Riffey v. Tonder

375 A.2d 1138, 36 Md. App. 633, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 439
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 7, 1977
Docket788, September Term, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 375 A.2d 1138 (Riffey v. Tonder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riffey v. Tonder, 375 A.2d 1138, 36 Md. App. 633, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 439 (Md. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Moore, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The surviving husband of a young mother who died of a pulmonary embolism instituted this medical malpractice *635 action against her obstetrician, Cesar L. Tonder, M.D. and the South Baltimore General Hospital, appellees. Suit was brought by the husband individually, in his capacity as administrator, and as father and natural guardian of the couple’s two infant children. After an 11-day jury trial, there was a verdict for the defendants-appellees. On this appeal, the principal assignment of error is a ruling of the trial court which precluded the appellants from producing a pathologist as a rebuttal witness. Errors in the court’s charge to the jury are also claimed. We find reversible error in the holding by the trial court that the testimony of the pathologist would not have constituted rebuttal evidence.

I

On October 23, 1970, Wanda Riffey delivered a child by caesarean section at the South Baltimore General Hospital. Her physician, Dr. Cesar L. Tonder, a specialist in obstetrics and gynecology, was Associate Director of the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology at the Hospital. The medical records introduced into evidence revealed that Mrs. Riffey was a private patient of Dr. Tonder. She was discharged on October 26,1970.

A persistent swelling of her right calf forced Mrs. Riffey to seek medical assistance in the emergency room of the Hospital on November 7, 1970. One of the Hospital’s interns, Dr. Yu, examined her at that time and diagnosed her condition as acute thrombophlebitis (the formation of a blood clot caused by inflammation of the vein). She was admitted under the care of Dr. Tonder. The latter saw the patient on the evening of the 7th and, concurring with Dr. Yu’s diagnosis, ordered administration of the drug dextran. One of the facts elicited from Mrs. Riffey upon admission was that the leg pain associated with the swelling had persisted for about one week. On November 10, she was seen in consultation by Dr. Colen Heinritz, an internist with privileges at the Hospital. He examined her, made a diagnosis of thrombophlebitis resolving in the right leg, and reordered another unit of dextran. Twice the following day, *636 in a follow-up consultation, Dr. Kermit Bonovich, Dr. Heinritz’s partner, visited the patient.

The medical records disclose that on November 12 the patient experienced chest pains, of which she complained to the nurse, in the upper left lung and at the base of the neck. One of the Hospital’s interns, Dr. Matesic, was notified and he ordered chest x-rays (which were negative) and recorded her vital signs. Additionally, she was examined the same day by Dr. Bonovich, who noted that she was responding well to the dextran and that she was ambulatory.

Mrs. Riffey was discharged from the Hospital on November 14 at 9:15 a.m. According to her discharge records, she was asymptomatic, swelling and pain having been relieved. Shortly after her release, however, while at home, she collapsed and was rushed to the emergency room of Bon Secours Hospital. There she succumbed to a massive pulmonary embolism at 11:45 a.m.

Dr. William D. Roche, a specialist in obstetrics and gynecology at Navy Regional Medical Center in San Diego, California, qualified as appellants’ sole expert witness. In his opinion, both Dr. Tonder and the Hospital breached the appropriate standard of care required of physicians and hospitals in the same class as the appellees, acting under similar circumstances, by failing to diagnose Mrs. Riffey’s symptoms on November 12, the day of her chest complaints, as a minor pulmonary embolism, and by failing thereafter to treat her properly with an anticoagulant drug, specifically heparin. Dr. Roche testified that where an overweight, 1 post-operative patient, suffering from thrombophlebitis complains of chest pains, a diagnosis of a pulmonary embolus is indicated “until otherwise proven.” 2

*637 Testifying from the medical records admitted in evidence, Dr. Roche concluded that certain diagnostic tests should have been performed to ascertain the existence vel non of an embolus on November 12. These tests should have included additional x-rays, enzyme, bilirubin and blood gas tests, a lung scan and electrocardiograms. The physician relied upon the recorded vital signs, measured on the day of Mrs. Riffey’s chest complaints, indicating elevated pulse (110 per minute) and increased respiratory rate (from 20 to 28) to corroborate his conclusions that the patient suffered from a minor pulmonary embolism on November 12. By administering the drug heparin, according to Dr. Roche, Mrs. Riffey’s blood would not have coagulated, or clotted, to any further degree thereby avoiding the possibility of a second, more serious pulmonary embolus; “my opinion is unequivocally that failure to treat this first pulmonary embolus directly led to her death,” he flatly declared.

In their defense, the appellees produced, in addition to the treating physicians, Dr. Tonder, Dr. Bonovich and Dr. Heinritz, three other medical expert witnesses, unconnected with the treatment of Mrs. Riffey. Each of the witnesses testified that based on the medical records and the autopsy report, Mrs. Riffey did not experience a minor pulmonary embolism on November 12. According to Dr. C. Thomas Flotte, associate professor of surgery at the University of Maryland Medical School, the signs and symptoms of a pulmonary embolism, including sharp, crushing pain in the chest, as opposed to the tenderness noted in Mrs. Riffey’s case, respiratory distress and elevated pulse, were not indicated on the 12th. Also, both Dr. Flotte and Dr. Umberto Villa Santa, professor of medicine at the University of Maryland, stated that the use of dextran was in keeping with the standard of care in treating thrombophlebitis. 3

*638 II The Rebuttal Witness

Of critical importance to appellants’ case was evidence that Mrs. Riffey had in fact suffered a minor pulmonary embolism on November 12. Dr. Roche, in stating his conclusion as to the existence of a pulmonary embolism on November 12, relied primarily upon the Hospital’s medical records of that day. Although appellants’ counsel did inquire of the witness whether he had reviewed the autopsy report, to which Dr. Roche affirmatively responded, it is clear from the record that the doctor used the autopsy report for a limited purpose. The following appears in the transcript:

“Q. (Mr. Julian [appellants’ counsel]) Doctor, have you, and I will request also that you look at the autopsy report in the case of Mrs. Riffey?
A. Yes, I have.
Q. Do you have a copy of it, doctor?
A. Yes, I have a copy.
Q. First, with respect to her general state of health, her vital organs, heart, liver, spleen, those things, what does it show with respect to this woman?
A. She was an extremely healthy young woman.

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Bluebook (online)
375 A.2d 1138, 36 Md. App. 633, 1977 Md. App. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riffey-v-tonder-mdctspecapp-1977.