Moore v. Anesthesia Services, P.A.

966 A.2d 830, 2008 WL 5206790, 2008 Del. Super. LEXIS 383
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 8, 2008
DocketCiv. A. 06C-01-013-JOH
StatusPublished

This text of 966 A.2d 830 (Moore v. Anesthesia Services, P.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Anesthesia Services, P.A., 966 A.2d 830, 2008 WL 5206790, 2008 Del. Super. LEXIS 383 (Del. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

HERLIHY, J.

The Court has before it three motions for summary judgment. Plaintiffs have brought suit claiming medical negligence or defective product. The product at issue is a suture used in plaintiff Roland Moore’s surgery. Earlier in this case, an apparent factual dispute developed over which manufacturer supplied the suture.

After previously denying summary judgment motions regarding that dispute, additional discovery was undertaken. It now appears that the full factual record has been developed. That has prompted one manufacturer, U.S. Surgical Corp. to move for summary judgment arguing there is no basis to find it supplied the suture plaintiffs allege was defective. Plaintiffs have moved for partial summary judgment asking this Court, in effect, to declare U.S. Surgical’s suture was not used. The other suture manufacturer, Ethicon, Inc., does not oppose U.S. Surgical’s motion. Its own motion for summary judgment contends that plaintiffs cannot meet the necessary elements of a circumstantial case of defect. Therefore, Ethicon argues summary judgment should be awarded to it now.

The Court finds the factual record warrants granting U.S. Surgical’s motion which renders plaintiffs motion moot. For reasons explained herein, summary *832 judgment is not warranted for Ethieon’s motion.

Factual Background

On June 23, 2004, Roland P. Moore (“Moore”) was admitted to Christiana Hospital (“Christiana”) to undergo carotid endarterectomy. The surgery was performed by Dr. Sonya Tuerff. The procedure required a wiry, thin 6-0 suture be applied to Moore. The suture came in a sealed bag, which was opened by a nurse and handled by Dr. Tuerff and possibly the doctor’s surgical assistant. Dr. Tuerff testified that this suture, as was the common medical practice, came attached with two needles on both ends. Dr. Tuerff stated that she checked the suture for any manufacturing defects. 1 From her deposition, she has surmised that there was potential defect with the suture used in Moore’s surgery. 2 However, Nurse Judith Lind-Maloney testified that she recalled Dr. Tuerff remarking that she may have tied the suture too tightly. 3

In any event, the surgical wound was eventually sealed and the procedure appeared to have been successful. Moore was then transferred to the Post Anesthesia Care Unit (“PACU”). However, while in the PACU, Moore became hypersensitive and severely agitated. Subsequently, Moore lost consciousness, had to be reintu-bated, and required another surgery. The second surgery revealed that Moore had a large hematoma at the surgical sight. Plaintiffs’ allege that the hematoma and the need for emergency surgery resulted from either the defective suture or medical malpractice. After the second surgery, it was determined that Moore had suffered a stroke which resulted in paralysis and diminished mental capacity. He will require the assistance of long term care.

Unfortunately, Christiana personnel discarded the suture used in the endarterec-tomy. Without the actual suture used in the surgery, a dispute between Ethicon and U.S. Surgical arose, with each side claiming it was the other company that produced the suture used for Moore’s surgery. In February 2008, this Court could not make a determination on summary judgment regarding whose suture was employed, in large part, because these facts remained in dispute or needed to further developed. 4 The fundamental factual conflict was that Dr. Tuerff said it was an Ethicon suture but a later Christiana bill listed the suture as U.S. Surgical.

Since that time, new information has been brought to the Court’s attention. Specifically, Christiana has now moved to amend some of its earlier discovery responses. In an earlier response, it claimed it had both Ethicon and U.S. Surgical sutures available for use when Moore had his surgery. Now Christiana, through an affidavit from Robert Martin (“Martin”), has stated that U.S. Surgical sutures were not available on the date of Moore’s surgery. 5 Instead, it has now determined the earliest date that U.S. Surgical sutures would have been used at Christiana would have been July 11, 2004, roughly two weeks after Moore’s surgery date. 6 More affidavits have been provided. Scott Huntley, a *833 sales representative for U.S. Surgical, and Christopher Miller, a marketing and sales employee of U.S. Surgical, have provided statements asserting that no U.S. Surgical sutures were available to Christiana on the date of Moore’s surgery. 7

In addition to Christiana’s discovery “correction,” Martin clarified the factual problem of Moore’s billing statement from his surgery. When the Court had ruled against summary judgment in February, the medical bill disclosed during discovery in 2006 listed the suture used at surgery was a U.S. Surgical brand. In an affidavit, Martin stated that this “error” was due to the fact that the computer bill was generated in March 2006 and reflected the products available to Christiana at that date, not June 23, 2004. Christiana’s counsel has also admitted and acknowledged this mistake to the Court during oral arguments. Its counsel also represented to this Court that it was now acknowledging that the suture in question was an Ethicon brand and repudiated a previous discovery response which represented uncertainty about the identity of the suture manufacturer.

Parties’ Contentions

In light of the new factual record, U.S. Surgical argues that it was chronologically impossible for its sutures to have been used at Christiana when Moore’s surgeries occurred. It contends this finding is buoyed by the three affidavits, which tend to establish a date two weeks following Moore’s surgery as the first occasion that U.S. Surgical sutures may have been available to operating doctors at Christiana.

Moore has moved for partial summary judgement asking this Court for a declaration that U.S. Surgical’s suture was not the one Dr. Tuerff used on him and that it was Ethicon’s. He relies on the same record that U.S. Surgical employs.

Ethicon has adopted a unique response to these motions. It does not oppose U.S. Surgical’s motion. It opposes, however, Moore’s motion even though the result is the same. Of course, granting U.S. Surgical’s motion is not a judicial declaration, as Moore seeks. However, if the Court granted U.S. Surgical’s motion, then the suture would necessarily become Ethi-con’s. In disputing Moore’s motion, on the other hand, Ethicon challenges the veracity of the affidavits from Christiana and U.S. Surgical and points, again, to the Christiana bill that was generated in 2006.

Ethicon’s motion, however, is more focused on plaintiffs’ inability to present a case of product defect. First, the suture in question was not retained. Second, it asserts plaintiffs are unable to exclude the possibility that one or more people in the operating room mishandled or damaged the suture, including Dr. Tuerff.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Windom Ex Rel. Windom v. Ungerer
903 A.2d 276 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2006)
General Motors Corporation v. Dillon
367 A.2d 1020 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1976)
Moore v. Sizemore
405 A.2d 679 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1979)
Oliver B. Cannon & Sons, Inc. v. Dorr-Oliver Inc.
312 A.2d 322 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1973)
Ebersole v. Lowengrub
180 A.2d 467 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1962)
Allendorf v. Kaiserman Enterprises
630 A.2d 402 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1993)
Plant v. Catalytic Construction Company
287 A.2d 682 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1972)
Pryor v. Aviola
301 A.2d 306 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1973)
Delaware Coach Co. v. Reynolds
71 A.2d 69 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1950)
Cuonzo v. Shore
958 A.2d 840 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2008)
Ciociola v. Delaware Coca-Cola Bottling Company
172 A.2d 252 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1961)
LOCAL UNION 199, LABORERS'INT. U. OF NO. AM. v. Plant
297 A.2d 37 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1972)
Law v. Gallegher
197 A. 479 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1938)
Roper v. Blumenfeld
706 A.2d 1151 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
966 A.2d 830, 2008 WL 5206790, 2008 Del. Super. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-anesthesia-services-pa-delsuperct-2008.