Defendants based on
a failure to establish a genuine issue of material fact on proximate cause, a
required element of negligence.1 As it explained: “[t]he record is completely
devoid of evidence, from lay or expert sources, that Dority’s fall was the
proximate result of any breach of duty by either defendant.” Aplt. App. IV
at 31. Leonard timely appeals.
Final judgment was entered following the entry of summary
judgment, so we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm.2
1 Leonard does not argue on appeal that the wrongful death claim was
dismissed in error, so it is not properly before us. Kitchen v. Herbert, 755 F.3d 1193, 1208 (10th Cir. 2014) (“[T]he omission of an issue in an opening brief generally forfeits appellate consideration of that issue.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
2 Judge Hartz joins this Order and Judgment except for footnote 4.
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I. BACKGROUND
A. Facts and Evidence
Unless otherwise indicated, the following facts were undisputed at
summary judgment.
Dority fell and broke his right hip at around 1:25 a.m. on April 18,
2021. He had moved into Smoky Hill only two weeks prior to the fall, after
a fall at his home on April 6 and an overall decline in his ability to care for
himself. However, prior to the fall in the middle of the night on April 18, he
had not fallen while a resident at that facility.
The district court found that nobody witnessed Dority’s fall. However,
according to Leonard, the nurse who was assigned to care for Dority the
night of his fall (Andrea Stika) telephoned Leonard near the time when
Dority fell and said that she had dropped Dority in his room while
attempting to transfer him. Nurse Stika added a note in Dority’s chart a
few hours after he fell, stating:
At approx[imately] 1:25 [a.m.] this morning, this nurse heard resident hollering out for help in his room. Upon arriving, resident was found lying on the floor against the wall, mostly on his left side. He was complaining of right hip and knee pain from his fall, and has scraped his elbow [and] behind his right ear. When touching the right hip, [Dority] yelled out in pain. He stated that he could not move it. Neuros were done, and no obvious injury noted, besides the scrape behind right ear.
Aplt. App. IV at 26.
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Within minutes of Dority’s fall, an ambulance arrived and took him to
the emergency room at Salina Regional Medical Center. There, x-rays
confirmed that Dority’s fall had fractured his right hip. The next day, he
died from complications; his death certificate listed his hip fracture as the
primary cause of his death.
B. Procedural History – Summary Judgment Grant
The year following Dority’s death, Leonard filed a negligence and
wrongful death lawsuit. As defendants, she named Smoky Hill and several
of its related corporate entities, which either funded or managed Smoky
Hill.
During discovery, Leonard designated and offered a nursing expert,
Nurse Tache, and a medical doctor, Dr. Kirby, to support her case. A
deposition was taken of Nurse Tache, which was made part of the record.
In Nurse Tache’s deposition, she testified that there are “possibly five
different versions” of how Dority might have fallen and broken his hip. Aplt.
App. III at 102. She testified that Defendants departed from the standard
of care in six different ways, but she volunteered that “[w]e have no idea”
how Dority fell and that, “I guess it would have to be – the jury can make
that decision.” Id. at 102–03. She also said that her opinions “all apply
equally” to all five versions of how the fall might have happened. Id. at 103.
She also made clear that she was not opining that Dority was being
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improperly transferred by one nurse (instead of two) when he fell. See id.
at 85 (“I didn’t say he was being transferred at that time, no.”).
The district court reviewed the testimony and opinions from Leonard’s
two expert witnesses, Nurse Tache and Dr. Kirby. Beginning with
Dr. Kirby, he was offered by Leonard as an expert to opine on the medical
cause of Dority’s death, i.e., that the fall caused Dority’s injuries and death.
Even so, the circumstances and cause of Dority’s tragic fall remained
unclear, and Leonard did not designate an expert on the cause of the fall
itself, including Nurse Tache.
