Ouellette Ex Rel. Ouellette v. Subak

391 N.W.2d 810, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 844
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 8, 1986
DocketC4-85-571
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 391 N.W.2d 810 (Ouellette Ex Rel. Ouellette v. Subak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ouellette Ex Rel. Ouellette v. Subak, 391 N.W.2d 810, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 844 (Mich. 1986).

Opinion

KELLEY, Justice.

The father of a child born with brain damage brought this negligence action on behalf of the child and himself against two medical general practitioners. The trial court refused to give the doctors’ requested jury instructions that physicians are not responsible for an honest error in judgment. A Hennepin County jury by special verdict found the doctors negligent and awarded $1 million in damages. Following denial of their post trial motions and entry of judgment on the verdict, the doctors appealed. 1 Holding that the trial court erred when it refused to give the so-called “honest error in judgment” instruction, the court of appeals reversed and remanded for a new trial on all issues. 2 Both parties petitioned this court for further review. Both petitions were granted. For the purpose of this opinion, the Ouellettes will be denominated appellants and the physicians, respondents. Appellants here challenge the court of appeals’ reversal, claiming the trial court correctly refused to give the “honest error in judgment” instruction. Respondents allege error in admission of an alleged expert’s testimony on causation, and claim insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of negligence and causation. 3 We affirm the court of appeals.

Kristian Ouellette is a brain-impaired child with profound physical and mental retardation. Six and one-half years after his birth he was functioning developmental *812 ly between the age of 6 and 13 months. He can sit and crawl, but cannot stand without braces nor walk without help. He can drink from a cup and hold a spoon but is unable to feed himself. He can neither talk nor communicate basic needs. His problems are permanent. Doctors expect no significant development in his higher intellectual function nor in his self help skills. His parents contend his problems were caused by the negligence of respondents, two family practitioners — Dr. Barbara H. Subak and Dr. Maxine 0. Nelson. The negligence claimed is failure to intervene in a prolonged pregnancy.

Julie Ouellette, then 20, suspected she was pregnant with her first child in February 1977. She and her husband had regularly practiced birth control but had a single act of unprotected intercourse on January 23, 1977. On March 11, she first saw Dr. Subak, a board certified family practitioner. Approximately 15 percent of Dr. Subak’s practice was obstetrics. She told the doctor that the onset of her last menstrual period was January 5, 1977. A pregnancy test was positive. After taking a history and making a physical examination, Dr. Subak calculated the “estimated date of confinement” (EDC), or due date, as October 12, 1977.

At a May 12 prenatal visit, Dr. Maxine Nelson, Dr. Subak’s associate, detected no fetal heart tones, usually heard at 18 to 19 weeks. These heart tones were detected by Dr. Subak for the first time on June 11.

As the pregnancy progressed, Dr. Subak began to entertain doubts about the validity of the EDC. A September 8 examination revealed that the fetus was still floating rather than “engaging” in the pelvis. Normally, the fetus descends into the mother’s pelvis approximately one month before delivery. On a September 28 examination, the fetus was still floating, a fact Dr. Subak considered unusual at 38 weeks, two weeks before the calculated due date. 4

More doubts as to the EDC were raised in Dr. Subak’s mind when at an October 7 examination, only five days from the EDC, the fetus was still floating and the cervix was still closed. On a pelvimetry, an x-ray of the pelvis, taken that day, the femoral epiphysis of the fetus — the growth plate at the end of the femur — was not visible. The femoral epiphysis, which ossifies separately from the femur, is normally visible by x-ray on a male fetus at 36 weeks.

Five days after the EDC, on October 17, Dr. Subak found the cervix was beginning to soften, but the head of the fetus was barely into the pelvis. A week later Dr. Nelson noted a soft but closed cervix and that the baby’s head was at the same station in the birth canal as the previous week. Similar findings were made on November 2.

On November 9 Dr. Subak admitted Mrs. Ouellette to Metropolitan Medical Center to induce labor and conduct an oxytocin challenge test (OCT). 5 Dr. Subak consulted with Dr. John N. Maunder, a board-certified obstetrician. Although Mrs. Ouellette was at 43 weeks, or three weeks overdue by medical history, Dr. Subak felt from her clinical observation the pregnancy was at 39 weeks. Dr. Maunder examined Mrs. Ouellette and found her cervix thick and closed and her membranes intact. He saw no immediate need to terminate the pregnancy. Dr. Maunder noted the baby was very active, making it difficult to get heart tracings. He considered the EDC off and *813 advised Dr. Subak to stimulate labor cautiously and conduct a prolonged OCT.

Results of the OCT were normal on November 9 and 10. Mrs. Ouellette did not go into labor and was discharged from the Center. She returned November 17 for another OCT which was again negative and failed to lead to real labor. When Dr. Nelson saw Mrs. Ouellette on November 25, she observed the cervix was softening but the fetus’ head was still floating. On November 30, Dr. Subak admitted Mrs. Ouellette for another OCT and induction of labor. The OCT was again normal but Mrs. Ouellette still did not progress into labor. Dr. Nelson visited the patient in the hospital that evening and consulted with Dr. John T. Moehn, an obstetrician. On examination, he found the fetus was large but still floating. He recommended terminating the pregnancy by Caesarean section. The situation was not considered an emergency because the fetal monitoring strips were normal, indicating the baby was not in jeopardy.

The following morning, Dr. Mitchell Pincus performed a Caesarean section and delivered a baby weighing 9 pounds, 13 ounces. The Caesarean section was performed because the baby was considered large and post-mature. Dr. Pineus, however, observed no classic signs of “post-mature syndrome,” such as shriveled skin. He found no gross abnormalities in the placenta, so it was not sent to a pathologist for microscopic evaluation. Dr. Pineus also recalled no meconium in the amniotic fluid, an indicator of fetal distress.

The evidence is conflicting on the state of Kristian’s health at birth and during his hospital stay. Generally, the appellants assert he displayed signs indicative of previous fetal distress. To the contrary, the medical evidence, photographs, and recognized tests such as the Apgar scores, 6 respondents contend, show the absence of the alleged fetal distress blamed for Kristian’s admittedly severe developmental impairments.

The complaint charged the two physicians with negligence in permitting a prolonged pregnancy, failing to timely induce labor or recognize increased risks of injury to the fetus, and ignoring signs of fetal distress.

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Bluebook (online)
391 N.W.2d 810, 1986 Minn. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ouellette-ex-rel-ouellette-v-subak-minn-1986.