Ray v. Beatrice Community Hosp. & Health Ctr.

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 2022
DocketA-21-240
StatusPublished

This text of Ray v. Beatrice Community Hosp. & Health Ctr. (Ray v. Beatrice Community Hosp. & Health Ctr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ray v. Beatrice Community Hosp. & Health Ctr., (Neb. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

RAY V. BEATRICE COMMUNITY HOSP. & HEALTH CTR.

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

DOUGLAS ALAN RAY, APPELLANT, V.

BEATRICE COMMUNITY HOSPITAL AND HEALTH CENTER, INC., APPELLEE.

Filed February 8, 2022. No. A-21-240.

Appeal from the District Court for Gage County: RICKY A. SCHREINER, Judge. Affirmed. Lyle J. Koenig, of Koenig Law Firm, and James R. Welsh, of Welsh & Welsh, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant. Mark A. Christensen and Travis W. Tettenborn, of Cline, Williams, Wright, Johnson & Oldfather, L.L.P., for appellee.

PIRTLE, Chief Judge, and RIEDMANN and WELCH, Judges. WELCH, Judge. INTRODUCTION Douglas Alan Ray appeals the Gage County District Court’s order granting summary judgment in his professional negligence action against Beatrice Community Hospital and Health Center, Inc. (Hospital). Specifically, Ray alleges that the district court erred in denying his request to introduce the remaining portion of an expert witness deposition into evidence or, alternatively, finding that the common knowledge exception did not apply in the court’s determination that no genuine issue of material fact existed. For the reasons herein, we affirm.

-1- STATEMENT OF FACTS COMPLAINT In May 2019, Ray filed a complaint against the Hospital alleging professional negligence and premises liability. Ray contended, and the Hospital did not dispute, that in November 2017, he was admitted to the Hospital and underwent a total right knee replacement which was performed by Dr. Derek Weichel, a surgeon employed by the Hospital. Following the surgery, Dr. Weichel ordered Ray to complete physical therapy to ensure Ray would be able to navigate stairs as a requirement for discharge. On the morning of his anticipated discharge and prior to his physical therapy session, Hospital nurses assisted Ray out of his bed and into the bathroom. While Ray was using the bathroom, the nurses waited outside the bathroom door. When Ray tried to stand up, he slid and fell into a sitting position. After Ray’s fall, Dr. Weichel completed a post-fall assessment and determined that Ray did not sustain any injury as a result of the fall and that Ray could be discharged that day provided that Ray successfully completed the afternoon physical therapy session. During the afternoon physical therapy session, Kasey Murphy, a physical therapy nurse, directed Ray to perform stair training via a platform step. Ray was to use the platform step in order to demonstrate that he was successfully able to ascend and descend stairs while using a front wheel walker. Murphy utilized a hands-on assist with a gait belt to help guide Ray while he was ascending and descending from the platform step. As Ray attempted to ascend the platform leading with his good leg at Murphy’s request, Ray’s right leg, which had been operated on, gave out causing Ray to fall and land in a sitting position. Murphy was unable to catch Ray as he fell or hold him up with the gait belt due to Ray’s weight which was around 340 pounds. The fall dehisced Ray’s surgical wound requiring Ray to undergo a second surgery. During the second surgery, Dr. Weichel performed irrigation and closure of the surgical site. While completing that procedure, Dr. Weichel discovered, and repaired, a tear of the distal quadriceps muscle in Ray’s right leg. In connection with his fall from the platform, Ray alleged that the Hospital breached its duty “to possess and use the care, skill, and knowledge ordinarily possessed and used under like circumstances by other health care providers, physicians, and members of their respective professions engaged in similar practice . . . ,” alleged certain particular acts of negligence, and alleged “that as a direct and proximate result of [the Hospital’s] negligence and malpractice, [Ray] sustained substantial and permanent injuries and related damages.” Ray also alleged that the placement and use of the platform step constituted a hazard to him and that the Hospital was negligent under a premises liability theory of recovery. THE HOSPITAL’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT/ RAY’S MOTION FOR EXTENSION On January 28, 2021, the Hospital filed a motion for summary judgment and scheduled the hearing for February 8. The motion was filed in advance of the court-ordered dispositive motion deadline of February 12 and scheduled jury trial of March 22. Prior to the summary judgment hearing, Ray’s counsel requested an extension until March 8 to respond to the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment via a motion for extension of time to file a brief opposing the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment and evidence in support thereof. The court held a hearing on Ray’s

-2- motion for extension of time on February 4. During that hearing, Ray’s counsel asserted that co-counsel contracted Covid-19 in January, that this caused his office to get behind, and that he desired more time to respond to the Hospital’s motion. In response, the Hospital’s counsel argued that Ray’s counsel had not complied with the statute requiring that he submit an affidavit showing good cause for a continuance and that Ray’s counsel was seeking additional time to find new evidence because Ray’s expert witness could not establish causation in her deposition. Ray’s counsel stated that the intention was not to seek new evidence, but, rather, obtain additional time to review and refute the Hospital’s allegations in connection with their motion for summary judgment. The court denied Ray’s motion to continue, stating: Well, we can have the hearing [on summary judgment] on February 8th, as scheduled, and I will give you an opportunity to brief that. The summary judgment process is laid out in the court rules. Again, this case has been on file for 465 days. You should have a fantastic grip on the facts of this. You should be able to make that argument why they are not entitled to judgment as a matter of law by now. So we are going to go ahead with the hearing on February 8th. I will address a briefing schedule on that motion at that time.

The hearing on the motion for summary judgment was held as scheduled on February 8, 2021, via WebEx. In support of its motion, the Hospital introduced into evidence an affidavit and curriculum vitae of Dr. Weichel; counsel’s affidavit which attached portions of depositions from Ray and Ray’s designated expert, Sheryl Deaconson; and the previously filed statement of undisputed material facts. Counsel for the Hospital also requested that the court take judicial notice of the complaint and answer. Dr. Weichel’s affidavit specifically stated that there was no breach in the standard of care by the Hospital’s nurses and that no act or omission on the part of the Hospital’s nursing staff was the proximate cause of any injury or damage sustained by Ray. Paragraph 3 of Dr. Weichel’s opinion stated, in pertinent part: g. I performed irrigation and closure of . . . Ray’s surgical wound . . . . Ray’s surgical wound dehisced when he fell during physical therapy. During the surgery, I discovered a tear of the distal quadriceps muscle in . . . Ray’s right leg, which I repaired. h. It is my opinion that the injury to . . . Ray’s quadriceps muscle was sustained as a result of the fall that occurred during physical therapy in the afternoon of November 22. .... 10. It is my opinion there is no relationship between . . . Ray’s “fall” during the morning of November 22 and the fall during the physical therapy during the afternoon of November 22. The physical therapy was being conducted pursuant to and in accordance with my wishes and orders after examining . . . Ray following the morning “fall,” and there is nothing the nursing staff could have done to prevent the fall during physical therapy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Ray v. Beatrice Community Hosp. & Health Ctr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-beatrice-community-hosp-health-ctr-nebctapp-2022.