Moresi v. Evans

572 S.E.2d 327, 257 Ga. App. 670, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 2888, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 1255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedOctober 1, 2002
DocketA02A1168
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 572 S.E.2d 327 (Moresi v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moresi v. Evans, 572 S.E.2d 327, 257 Ga. App. 670, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 2888, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 1255 (Ga. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Mikell, Judge.

Lori and Lance Moresi filed suit against Carlton Douglas Evans, R.Ph., and Hapeville Drug Company, Inc. d/b/a Village Pharmacy (“Village Pharmacy”) after Evans, a pharmacist, erroneously dispensed phenobarbital instead of phentermine hydrochloride to Mrs. Moresi. The action asserted claims of professional negligence, bad faith, punitive damages, and loss of consortium against Evans and alleged that Village Pharmacy was liable under the theory of respon-deat superior. Mrs. Moresi claimed that after taking phenobarbital for four days, she began to experience side effects, including weakness, loss of consciousness, varicose veins, and swelling in her right leg. The trial court granted partial summary judgment to the plaintiffs on the issues of Evans’ negligence and Village Pharmacy’s potential respondeat superior liability. The court concluded that Evans breached a duty by mistakenly filling Mrs. Moresi’s prescription with the wrong drug and, therefore, was negligent as a matter of law. However, the court held that the issues of proximate cause and damages were questions of fact for the jury.

On the defendants’ motion, the trial court trifurcated the trial into three phases: (1) causation and compensatory damages; (2) liability for punitive damages; and (3) the amount of punitive damages. After the first phase of the trial, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants, obviating the need for determining punitive damages. Judgment was entered on the verdict, and the plaintiffs filed a motion for a new trial. Following a hearing, the trial court denied the motion. This appeal followed.

Mr. and Mrs. Moresi argue that the trial court erred in trifur-cating the trial, in limiting the testimony of their expert witness, in refusing to give their requested jury charge on the defendants’ burden of proof, and in failing to clarify the applicable law in response to a jury question during deliberation. We affirm.

The record demonstrates that Mrs. Moresi began taking fen-fluramine and phentermine hydrochloride (“Fen-Phen”) by prescription in February 1997 to treat obesity. Approximately three months later, on May 28, 1997, Evans erroneously filled Mrs. Moresi’s prescription for phentermine hydrochloride with 30 milligrams of phenobarbital. Phenobarbital is a widely used medication that is normally prescribed to control seizures. Over the next several days, Mrs. Mor-esi took four tablets of phenobarbital. She testified that she experienced a number of symptoms, including fatigue, lethargy, weakness, dizziness, headaches, emotional instability, and nightmares.

According to Mrs. Moresi, on May 31, after taking the fourth dose of phenobarbital, she felt increasingly weak, dizzy, and de *671 pressed. She testified that she “blacked out” while taking a bath. Mrs. Moresi called a Kroger pharmacy and described the medication she had taken and her subsequent symptoms. Her conversation with the pharmacist led her to believe that she had ingested phenobarbital. Mrs. Moresi called her husband at work and told him that she believed she had been given the wrong medication.

Mr. Moresi testified that he arrived home between 30 and 40 minutes after his wife’s call. He found his wife, wearing a towel, asleep on the couch. Their three young children, a two-year-old girl and twin eleven-month-old boys, were unattended. Mr. and Mrs. Moresi proceeded to the Georgia Baptist Urgent Care Center. After expressing her belief that she had been given phenobarbital, Mrs. Moresi was diagnosed with an adverse reaction to the drug. She was given intravenous fluids and activated charcoal. A blood test confirmed the presence of phenobarbital. However, the treating physician noted in her report that the level of phenobarbital in Mrs. Mor-esi’s blood was “[b]arely detectible. Certainly not toxic.” Mrs. Moresi was released that evening.

Mrs. Moresi testified that the next morning, June 1, she experienced additional symptoms including fluid retention, swelling in both legs, and throbbing pain in her right leg. She further testified that over the next several days, the veins in her right leg became swollen and “knotty” in appearance and that she had difficulty urinating. She also experienced nausea. On June 20,1997, she returned to the Urgent Care Center, where she was diagnosed with pyelone-phritis, an acute bacterial infection of the kidney resulting from poor emptying of the bladder, and phlebitis, an inflammation of the veins in the leg. Dr. Kimberly Gibson, Mrs. Moresi’s treating physician at the Urgent Care Center, testified that she believed the adverse drug reaction was at least a contributing cause of both disorders. Similarly, Dr. Kenneth Barnwell, who provided ongoing treatment to Mrs. Moresi beginning on July 16, 1997, testified that he diagnosed the condition in her right leg as “recurrent thrombophlebitis in the varicose veins . . . with associated edema” and further testified that the condition was most likely related to exposure to phenobarbital.

The defense presented evidence that Mrs. Moresi had a history of leg swelling and varicose veins prior to ingesting phenobarbital. In fact, Mrs. Moresi admitted on cross-examination that she developed varicose veins during both of her pregnancies, beginning in 1994. Her obstetrician, Dr. Paul Browne, deposed that Mrs. Moresi’s second pregnancy was complicated by “severe varicosities” and that once varicose veins develop, they can become a problem after the pregnancy is over. Further, Dr. Kellie Gray, a vascular surgeon who examined Mrs. Moresi, deposed that she knew of no correlation between phenobarbital and the occurrence of varicose veins.

*672 Dr. Alexander Duncan, a blood coagulation specialist, testified that after reviewing Mrs. Moresi’s medical records, he concluded that the problems in her right leg were not caused by an adverse reaction to phenobarbital. He further testified that the condition of Mrs. Mor-esi’s right leg was probably related to the varicose veins she suffered during pregnancy.

The defense also presented evidence that Mrs. Moresi had a history of urinary tract infections and was treated for such infections on at least two occasions prior to ingesting phenobarbital. Additionally, Dr. Duncan testified that urinary tract infections are common in pregnant women and are caused by bacteria entering the body from the outside.

In response to Mrs. Moresi’s claim that the phenobarbital caused her to feel lethargic and fatigued, the defense elicited her testimony on cross-examination that she often got up in the middle of the night to give the twins bottles and that she frequently was tired. Mr. Mor-esi admitted that the months leading up to May 1997 were “hectic times around [his] household,” that he worked approximately 60 hours per week, that his wife was primarily responsible for caring for the children, and that she was often exhausted.

1. First, Mr. and Mrs. Moresi contend that the trial court erred in trifurcating the trial. Finding no abuse of discretion, we affirm.

“Trial courts are vested with wide discretion in the management of the business before them and this Court will not interfere absent clear and manifest abuse of discretion.” Cantrell v. Northeast Ga. Med. Center, 235 Ga. App. 365, 368 (1) (b) (508 SE2d 716) (1998) (bifurcation of liability and damages issues in wrongful death and medical malpractice action was not error). See also Hanie v.

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Bluebook (online)
572 S.E.2d 327, 257 Ga. App. 670, 2002 Fulton County D. Rep. 2888, 2002 Ga. App. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moresi-v-evans-gactapp-2002.