Maliyah Ashunti Hubbard v. McDonald's Corporation

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 2009
Docket2009-IA-00464-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Maliyah Ashunti Hubbard v. McDonald's Corporation (Maliyah Ashunti Hubbard v. McDonald's Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maliyah Ashunti Hubbard v. McDonald's Corporation, (Mich. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2009-IA-00464-SCT

MALIYAH ASHUNTI HUBBARD, MINOR, BY AND THROUGH TIFFANY HUBBARD, HER MOTHER AND NATURAL GUARDIAN

v.

MCDONALD’S CORPORATION, MICHAEL L. RETZER d/b/a MCDONALD’S

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/02/2009 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. JOSEPH H. LOPER, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: GRENADA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: WILLIAM C. WALKER, JR. FRANK H. SHAW, JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: SUSAN N. O’NEAL FRANK THACKSTON NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 06/24/2010 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE GRAVES, P.J., DICKINSON AND CHANDLER, JJ.

CHANDLER, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Tiffany Hubbard (Hubbard) slipped and fell at her job at a McDonald’s restaurant on

April 19, 2002. On April 29, 2002, Hubbard prematurely delivered her daughter, Maliyah

Ashunti Hubbard (Maliyah). Maliyah, by and through Hubbard, commenced this negligence

lawsuit against McDonald’s Corporation and Michael L. Retzer, d/b/a McDonald’s,

(McDonald’s), alleging, in part, that Hubbard’s fall had proximately caused Maliyah’s premature birth and her injuries from complications of prematurity. Maliyah designated Dr.

Anthony DeSalvo as an expert witness on the causal connection between Hubbard’s fall and

the premature delivery. The trial court granted McDonald’s’ motion to strike Dr. DeSalvo’s

testimony. This Court has granted Maliyah’s petition for an interlocutory appeal.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On February 12, 2008, McDonald’s filed the motion to strike, with attachments

consisting of Hubbard’s medical records from Grenada Lake Medical Center, the deposition

of Dr. DeSalvo, and the affidavit of defense expert Dr. Paul Rice.1 According to Hubbard’s

medical records from Grenada Lake Medical Center, she was admitted to the emergency

department on April 19, 2002. She reported that she had “slipped on wet floor–fell to R

side,” and complained of right-sided abdominal pain. The records noted that Hubbard was

twenty-three weeks pregnant, and that her membranes were intact.2 Hubbard was monitored

for approximately four hours and then discharged with instructions to rest.

¶3. Hubbard returned to the emergency room on April 26, 2002, complaining that on the

previous Tuesday, her water had broken and run down her leg. She also had experienced

cramping. Her admission diagnosis was recorded as “Fall-? Leaky Membrane.” The nursing

notes showed that a Nitrazine test was determined to be negative.3 Based on a laboratory

1 Only documentation relevant to the motion to strike has been included in the record on appeal. 2 Dr. DeSalvo testified that “membranes” refers to the “bag” holding the baby and the amniotic fluid. A rupture of membranes means the bag has broken. 3 Dr. DeSalvo explained that a Nitrizine test detects elevated pH in the vagina, and it is commonly used to test for the presence of amniotic fluid.

2 test, she was diagnosed with trichomonas, a vaginal infection, and sent home with

medication. Hubbard returned the next day complaining of “cramping in hips and buttocks.”

She stated she had “clear fluid-like” vaginal discharge. A nurse noted that her membranes

were intact and that she was not having contractions. She was discharged with a diagnosis

of pressure pain and trichomonas.

¶4. Hubbard visited the emergency room again on April 28, 2002, complaining of lower

abdominal and back pain all day. At 12:55 a.m. on April 29, 2002, a nurse noted that she

was in preterm labor. At this point, Hubbard was twenty-four-and-and-a-half weeks

pregnant. Her membranes were noted to be intact. Dr. S.W. Bondurant treated Hubbard.

She was administered IV fluids and tocolysis. Dr. Bondurant noted that Hubbard’s

pregnancy had been complicated by a trichomonas infection and by a fall at work, in which

she had landed on her back. The nurse’s notes reflect that, at 1:25 a.m., Hubbard had a

“spontaneous rupture of membranes.” At 2:29 a.m., she was transferred to the University of

Mississippi Medical Center (UMC), where she delivered Maliyah prematurely. According

to Dr. DeSalvo’s deposition, the UMC medical records stated that Hubbard had a “bulging

bag of water” when she arrived.

¶5. According to Dr. DeSalvo’s deposition, he is board-certified in obstetrics and

gynecology. From his review of Hubbard’s medical records and his experience, training, and

expertise, Dr. DeSalvo testified to a reasonable degree of medical probability that Hubbard’s

fall at work was a significant contributing cause of her premature rupture of membranes and

premature labor leading to Maliyah’s premature birth. Dr. DeSalvo testified to a reasonable

degree of medical probability that Hubbard’s membranes actually had ruptured on or about

3 Tuesday, April 23, 2002, and that Hubbard’s fall was a significant contributing cause of the

rupture and premature labor.

¶6. Dr. DeSalvo testified that Hubbard’s documented pregnancy course after her April 19,

2002, fall supported his opinion that Hubbard’s water had broken on or about April 23, 2002.

He noted that Hubbard had reported on April 26, 2002, that her water had broken the

previous Tuesday, that she had clear fluid running down her leg, and that she had cramps.

Dr. DeSalvo testified that clear fluid and cramping are consistent with ruptured membranes.

He testified that the presence of amniotic fluid in the vagina confirms ruptured membranes.

However, he testified, the absence of amniotic fluid in the vagina does not exclude ruptured

membranes.

¶7. Dr. DeSalvo admitted that medical personnel did not diagnose ruptured membranes

on April 26, 2002, and that the Nitrazene test, which would have detected amniotic fluid, was

negative, but he cast doubt on the reliability of the Nitrazene test. He explained that a

Nitrazene test does not specifically detect amniotic fluid, but only detects elevated pH in the

vagina, which is indicative of the presence of amniotic fluid. He testified that trichomonas

infection also elevates vaginal pH. He testified that, because Hubbard had trichomonas, her

vaginal pH was elevated, and the Nitrazene test should have been positive. Dr. DeSalvo

opined that, because the Nitrazine test failed to detect Hubbard’s elevated vaginal pH from

trichomonas, the test was improperly administered. Dr. DeSalvo admitted that trichomonas

infection can be a contributing factor in preterm labor, but he testified that, for the vast

majority of expectant mothers, a vaginal infection does not cause preterm labor. He stated

that the discharge caused by trichomonas is usually yellow, not clear.

4 ¶8. Dr. DeSalvo also opined that Hubbard’s rupture of membranes on or about April 23,

2002, was of the type known as a “high leak.” Dr. DeSalvo explained that if the membranes

rupture at the bottom of the bag near the cervix, then the amniotic fluid quickly drains out

of the vagina. But if the membranes rupture high “in the interface between the membranes

and the wall of the uterus,” then “the water will trickle out, but the water at the bottom will

still bulge,” a type of rupture known as a “high leak.” Dr. DeSalvo testified that a high leak

can be difficult to diagnose because the condition may cause small amounts of amniotic fluid

to leak intermittently. He also testified that a high leak can have a latency period of several

days. Dr.

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