Defendants in their motion for summary judgment pointed out this
evidentiary gap,3 and the district court found that “[p]laintiff did not
designate Tache to testify on whether defendants’ deviations from any
standard of care caused Dority’s fall[.]” Aplt. App. IV at 31. Leonard’s
summary judgment response cited testimony from Nurse Tache’s
deposition, but it did not refute that Nurse Tache did not designate an
expert opinion on causation or what caused Dority’s fall.
The district court then reviewed Nurse Tache’s opinion that Smoky
Hill had departed from the standard of care in six ways in its care for Dority.
3 See Aplt. App. II at 10 (“Plaintiffs’ physician expert Dr. Kirby was
the only expert designated to provide causation opinions.”); id. at 24–25 (same).
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It concluded, however, that Nurse Tache’s report failed to explain how any
specific measures suggested by Nurse Tache would have prevented Dority’s
fall, or how any of the six departures of the standard of care actually caused
the fall. Rather, Nurse Tache’s generic opinion that the fall was
“prevent[able,]” Id. at 32, was conclusory and speculative, so the district
court found it immaterial under the Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56
summary judgment standard.
The district court granted summary judgment for Defendant, holding
that Leonard failed to offer sufficient evidence on proximate cause to create
a genuine issue of material fact. The district court began by explaining that
its ruling did “not turn on whether expert testimony is required to establish
defendants’ deviation from the requisite standard of care or whether
defendants’ deviation was the proximate cause of Dority’s fall.” Aplt.
App. IV at 31. Instead, summary judgment was proper because “[t]he record
is completely devoid of evidence, from lay or expert sources, that Dority’s
fall was the proximate result of any breach of duty by either defendant.” Id.
Although Defendants did not move to exclude either expert witness,
the district court’s summary judgment decision invoked Daubert and
Federal Rule of Evidence 702 and further suggested that neither expert’s
testimony was sufficient under the Daubert framework. In doing so, it found
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that both experts offered opinions “based on the incorrect legal premise that
failure to prevent an accident is sufficient to find liability”:
Under Rule 702, Fed. R. Evid., and Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 509 U.S. 579 (1993), expert testimony from Tache and Dr. Kirby on the issue of causation would cause confusion and delay. Their opinions are based on the incorrect legal premise that failure to prevent an accident is sufficient to find liability, and are tethered to specific evidence about the circumstances of the fall. The record is totally devoid of evidence about how Dority fell or why.
Importantly, no other residents or staff witnessed Dority’s fall the morning of April 18, 2021. Thus, no witnesses can testify to what happened that morning or what, if any, precautions would have prevented a fall under the circumstances. To submit this question to a jury would force them to speculate whether – even if defendants failed to exercise appropriate fall-related interventions and adequately supervise and monitor Dority – those deviations from the standard of care were the proximate cause of his fall.
Aplt. App. IV at 34.
Ultimately, the district court held that Leonard failed to offer any fact
or expert evidence on proximate cause and “[a]bsent such evidence, no
reasonable jury could hold defendants liable without speculating about the
circumstances or reasons for his fall.” Id. at 35.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo
applying the same standards as the district court. Est. of Beauford v. Mesa
Cnty., 35 F.4th 1248, 1261 (10th Cir. 2022). Summary judgment is
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appropriate where “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and
the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a).
In conducting our review, we view the factual record “in the light most
favorable to the [nonmovant].” Self v. Crum, 439 F.3d 1227, 1230 (10th Cir.
2006).
At the same time, “[u]nsubstantiated allegations carry no probative
weight in summary judgment proceedings.” Est. of Hurtado v. Smith,
119 F.4th 1233, 1236 (10th Cir. 2024) (citation omitted). As we have
explained, “the nonmovant ‘must go beyond the pleadings and designate
specific facts’ as to that element to survive summary judgment.” Id. (quoting
Sealock v. Colorado, 218 F.3d 1205, 1209 (10th Cir. 2000)).
