Mark W. Urlaub, as Next of Kin and of the Estate of Bertha Worley Urlaub v. Select Specialty Hospital-Memphis, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 20, 2011
DocketW2010-00732-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Mark W. Urlaub, as Next of Kin and of the Estate of Bertha Worley Urlaub v. Select Specialty Hospital-Memphis, Inc. (Mark W. Urlaub, as Next of Kin and of the Estate of Bertha Worley Urlaub v. Select Specialty Hospital-Memphis, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mark W. Urlaub, as Next of Kin and of the Estate of Bertha Worley Urlaub v. Select Specialty Hospital-Memphis, Inc., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON NOVEMBER 17, 2010 Session

MARK W. URLAUB, as next of kin and Executor of the Estate of BERTHA WORLEY URLAUB v. SELECT SPECIALTY HOSPITAL-MEMPHIS, INC., ET AL.

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. CT-0001821-08 Robert L. Childers, Judge

No. W2010-00732-COA-R3-CV - Filed January 20, 2011

Plaintiff filed this medical battery suit on behalf of his deceased mother and named as defendants the nephrologist who ordered an allegedly unauthorized hemodialysis procedure, another treating physician, and the hospital where she was treated. The trial court granted summary judgment to the treating physician who did not order the procedure and to the hospital. Plaintiff appeals. We find that both of these defendants were entitled to summary judgment and therefore affirm the trial court’s decision.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

A LAN E. H IGHERS, P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D AVID R. F ARMER, J., and J. S TEVEN S TAFFORD, J., joined.

Mark W. Urlaub, Prince Frederick Maryland, pro se

James L. Kirby, Jeffrey L. Griffin, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellee, Select Specialty Hospital-Memphis, Inc.

Michael G. McLaren, William E. Cochran, Jr., Memphis, TN, for the appellee, Louis V. Eberle, III, M.D. OPINION

I. F ACTS & P ROCEDURAL H ISTORY1

On April 13, 2007, Bertha Urlaub was admitted to Select Specialty Hospital (“Hospital”), in Memphis, under the care of her physician, Louis V. Eberle, III, M.D. (“Dr. Eberle”). Mrs. Urlaub, who was in her seventies, had previously suffered a brain injury after undergoing an operation at another hospital, and she was ventilator-dependent, comatose, and unresponsive. Dr. Eberle specialized in the area of internal medicine. During his care of Mrs. Urlaub, Dr. Eberle requested numerous consults in the areas of nephrology, gastroenterology, endocrinology, diabetes, neurology, infectious disease, surgery, and cardiology. He requested a nephrology consult due in part to Mrs. Urlaub’s decreased urine output. A nephrology consult was performed on May 1, 2007, and the nephrologist’s impression was acute renal failure, among other things. Hemodialysis was recommended to treat Mrs. Urlaub’s renal failure.

On May 5, 2007, another nephrologist, Mark Shermer, M.D. (“Dr. Shermer”) had a telephone conversation with Mrs. Urlaub’s son, Mark Urlaub (“Plaintiff”), who lived in Maryland and held power of attorney over Mrs. Urlaub’s affairs. Dr. Shermer suggested to Plaintiff that Mrs. Urlaub needed to undergo hemodialysis treatments in order to reduce her swelling and fluid buildup due to her decreased urine output. Dr. Shermer explained the benefits, risks, and potential complications of hemodialysis treatment. Plaintiff then consented to his mother’s receipt of hemodialysis treatment under certain conditions, including that such treatment was not to occur on consecutive days, and that his authorization was necessary prior to each procedure.

