Lydia L. Davis v. Ruth T. Young

946 F.2d 894, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 29035, 1991 WL 209479
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 17, 1991
Docket90-6429
StatusUnpublished

This text of 946 F.2d 894 (Lydia L. Davis v. Ruth T. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lydia L. Davis v. Ruth T. Young, 946 F.2d 894, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 29035, 1991 WL 209479 (6th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

946 F.2d 894

NOTICE: Sixth Circuit Rule 24(c) states that citation of unpublished dispositions is disfavored except for establishing res judicata, estoppel, or the law of the case and requires service of copies of cited unpublished dispositions of the Sixth Circuit.
Lydia L. DAVIS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Ruth T. YOUNG, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 90-6429.

United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.

Oct. 17, 1991.

Before KENNEDY and DAVID A. NELSON, Circuit Judges, and LIVELY, Senior Circuit Judge.

PER CURIAM:

Plaintiff Lydia L. Davis appeals the judgment against her in this medical malpractice diversity action. She alleges as reversible error the trial court's application of the Tennessee statute governing the competency of witnesses in medical malpractice cases. Specifically, she claims the court read the statute too restrictively in excluding the testimony of out-of-state doctors as to legal causation, in not granting a waiver of the statute's restrictions, and in charging the jury as it did based on the alleged errors in applying the statute. For the reasons set out below, we find no reversible error, and AFFIRM the District Court's judgment.

I.

Defendant Ruth T. Young, an oncologist in Kingsport, Tennessee, treated the plaintiff over several years for cancer. In early July 1988, Young changed the patient's treatment program to incorporate an altered drug therapy plan. Shortly thereafter Davis suffered a stroke. This suit was later initiated, alleging malpractice in the decision to administer the new drug therapy, and in the follow-up care attendant upon the execution of the new program.

During the course of the trial below, the court attempted with great difficulty to apply the law of Tennessee, as it was bound to do in this diversity case.1 Specifically, the court wrestled with the Tennessee statute relating to the competence of expert witnesses in medical malpractice cases. Tenn.Code Ann. § 29-26-115(b) provides as follows:

No person in a health care profession requiring licensure under the laws of this state shall be competent to testify in any court of law to establish the facts required to be established by subsection (a) unless he was licensed to practice in the state or a contiguous bordering state a profession or specialty which would make his expert testimony relevant to the issues in the case and had practiced this profession or specialty in one of these states during the year preceding the date that the alleged injury or wrongful act occurred. This rule shall apply to expert witnesses testifying for the defendant as rebuttal witnesses. The court may waive this subsection when it determines that the appropriate witnesses otherwise would not be available.

Subsection (a) provides that in a medical malpractice action, the claimant has the burden of proving by evidence as provided by subsection (b) the three common law elements of negligence, namely the standard of care owed the patient, the breach of that duty, and that the breach was a proximate cause of plaintiff's injury. At the time the court below was applying this statute, the most recent Tennessee court to construe the statute was the Tennessee Court of Appeals in an unreported case, Payne v. Caldwell, No. 88-345 II, 1989 WL 92197, 1989 Tenn.App.Lexis 547 (Ct.App. Aug. 16, 1989) ("Payne I").

The court below read the Payne I case as providing that geographically ineligible witnesses could not testify as to the prima facie elements, but should be allowed to testify as to the issue of "medical causation." Both the Payne I court and the court below failed to articulate the exact contours of "medical causation," and how it differs from legal causation. Applying its understanding of the Payne I rule, however, the court below excluded the testimony of plaintiff's Michigan doctors only insofar as it related to the standard of care prevailing in Kingsport, Tennessee, and to the legal, proximate causal relationship between the defendant's acts and the plaintiff's injuries. The court thus attempted to allow the doctors to testify to the "medical causation" element, but not to the legal causation. The court further charged the jury that it could consider their testimony in evaluating the medical causation, but not in determining the standard of care or the legal causation. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant.

II.

Davis raises three issues on appeal. First, she alleges error, under the law of Tennessee, in limiting the testimony of the Michigan doctors as to the medical causation, but not allowing it as to the proximate or legal causation. Second, she alleges error in the jury instructions, which were consistent with this semantic distinction between medical and legal/proximate cause, allowing the competence of the Michigan doctors as to the former but not the latter. Third, she alleges error in the trial court's failure to fully waive the geographic requirements as to the Michigan doctors' competence.

We have considerable difficulty in grasping the distinction, as applied by the court below, between "medical causation" and the legal and proximate causation elements of the cause of action. The statute appears on its face to exclude testimony of non-qualifying experts as to the three elements. As to other issues of relevance, such as damages, non-qualifying testimony is not barred as incompetent by the statute. Nowhere in the plain language of the statute do we find any distinction between different forms of causation.

We have the benefit of the Supreme Court of Tennessee's clarification of the statute's restrictions in its decision in Payne v. Caldwell, 796 S.W.2d 142 (Tenn.1990) ("Payne II"), handed down after the trial in this case. It squarely held that testimony as to each of the elements of medical malpractice--the standard of care, the breach of the standard, and proximate cause connecting the breach and the injury suffered--must be established by testimony from local (in state or contiguous state) doctors absent a waiver from the court due to the unavailability of such witnesses. Id. at 143; ("the element of proximate cause is included [in the coverage of the statute] and witnesses, to be competent to testify on the issue, must meet the licensing and geographic requirements of section (b)").

Under the law of Tennessee, therefore, the testimony of the Michigan doctors relating to the standard of care, and to the causes of the alleged injury suffered, were barred as incompetent by the statute. Any distinction between medical causation versus legal causation is inapposite. As noted by the Payne II court, the "proof of each element in a medical malpractice action is so entwined that it is difficult, if not impossible, for a witness to testify on the issue of causation without commenting, either expressly or tacitly, on the standard of care or whether or not it was breached." Payne, 796 S.W.2d at 143. In allowing the testimony of the non-qualifying doctors as to medical causation, the court below erred in plaintiff's favor. Were we to reverse, their testimony would simply be more limited.

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Related

Ralph Ex Rel. Ralph v. Nagy
749 F. Supp. 169 (M.D. Tennessee, 1990)
Payne Ex Rel. Payne v. Caldwell
796 S.W.2d 142 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1990)

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946 F.2d 894, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 29035, 1991 WL 209479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lydia-l-davis-v-ruth-t-young-ca6-1991.