III. DISCUSSION
We affirm the district court’s summary judgment rulings. While it
cited and discussed Daubert and Rule 702, the viability of the district court’s
decision did not depend on Daubert or the exclusion of Nurse Tache’s
testimony on causation. Indeed, Leonard fails to engage with the district
court’s core ruling that there was insufficient fact or expert evidence to
reach a jury and that Nurse Tache’s testimony was inherently speculative.
A. Proximate Cause
We first address the district court’s ruling that Leonard failed to
introduce sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact on
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proximate cause. Because this case is in federal court based on diversity
jurisdiction, we “apply state substantive law and federal procedural law.”
Racher v. Westlake Nursing Home Ltd. P’ship, 871 F.3d 1152, 1162
(10th Cir. 2017). As a result, we apply Kansas substantive law.
Under Kansas law, a negligence claim requires a plaintiff to establish
(1) the defendant owed a duty to the plaintiff, (2) a breach of that duty,
(3) an injury to the plaintiff, and (4) “proximate cause, which means a
causal connection between the duty breached and the injury.” Hale v.
Brown, 197 P.3d 438, 440 (Kan. 2008). The mere fact that “someone was
injured is not of itself sufficient to predicate liability. It is familiar law that
negligence is never presumed; it must be established by proof.” Goodloe v.
Jo-Mar Dairies Co., 185 P.2d 158, 164 (Kan. 1947) (citations omitted). In
other words, “negligence is not actionable unless it is the proximate cause
of injury.” Id. at 165.
The district court granted summary judgment based on proximate
cause, and it is the only element at issue on appeal. Under Kansas law, the
proximate cause of an injury is “the cause that in a natural and continuous
sequence, unbroken by any [superseding] cause, both produced the injury
and was necessary for the injury. The injury must be the natural and
probable consequence of the wrongful act.” Hale, 197 P.3d at 440; see also
Puckett v. Mt. Carmel Reg’l Med. Ctr., 228 P.3d 1048, 1060 (Kan. 2010)
9 Appellate Case: 24-3009 Document: 53-1 Date Filed: 02/27/2025 Page: 10
(same). Courts developed proximate cause to restrict the zone of tort
liability; a defendant is “not responsible for all possible consequences of
their negligence, but only those consequences that are probable according
to ordinary and usual experience.” Hale, 197 P.3d at 440.
Proximate cause has two components: causation in fact and legal
causation. Burnette v. Eubanks, 425 P.3d 343, 350 (Kan. 2018) (citation
omitted). To satisfy causation in fact, the plaintiff must “prove a cause-and-
effect relationship” between a defendant’s actions and the plaintiff's
injuries. Id. For legal causation, the plaintiff must establish that “it was
foreseeable that the defendant’s conduct might create a risk of harm to the
victim and that the result of that conduct and contributing causes was
foreseeable.” Id. Thus, Leonard was required to show not only a departure
from the standard of care but also “that the negligence caused the injury.”
Bacon v. Mercy Hosp. of Ft. Scott, 756 P.2d 416, 420 (Kan. 1988).
Expert testimony on proximate cause is sometimes, but not always,
required in medical malpractice or nursing home negligence cases. If the
standard of care and duties owed by a doctor or a nursing home are not
common knowledge or apparent to the average layperson, expert testimony
is required to establish the accepted standard of care and to prove
causation. Id. In other words, “expert testimony is necessary only if the
matter is outside the common knowledge of the jury.” Tudor v. Wheatland
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Nursing L.L.C., 214 P.3d 1217, 1222 (Kan. Ct. App. 2009). This “common
knowledge” test – not the “classification” of a case as “ordinary negligence”
– determines whether the testimony of an expert witness on causation is
required. Id.
In this case, Leonard does not dispute that an expert was required to
prove the proximate cause for Dority’s fall. And when an expert witness is
offered, they “must confine their opinions to matters in issue which are
certain or probable and not testify as to mere possibilities.” Bacon, 756 P.3d
at 420; accord Roberts v. Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Corp., 884 F.3d 967,
977 (10th Cir. 2018) (applying federal law).
