Moretz v. Muakkassa

2012 Ohio 1177
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 21, 2012
Docket25602
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2012 Ohio 1177 (Moretz v. Muakkassa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moretz v. Muakkassa, 2012 Ohio 1177 (Ohio Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[Cite as Moretz v. Muakkassa, 2012-Ohio-1177.]

STATE OF OHIO ) IN THE COURT OF APPEALS )ss: NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF SUMMIT )

LARRY J. MORETZ, et al. C.A. No. 25602

Appellees / Cross-appellants

v. APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE KAMEL F. MUAKKASSA, M.D., et al. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF SUMMIT, OHIO Appellants / Cross-appellees CASE No. CV-2007-03-2157

DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY

Dated: March 21, 2012

DICKINSON, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

{¶1} Following surgery to remove a large, fluid-filled mass in his pelvis, Larry Moretz

found that he had lost all control of his bowels and bladder and all sexual function. He and his

wife sued his neurosurgeon and general surgeon. The general surgeon, Gary Williams, settled

before trial. The Moretzes prosecuted their medical malpractice claims against the

neurosurgeon, Kamel Muakkassa, arguing that he violated the standard of care by failing to scrub

in on the surgery and failing to use magnification and/or nerve stimulation to help locate and

protect nerves during the procedure. The parties do not dispute that Mr. Moretz’s injuries are

permanent or that they were caused by the surgery, but Dr. Muakkassa has argued that the

injuries were not caused by any deviation from the standard of care. Following a jury verdict of

$995,428 against him, Dr. Muakkassa appealed and the Moretzes cross-appealed. This Court

affirms in part because the trial court (1) exercised proper discretion in determining there was 2

good cause to permit a later filing of the Moretzes’ expert’s deposition under Rule 32(A) of the

Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure, (2) correctly refused to submit a narrative jury interrogatory, (3)

properly determined that Evidence Rule 803(18) would not operate to exclude a medical

illustration taken from a textbook, (4) properly admitted Mr. Moretz’s medical bills and expert

testimony about their reasonableness, and (5) properly excluded evidence of write-offs from

medical bills in the absence of a proper foundation and because (6) Dr. Muakkassa did not

demonstrate prejudicial error in the trial court’s exclusion of evidence about Dr. Williams’s

settlement, (7) Section 1343.03(C) of the Ohio Revised Code is not unconstitutional, and (8) the

trial court properly exercised discretion in determining that Dr. Muakkassa did not make a good

faith effort to settle the claims against him. This Court reverses the judgment in part and

remands this matter for recalculation of prejudgment interest because the trial court should have

calculated interest on the verdict after it was reduced by the amount of Dr. Williams’s settlement.

BACKGROUND

{¶2} At the time of the surgery, Mr. Moretz was 36 years old, married, and the father

of a two-year-old daughter. He had normal sensation and sexual function and normal bowel and

bladder function. After experiencing acute abdominal pain and some constipation and hesitancy

with urination, he sought treatment for his symptoms. A radiology report revealed a grapefruit-

sized mass near his tailbone, and he was referred to Dr. Muakkassa for treatment of an anterior

sacral meningocele. Mr. Moretz testified that his doctors told him he had a hole in his tailbone

and the fluid around his spinal cord had forced its way out through the hole to form a pouch

created by the membrane surrounding the spinal cord. He was told that the large, fluid-filled cyst

was pressing on his bladder and other organs, causing his symptoms. Dr. Muakkassa advised 3

him to see Dr. Williams, a general surgeon, to discuss whether the cyst could be removed

laparoscopically.

{¶3} The parties agree that Mr. Moretz had a large cyst located near the end of his

spinal cord, but they disagree about whether it was a meningocele or a neurenteric cyst. The

Moretzes’ neurosurgery expert, Gary Dennis, described the cyst as an anterior sacral

meningocele, which he explained is an “outpouching” of the meninges, or covering of the spinal

cord, filled with cerebral spinal fluid. Dr. Muakkassa and his neurosurgery expert, Mark

McLaughlin, however, testified that the cyst was not a meningocele, but a neurenteric cyst,

which is associated with spinal abnormalities, but does not have nerve tissue in it. Dr.

McLaughlin explained that a neurenteric cyst is “really more of a digestive [system]

abnormality” that typically would be removed by a general surgeon rather than a neurosurgeon.

{¶4} Dr. Williams and Mr. Moretz testified consistently about the surgical plan.

According to them, if Dr. Williams was unable to remove the cyst with a less invasive

laparoscopic approach, he would switch to an open incision and provide access through the

abdomen to the cyst. Then, Dr. Muakkassa would remove the cyst from the tip of the spinal cord

and seal it off.

{¶5} Dr. Muakkassa and his expert, Dr. McLaughlin, testified that Dr. Muakkassa did

not violate the standard of care in his treatment of Mr. Moretz. Dr. Muakkassa testified that he

did not scrub in for Mr. Moretz’s procedure because it was unnecessary. He said that he entered

the surgical suite several times in order to consult with Dr. Williams. He described his

involvement as checking to see that Dr. Williams located the cyst and properly closed it off to

avoid a leak of cerebral spinal fluid. He said that he was not specifically looking for nerves

because there are no nerves in that area, but if there had been any there, he would have seen 4

them. He described the surgery as removal of a cyst in the abdominal cavity, not neurosurgery.

Dr. Muakkassa testified that Dr. Williams appropriately performed the surgery. He said the

injuries occurred because the pressure of the cyst over time had caused damage to the nerves so

that they could not endure the normal stretching required to access the cyst during surgery,

resulting in a loss of function.

{¶6} After the jury returned a verdict against Dr. Muakkassa, he moved to apply the

statutory cap for non-economic damages and a statutory set-off for the amount paid by Dr.

Williams in settlement. The Moretzes opposed the motion for a set-off of the amount paid by

Dr. Williams and moved for prejudgment interest. The trial court reduced the verdict by $39,600

to bring the noneconomic damages element in line with the cap, then calculated prejudgment

interest before applying a set-off for the prior settlement. The trial court entered judgment for

the Moretzes in the amount of $953,858.08 and ordered Dr. Muakkassa to pay costs.

CIVIL RULE 32(A)

{¶7} Dr. Muakkassa’s first assignment of error is that the trial court incorrectly

permitted the Moretzes to present expert witness testimony via a videotape deposition that was

not timely filed as required by Rule 32(A) of the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure. He has argued

that they failed to show good cause for the delay in filing the deposition and, had the deposition

been excluded for violation of the rule, Dr. Muakkassa would have been entitled to a directed

verdict.

{¶8} Under Rule 32(A) of the Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure, “[e]very deposition

intended to be presented as evidence must be filed at least one day before the day of trial or

hearing unless for good cause shown the court permits a later filing.” The duty is mandatory, but

the Rule allows the trial court to permit a later filing if it determines there is good cause to do so. 5

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Related

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