Lewis, Miller & Co. v. Carrick CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 22, 2013
DocketH038152
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lewis, Miller & Co. v. Carrick CA6 (Lewis, Miller & Co. v. Carrick CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis, Miller & Co. v. Carrick CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Filed 11/22/13 Lewis, Miller & Co. v. Carrick CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

LEWIS, MILLER & COMPANY, INC., H038152 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Respondent, Super. Ct. No. CV194886)

v.

PAUL M. CARRICK,

Defendant and Appellant.

Appellant Paul M. Carrick was stung 80 to 100 times by bees. After he started to go into anaphylactic shock, his beekeeping helper called 911 and persuaded his neighbors to drive him from a remote location in the Santa Cruz Mountains to a hospital. Firefighters met them en route. Based on Carrick’s condition, the firefighters called California Shock Trauma Air Rescue (CALSTAR). CALSTAR flight nurses treated Carrick and arranged for him to be transported by helicopter to a hospital. Carrick subsequently refused to pay CALSTAR’s bill for $31,197.59. CALSTAR assigned its rights to respondent Lewis, Miller and Company, Inc. (LMC), which sued Carrick in this debt collection action. The case was tried to the court, which concluded that Carrick had entered into an oral contract with CALSTAR for treatment and transport, and entered a judgment in favor of LMC. On appeal, Carrick raises claims of error regarding delays in discovery and the exclusion of evidence at trial. He asserts a variety of legal errors. But Carrick misunderstands our standard of review and uses the appeal as an opportunity to reargue his case. We conclude that substantial evidence supports the court’s findings on contested factual issues and that Carrick has not met his burden of demonstrating error on appeal on the other points he raises. We will therefore affirm the judgment.

FACTS

Both sides presented evidence at trial. LMC’s witnesses were firefighter Christopher Cunningham, CALSTAR’s flight nurses Francine Abbruzzese1 and Kristine Tate, and CALSTAR’s accounts receivables manager, John Bunner. Carrick testified and represented himself at trial. Carrick lives in a remote area of the Santa Cruz Mountains. He has worked as an emergency medical technician (EMT), although the record does not disclose when he did such work.2 He is also a beekeeper.

Carrick’s Testimony

Around 6:30 p.m. on August 24, 2010, while tending his honey bees, Carrick and his helper, Deann Hamernick, were both stung multiple times. According to the first responders, Carrick was stung 80 to 100 times. Hamernick went inside, while Carrick continued to tend the bees. Carrick testified that later, he went into the kitchen and said “ ‘I am not feeling too good.’ ” But since he did not have health insurance, he told Hamernick he did not want her to call 911. Carrick then said, “ ‘I’m going into anaphylactic” shock. Carrick testified that he “fell down unconscious and hit the chair

1 Abbruzzese’s first name is listed as both “Frances” and “Francine” in the record. We shall use “Francine,” which is the name she used on her written report for CALSTAR. 2 Carrick’s opening brief cites his EMT registry number and says it expires on November 30, 2013. This information was not before the trial court.

2 and broke it on the floor and hurt [his] head.” Carrick, who was 62 years old, began shaking on the floor. Hamernick called 911. She later told Carrick, “ ‘Well, I couldn’t stand to see you die, so I called 911.’ ” Carrick testified that initially, he “was in a pretty deep coma” and shock. There was some delay in getting an emergency crew to respond and Carrick and Hamernick had difficulty communicating with the 911 operator because of poor phone reception, so they asked Carrick’s neighbors, Aimee Levine and Josh Harness, to drive them down the mountain. Levine and Harness placed Carrick in the front seat of their van and Harness drove to Quail Rocks, where they met an emergency crew from the Burrell CAL FIRE3 fire station. Carrick testified that Levine was “very worried” about him because he “wasn’t breathing, hadn’t breathed, and [his] heart was not functioning.”

Testimony of Firefighter Christopher Cunningham

Cunningham and two other firefighters responded to the 911 call. Cunningham was the primary crew member assigned to Carrick. As they headed “up the hill,” they encountered Levine’s van on Loma Prieta Avenue near the Quail Rocks area. When the firefighters arrived, Carrick was sitting upright in the front passenger seat of the van. Levine told Cunningham that, during the drive, Carrick had stopped breathing completely for about 30 seconds. She said she reached around the seat and “pulled on” Carrick’s chest until he started breathing again. Cunningham leaned Carrick’s seat back to treat him for shock, placed him on oxygen, and assessed his vital signs. Cunningham observed that Carrick’s lips were cyanotic (blue), that hives were starting to form on his chest and abdomen, and that he was having trouble breathing; the firefighters were also unable to get a blood pressure

3 CAL FIRE is an acronym used by the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. (See e.g., http://calfire.ca.gov/about/about.php [as of Nov. 21, 2013].)

3 from Carrick. Cunningham had been informed that, because of their location in the mountains, it would take at least 40 minutes for a ground ambulance to arrive and less than 15 minutes for a CALSTAR helicopter to arrive. Based on all these factors, Cunningham asked his captain to call CALSTAR. After placing Carrick in the shock position and giving him oxygen, the firefighters “were able to finally get a blood pressure,” but it was low. Cunningham told Carrick, “We’re going to need to transport you to the hospital.” Carrick nodded. Cunningham said “ ‘We have a helicopter on the way’ ” and Carrick “kind of grunted” in response. Since Carrick seemed to understand that he needed to go to the hospital, Cunningham assumed the grunt meant “yes” and “get me there.” After five to ten minutes on oxygen, Carrick was able to talk and said his pain level was an “8.” A short time later, Cunningham reassessed Carrick as the helicopter landed. Upon reassessment, Carrick reported that his pain was a “3” and was able to explain how the bee stings occurred. But Carrick was still breathing heavily, with wheezes; he was slightly disoriented; and his lips were still cyanotic. The helicopter landed in a nearby field. A passerby with a flatbed truck transported the flight nurses from the helicopter to the van where Carrick was seated. Other volunteers arrived and “worked the landing zone.” After the CALSTAR nurses arrived, Cunningham “backed away,” because they were in a confined space. He, therefore, could not hear whether Carrick consented to be transported by helicopter. Later, he did hear Carrick refuse to be intubated. Cunningham did not see Carrick resist treatment or transport, except for intubation. After the flight nurses evaluated Carrick, they took him to the flatbed truck on a spine board and transported him to the helicopter. Cunningham was with Carrick when he was loaded onto the helicopter. While Cunningham evaluated and treated Carrick, his partners assessed Hamernick. As the helicopter took off, Hamernick started to react to her bee stings in an 4 anaphylactic way. By then, a ground ambulance had arrived. The ground ambulance took Hamernick to a hospital. Cunningham works on a Basic Life Support rig and is not allowed to carry medications like Epinephrine. He testified that he may only administer sugar or oxygen or the patient’s own medication (i.e., he may give Epinephrine using the patient’s Epi- pen).

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