We agree with the district court that Leonard failed to offer sufficient
fact or expert evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact on
proximate cause. Contrary to Leonard’s argument, the district court did not
base its ruling entirely on its exclusion of Nurse Tache under Daubert.
Instead, the district court stated: “[t]he record is completely devoid of
evidence, from lay or expert sources, that Dority’s fall was the proximate
result of any breach of duty by either defendant.” Aplt. App. IV at 31.
Leonard sidesteps this core holding, insisting that because she
provided an expert witness, summary judgment was improper. But our
summary judgment standard “requires more than mere speculation.” Est. of
Hurtado, 119 F.4th at 1238 (citation omitted); see also GeoMetWatch Corp.
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v. Behunin, 38 F.4th 1183, 1205 (10th Cir. 2022) (explaining that “the
nonmovant may not evade summary judgment by speculating about
possibilities or hypotheticals that have de minimis to no support in the
record”). Offering “conclusory allegations” or “unsupported speculation”
does not satisfy the nonmovant’s burden at summary judgment.
GeoMetWatch Corp., 38 F.4th at 1214.
Nurse Tache’s deposition testimony offered “unsupported” and
“conclusory” statements that Dority’s fall could have been prevented.
Roberts, 884 F.3d at 977. But “such statements, even from experts, are
insufficient to defeat summary judgment.” Id. “It is axiomatic that an
expert, no matter how good [her] credentials, is not permitted to speculate.”
Goebel v. Denver & Rio Grande W. R.R. Co., 215 F.3d 1083, 1088 (10th Cir.
2000). Indeed, an expert’s opinions “must be based on facts which enable
[the expert] to express a reasonably accurate conclusion as opposed to
conjecture or speculation[.]” Dodge v. Cotter Corp., 328 F.3d 1212, 1222
(10th Cir. 2003) (quoting Gomez v. Martin Marietta Corp., 50 F.3d 1511,
1519 (10th Cir. 1995)).
At summary judgment, the district court held there were insufficient
facts to enable an expert to determine the cause of Dority’s fall, nor did
Nurse Tache offer that opinion. Nurse Tache opined that, generally, a
nursing plan and adequate staffing are likely to prevent falls by residents.
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But she failed to designate any opinion in her expert report regarding how
or why Dority fell, or how Smoky Hill specifically caused Dority’s fatal fall.
And while Nurse Tache “criticized defendant’s documentation practices” as
to the fall, “she did not implicate them” in Smoky Hill’s alleged negligence.
Aplt. App. IV at 32. Ultimately, as the district court concluded, Nurse
Tache’s opinion on causation was “that defendants ‘failed to prevent an
avoidable fall.’ This opinion does not create a genuine issue of material fact
whether any alleged breach of defendants’ duty of care caused Dority’s
injury.” Id. (citation omitted).
Not only was Nurse Tache’s testimony conclusory, but it was also
inconsistent with Leonard’s theory on appeal. See Bacon, 756 P.2d at 420
(emphasizing the “contradictory testimony” on causation provided by the
plaintiff’s expert witnesses). In Nurse Tache’s deposition, she testified that
there are “possibly five different versions” of how Dority might have fallen
and broken his hip. Aplt. App. III at 102. She did not identify any version
as being probable or the most likely; rather, she testified that “[w]e have no
idea” how Dority fell. Id. at 102–03. On appeal, Leonard narrows to one of
the five versions: relying solely on a phone call from Smoky Hill to Leonard
the morning of the fall, Leonard says that she was told that Dority was
dropped while being transferred by only one nurse, when two nurses were
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needed, and thus a nursing care plan should have been in place to prevent
the fall.
When the Defendants moved for summary judgment before the
district court and put causation at issue, Leonard did not argue that this
phone call created a genuine issue of material fact as to the cause of the fall.