On May 9, Mrs. Urlaub completed a hemodialysis treatment with Plaintiff’s consent. On or about May 10, Dr. Shermer and Plaintiff had another telephone conversation, during which Dr. Shermer told Plaintiff that if hemodialysis treatments were not performed on consecutive days for at least a few days, “we’re going to fall so far behind in the fluid balance that everything is going to be futile.” Dr. Shermer also explained that he could not effectively provide ongoing supportive care to try to sustain Mrs. Urlaub’s life unless Plaintiff gave him some leeway to handle the hemodialysis treatments using his best

1 Because the order appealed was made final pursuant to Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedure 54.02, other claims remain pending in the trial court. The facts set forth in this opinion are drawn from the limited record we have before us on appeal. Our inclusion of any particular fact in this opinion should not be construed as a conclusive finding of fact that would prevent the parties from presenting additional evidence regarding the fact or prevent the trial court from making different findings of fact based on the evidence presented by the parties.

-2- judgment. According to Dr. Shermer, Plaintiff expressed that “he wanted everything done” to try to save his mother’s life. Following this conversation, it was Dr. Shermer’s understanding that it was “left to [Dr. Shermer’s] best judgment as to what [Mrs. Urlaub] needed to give her the best chance to survive.” It was also Dr. Shermer’s impression that Plaintiff understood that it was necessary to perform hemodialysis on consecutive days for a few days.

Mrs. Urlaub completed another hemodialysis treatment on May 11 with Plaintiff’s consent. On May 12, Plaintiff learned from his sister that Mrs. Urlaub was scheduled to undergo another hemodialysis treatment that evening. Plaintiff immediately called the Hospital and spoke with a hospital staff member, and eventually, Plaintiff spoke with Dr. Eberle. Dr. Eberle verified that Mrs. Urlaub was scheduled to undergo hemodialysis again that evening as ordered by Dr. Shermer. According to Plaintiff, he was adamant in instructing Dr. Eberle that Mrs. Urlaub was not to undergo the hemodialysis treatment. After further discussion, the conversation allegedly “[went] downhill fast,” with Dr. Eberle stating, “you’re not a doctor” and “if we don’t do this Dr. Shermer is just going to walk,” to which Plaintiff responded, “I don’t give a [expletive] whether he walks or whether you like this or not, I am directing you not to do this treatment.” According to Plaintiff, Dr. Eberle would not give him Dr. Shermer’s telephone number but stated that he would relay Plaintiff’s information to Dr. Shermer. Dr. Eberle then allegedly told Plaintiff to get his sister up to the Hospital to witness the hemodialysis treatment.

After his conversation with Dr. Eberle, Plaintiff called the Administrator of the Hospital, David Key, who stated that he could not intervene in the situation. Plaintiff then called his sister, and she went to the Hospital and witnessed the procedure. Approximately one hour after the hemodialysis treatment was completed, Mrs. Urlaub suffered cardiac arrest, and she died the next day.

Plaintiff filed this lawsuit as next of kin and executor of the estate of Mrs. Urlaub, alleging medical battery and medical negligence against numerous defendants, including Dr. Shermer, Dr. Eberle, the Hospital, a nurse, and Bio-Medical Applications of Tennessee, Inc., which is an entity that allegedly owned and operated the hemodialysis unit. The complaint stated,

Defendant [Hospital] is being sued in its capacity as owner and operator of the hospital wherein the care and treatment of Plaintiff Bertha Urlaub was given; in its capacity as the principal and/or employer of Defendant Bio-Medical Applications of Tennessee, Inc.; and in its capacity as the direct or indirect principal and/or employer of Defendant Nurse Bobbie Hinds. Should facts other than those alleged herein become apparent during discovery, Defendant

-3- [Hospital] should be on notice that it is also being sued as the principal and/or employer of any agents and/or employees who may be discovered to have cared for Plaintiff Bertha Urlaub negligently or without informed consent.

Plaintiff subsequently stipulated in an agreed order that Bio-Medical Applications of Tennessee, Inc., and Nurse Hinds should be granted summary judgment, and it dismissed its claims against those defendants with prejudice. In later consent orders, Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed his claims of medical negligence against Hospital, Dr. Shermer, and Dr. Eberle, with prejudice. However, his claims for medical battery against those three defendants remained pending.

Dr.

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