Leyson v. Steuermann

705 P.2d 37, 5 Haw. App. 504, 1985 Haw. App. LEXIS 71
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1985
DocketNO. 8746; CIVIL NO. 6238
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 705 P.2d 37 (Leyson v. Steuermann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leyson v. Steuermann, 705 P.2d 37, 5 Haw. App. 504, 1985 Haw. App. LEXIS 71 (hawapp 1985).

Opinion

*505 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

BURNS, C.J.

Plaintiff Cresencio Leyson (Leyson) appeals the judgment in favor of defendant Nicholas Steuermann, M.D. (Steuermann), pursuant to the jury’s special verdict finding Steuermann not negligent. We affirm.

The issues and our answers are as follows:

1. Having failed to object during Steuermann’s opening statement and having objected only on grounds of materiality during direct examination of Steuermann, may Leyson contend on appeal that remarks in Steuermann’s opening statement and certain testimony of Steuermann during examination by his counsel constitute an improper appeal to the prejudices and sympathies of the jury warranting a new trial? No.

2. Did the trial court reversibly err when it denied Leyson’s motion for permission to obtain an affidavit from the jury foreman that might have revealed the name of a juror who allegedly was a dominant factor throughout jury deliberations and that the jury found Steuermann not negligent for a legally inappropriate reason? No.

3. In light of the instructions given to the jury, is the jury’s special verdict manifestly against the weight of the evidence, thus requiring a new trial? No.

4. Having not objected at trial to the instructions that were given on the subject, may Leyson contend on appeal that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on the elements of the tort that is based on the doctrine of informed consent? No.

5. Is the plain error rule applicable in this case? More specifically stated, will a miscarriage of justice occur if we affirm the trial *506 judge’s strict enforcement of Rule 51(e), Hawaii Rules of Civil Procedure (HRCP), 1 in this case? No.

6. Did the trial court erroneously instruct the jury on the elements of the tort that is based on the doctrine of informed consent? We do not reach this question.

Leyson sought medical care from Steuermann in two separate time periods. He first began seeing Steuermann in Hilo on June 16, 1970 for a skin disorder, which was later diagnosed by Steuermann as severe psoriasis. 2

Steuermann treated Leyson’s psoriasis with injections and oral doses of corticosteroids (Kenalog, Prednisone, Bepatan, and Medrol-pak), an antimetabolite (methotrexate), and topical medication (Synalar). Steuermann generally prescribed the steroids approximately once a month in doses of either 40 or 60 milligrams. During brief periods of hospitalization, Steuermann initially treated Leyson with daily 40-milligram doses of the steroids and gradually tapered off the doses. Leyson continued as Steuermann’s patient until November 1971. During this first period, Steuermann did not advise Leyson as to any possible side effects of the treatment.

After he last saw Steuermann in November 1971, Leyson moved to Honolulu where he was treated for his psoriasis by Kaiser Medical Center from approximately March 1972 until September 1972. Leyson then moved to California where he also received treatment.

In 1973, Leyson returned to Hilo. From 1974 until December 1975 Leyson was under the care of physicians at Hilo Medical Center. He received treatments of Prednisolone (similar to Pred-nisone) for his continuing psoriasis. In 1975, he experienced problems with his joints and required surgery to his hip.

*507 On December 8, 1975 Leyson resumed treatment by Steuer-mann which continued until May 1977. Steuermann treated Leyson generally with injections of the steroid Kenalog in the same doses he had administered earlier. There is conflicting evidence whether during this second period of treatment Steuermann informed Leyson of the risks created by the treatment.

From 1977 to 1979, Leyson received steroid treatment from Dr. Irwin of the Hilo Medical Group. This treatment consisted of appreciably larger doses of Prednisone (usually 60 milligrams per day, up to as much as 180 milligrams per day) and topical steroids. In 1979, Leyson was hospitalized for a severe flare up of his psoriasis at Kuakini Medical Center where he also received steroid treatment. During 1979 and 1980, Leyson began to experience pain in his shoulders and developed a cataract problem.

On March 14, 1980 Leyson brought this suit against Steuer-mann to recover special, general, and punitive damages based on the theories of negligence, lack of informed consent, abandonment, and breach of warranty.

In his opening statement to the jury, counsel for Steuermann stated, inter alia, without objection:

His formal medical training was really interrupted by World War II and you will hear how he spent World War II, years in the concentration camp. He’s one of the very fortunate survivors of that ordeal.
After the war, after we tell you how the Nazis had him during the war and after the war, his camp was liberated, you might say, by the Russians. And he became a Russian prisoner and later got away from them, and after helping other people who were victims of the holocaust, he was able to come to the United States in the late ’40s.

During the trial, Steuermann was examined by his counsel and testified as follows:

A I graduated from medical school in, uh, Romania in 1937, April of 1937.
Q Did you complete that three years of residency or extra training in dermatology in about 1941, then?
A About 1941, that’s correct.
*508 Q And then what happened?
A In 1941 I opened my own practice in town for in dermatology and, uh, syphilogical and venereal diseases which lasted until August or September of 1942 when, uh, the Nazis, like everybody else, took us away and, uh, so I was in the concentration camps ’til I was liberated by the Russians December 24, exactly Christmas day, 1944.
And they took me prisoner that time again. And, uh, I was with them for oh, believe, about six months when I walked away from them.
And, uh, escaped, rather. And then walked back to my home town to look for my family. Of course when I got home, was nobody left. From a town where there were — before the war. They were town of 120,000 people. Ten percent of them were Jews. We got back and, uh —
MR. TAKAHASHI: Your Honor —
A — two hundred of us left.
MR. TAKAHASHI: Your Honor, I’d like to note our objection at this time. I really don’t see the materiality of this.
THE COURT: What’s the relevancy of it, Mr. Burke?
MR. BURKE: Well, Your Honor, I’m planning on continuing right into his medical training and experience.
THE COURT: All right. I take it that you’ll get back to relevant testimony?

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Bluebook (online)
705 P.2d 37, 5 Haw. App. 504, 1985 Haw. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leyson-v-steuermann-hawapp-1985.