Her failure to raise this argument below forfeits her right to raise it for the
first time on appeal, compounded because Leonard also failed to argue the
district court committed plain error. Parker Excavating, Inc. v. Lafarge
West, Inc., 863 F.3d 1213, 1223 (10th Cir. 2017); Richison v. Ernest Grp.,
Inc., 634 F.3d 1123, 1128 (10th Cir. 2011).
Also, Leonard insists correctly that her version of the facts must be
taken as true at summary judgment because she is the nonmovant.
“However, because at summary judgment we are beyond the pleading phase
of the litigation, a plaintiff's version of the facts must find support in the
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record.”4 Thomson v. Salt Lake Cnty., 584 F.3d 1304, 1312 (10th Cir. 2009).
And more to the point, Nurse Tache testified that she was not claiming that
Dority fell while being transferred. See Id. at 85 (“I didn’t say he was being
transferred at that time, no.”). Thus, Nurse Tache’s testimony confirms the
lack of factual or expert support for Leonard’s case.
More fundamentally, Leonard failed to properly designate Nurse
Tache as an expert offering an opinion on the proximate cause of Dority’s
fall. Recall that the district court found, “[p]laintiff did not designate Tache
to testify on whether defendants’ deviations from any standard of care
caused Dority’s fall[.]” Aplt. App. IV at 31.
Expert opinions must be properly designated in line with the
requirements listed in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(a)(2). See
4 Even if this argument was not forfeited, there is no support in the
record for this version of the facts beyond Leonard’s uncertain testimony during her deposition. A genuine dispute of material fact exists when the evidence is such that a “reasonable jury could return a verdict for the non-moving party.” Adair v. City of Muskogee, 823 F.3d 1297, 1304 (10th Cir. 2016) (citations omitted). During her deposition, Leonard testified that she did not know what time she was called, does not know who from Smoky Hill called her, nor whether the caller was involved in the event. Aplt. App. IV at 172-73. She also had “no idea” whether her father was standing when he fell, as opposed to getting out of bed and falling. Id. at 185. When pressed, she said, “I’m assuming that’s what happened,” meaning that her version of his fall (being dropped) was the correct version. Id. This assumption and uncertainty falls short of the genuine dispute standard.
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Jacobsen v. Deseret Book Co., 287 F.3d 936, 951–52 (10th Cir. 2002)
(explaining that Rule 26(a)(2) requires expert reports to contain a complete
statement of all opinions to be expressed while Federal Rule of Civil
Procedure 37(c)(1) requires the exclusion of any undesignated opinions,
unless the failure was substantially justified or harmless) (citations
omitted)). Leonard does not show that either exception to Rule 37(c)(1)
applies here, and an expert may not testify about new theories for the first
time in a deposition. Thus, Leonard’s failure to properly designate Nurse
Tache as an expert on proximate cause defeats her arguments on appeal.
Summary judgment was properly entered based on a lack of evidence
on proximate cause. If this case had proceeded to trial, the jury could have
only speculated about how and why Dority fell. See Pioneer Centres Holding
Co. Emp. Stock Ownership Plan & Tr. v. Alerus Fin., N.A., 858 F.3d 1324,
1340 (10th Cir. 2017) (affirming that the plaintiff failed “to meet the
threshold necessary to survive summary judgment on the issue of
causation”); Schneider v. City of Grand Junction Police Dep’t, 717 F.3d 760,
780 (10th Cir. 2013) (“Mere speculation . . . is not sufficient to establish
causation.”).
B. Exclusion Under Daubert
Next, we address Leonard’s fairness argument regarding an expert
witness excluded under Rule 702 and Daubert. Leonard argues that the
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district court improperly conducted an impromptu and informal Rule 702
and Daubert analysis of Nurse Tache in the summary judgment opinion,
without any notice, a Daubert hearing, or the filing of any Daubert motion
(or argument) by Defendants.
We review a district court’s exclusion of expert witness testimony
under Daubert and Rule 702 for an abuse of discretion. Frederick v. Swift
Transp. Co., 616 F.3d 1074, 1082–83 (10th Cir. 2010). “And we review de
novo whether the district court applied the proper legal standard under
Daubert.” Roe v. FCA US LLC, 42 F.4th 1175, 1180 (10th Cir. 2022).
We generally agree with Leonard that a district court should usually
hold a Daubert hearing before excluding expert testimony, and it should
also make a fully developed record that we can review on appeal. But in this
case, the failure to do so was immaterial. We conclude that any error by the
district court in conducting a sua sponte review under Rule 702 and Daubert
review is not reversible error for three reasons.
First, as explained, Leonard failed to designate Nurse Tache to offer
an opinion on proximate cause. Thus, invoking Daubert was superfluous
because there was no properly designated causation opinion from Nurse
Tache to exclude in the first place. Defendants made this argument in their
summary judgment motion, providing notice to Leonard before the entry of
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Second, a district court is required to enforce the Daubert safeguards,
even if the opposing party fails to challenge the admissibility of an expert’s
testimony. The district court’s role under Daubert is a “gatekeeper inquiry
under Rule 702[.]” Goebel v. Denver & Rio Grande W. R.R. Co., 215 F.3d
1083, 1088 (10th Cir. 2000). And although “the district court has discretion
in how it conducts the gatekeeper function, we have recognized that it has
no discretion to avoid performing the gatekeeper function.” Dodge, 328 F.3d
at 1223. If a district court is to play the role of “gatekeeper,” it must ensure
only valid expert testimony reaches a jury, even if the opposing party fails
to file a Daubert motion.
Third, Leonard focuses almost entirely on the alleged technical
violation committed by the district court. But Leonard fails to ever
substantiate that Nurse Tache designated a causation opinion free of
speculation. In other words, Leonard criticizes the district court’s Daubert
analysis, but she fails to explain how Daubert briefing or a hearing would
have changed the outcome. Leonard was obligated to present sufficient
summary judgment evidence, and additional Daubert procedures would not
have cured the lack of sufficient causation evidence. As a result, any error
committed by the district court on Daubert does not require us to reverse.
In sum, we discern no reversible error on this issue.
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AFFIRMED.
Entered for the Court
Richard E.N. Federico Circuit Judge
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No. 24-3009, Leonard v. HMG Park Manor of Salina, et al.
KELLY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
The court holds that the evidence was insufficient to create a genuine issue of
material fact and that Nurse Tache’s testimony was inherently speculative. My review of
the record persuades me that a jury trial is warranted.
On summary judgment, we cannot disregard the obvious factual dispute over the
circumstances of Mr. Dority’s fall. As the court’s order and judgment recites,
Ms. Leonard testified that Nurse Stika telephoned her and admitted she had “dropped”
Mr. Dority while attempting to transfer him. I Aplt. App. 231; IV Aplt. App. 819.
Contrary to one member of this panel’s assertion, nothing is uncertain about
Ms. Leonard’s statement that the person she spoke with told her that they dropped
Mr. Dority while transferring him. IV Aplt. App. 819 (“I know the lady told me on the
phone, and she told me they were transferring him from one chair to the other when they
dropped him.”); see also id. at 806–07, 827, 832, 837. Though Nurse Stika’s progress
note claimed that she found Mr. Dority lying on the floor, this note was created at 3:59
a.m. — almost three hours after Nurse Stika called 9-1-1. I Aplt. App. 231. Nurse Stika
was an employee of the nursing home. Id. at 226.
This testimony and evidence established a factual dispute over the circumstances
of Mr. Dority’s fall. According to the plaintiff, “[Nurse] Stika dropped Mr. Dority while
she alone attempted to transfer him from one chair to another causing a right hip
fracture.” Id. at 231. According to Defendants, “Mr. Dority was not transferred . . . by
[Nurse] Stika or any other Smoky Hill employee, rather Mr. Dority attempted to transfer Appellate Case: 24-3009 Document: 53-1 Date Filed: 02/27/2025 Page: 21
himself and walk by himself for an unknown reason and fell[.]” Id. at 245. This clear
factual dispute was recognized in the pretrial order. Id. at 231, 238, 245.
The court also states that Nurse Tache failed to designate an opinion on how
Smoky Hill caused Mr. Dority’s fatal fall. But Nurse Tache made several criticisms of
Smoky Hill’s inadequate staffing on the night of Mr. Dority’s fall that applied to the many
possible variations on what happened. Id. at 68–71; III Aplt. App. 552. Nurse Tache also
testified that her criticisms regarding Smoky Hill’s poor documentation and failure to
implement a comprehensive care plan applied regardless of which version of Mr. Dority’s
fall was proven. I Aplt. App. 68–71; III Aplt. App. 552. Moreover, Mr. Dority was
catheterized on the night of his fall, and Nurse Tache found it highly unlikely that he was
proceeding down the hall alone at full speed. III Aplt. App. 497, 568–72.
To be sure, Nurse Tache did not cabin her report to a specific set of facts, nor did
she directly implicate Smoky Hill’s deviations from the standard of care in Mr. Dority’s
fall. But I fail to see how she could have done so when the circumstances of Mr. Dority’s
fall were still the subject of a factual dispute containing “possibly five different versions
of the same event.” Id. at 550–51. And it comes as no surprise that Nurse Tache could
not divine the truth behind Mr. Dority’s fall from the record when she criticized, among
other things, Smoky Hill’s lacking documentation processes. I Aplt. App. 68. In light of
this factual dispute, I find her conclusion that “these deviations were a probable cause of
harm to Mr. Dority” to be sufficient. Id. at 60. Neither Nurse Tache nor this court has the
option of deciding which facts she either ignores or disbelieves.
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In moving for summary judgment, the Defendants bore the initial burden of
“pointing out to the district court [] that there is an absence of evidence to support the
nonmoving party’s case.” Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 325 (1986). But while
Defendants moved for summary judgment on the issue of causation, II Aplt. App. 277,
they never addressed Ms. Leonard’s theory that Nurse Stika dropped Mr. Dority while
transferring him. Id. at 258–63. Granted, Ms. Leonard’s counsel should have come up
with a stronger response on causation. Rather than highlight Ms. Leonard’s testimony
and alert the district court to the factual dispute it raised, counsel proceeded from the
faulty assumption that the only issue before the district court at summary judgment was
the legal issue of whether a nurse could testify as to causation. Id. at 347–49; Aplt. Br.
at 3.
Even despite counsel’s shortcomings, the district court itself reviewed the record
and its disputed facts “in the light most favorable to plaintiff[.]” IV Aplt. App. 658–59.
Indeed, though neither party presented the substance of Nurse Tache’s expert report, the
court took it upon itself to review her report for the purposes of the motion. Id. at 665
n.5. Yet while the district court’s review of the record led it to credit Defendants’ version
of Mr. Dority’s fall, id. at 660, and recognize the version that Mr. Dority gave to hospital
staff, id., it made no mention of Ms. Leonard’s version. Again, I recognize that counsel
failed to submit Ms. Leonard’s deposition testimony in opposing summary judgment.
II Aplt. App. 347–49. But the district court seems to have overlooked Ms. Leonard’s
testimony in concluding that “[t]he record is totally devoid of evidence about how
3 Appellate Case: 24-3009 Document: 53-1 Date Filed: 02/27/2025 Page: 23
[Mr.] Dority fell or why” and “no other residents or staff witnessed [Mr.] Dority’s fall[.]”
IV Aplt. App. 668.
In short, I believe that Nurse Tache’s criticisms, together with Ms. Leonard’s
testimony, create an obvious fact issue appropriate for a jury over whether Mr. Dority fell
on his own or was dropped. If he was dropped while being transferred by one nurse, then
Nurse Tache’s criticisms about inadequate staffing and care planning would prove that
Smoky Hill’s deviations from the standard of care caused Mr. Dority’s fall.