Robbins v. Van Gilder

622 A.2d 555, 225 Conn. 238, 1993 Conn. LEXIS 92
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 30, 1993
Docket14453; 14454; 14455
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 622 A.2d 555 (Robbins v. Van Gilder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robbins v. Van Gilder, 622 A.2d 555, 225 Conn. 238, 1993 Conn. LEXIS 92 (Colo. 1993).

Opinions

Borden, J.

The dispositive issue in these three appeals is whether, under the circumstances of the trial court proceedings, there is a final judgment for purposes of appeal.1 We conclude that there is no final judgment and, accordingly, dismiss the appeals.

Certain facts and the procedural history are undisputed. On December 30,1971, the defendant John C. Van Gilder, a neurosurgeon, performed an operation on the plaintiff, Arthur L. Robbins, at the defendant Yale-New Haven Hospital (hospital), in New Haven. On August 17, 1984, Robbins commenced this action by serving Van Gilder, the hospital, and the defendant Yale University (medical school)2 with a complaint returnable on September 18, 1984.3

[240]*240The final version of Robbins’ complaint was in three counts. The first count was against all the defendants. In that count, Robbins alleged that Van Gilder, as a member of the hospital’s neurosurgical staff, was an employee of the hospital, and was an employee of the medical school as an associate professor of neurosurgical medicine. Robbins alleged that Van Gilder had been negligent in the operation he performed on Robbins on December 30, 1971, ánd had caused Robbins serious and permanent injury.

In the second count, also against all three defendants, Robbins alleged that Van Gilder had failed to inform him of Van Gilder’s negligence. He further alleged that Van Gilder’s failure so to inform him, and that Van Gilder’s repeated assurances to him that he would fully recover, had fraudulently concealed from him the fact that he had suffered actionable harm. Robbins further alleged that, as a result of that fraudulent concealment, he did not discover and could not have reasonably discovered that he had suffered actionable harm until he received a letter, dated August 2,1982, informing him that the December 30, 1971 operation had been performed negligently.

The third count was against the hospital only. In that count, Robbins alleged that the hospital had failed to inform him that the operation had been negligently performed and that he had suffered actionable harm. He also alleged that the hospital had failed to monitor its staff and had failed to have a reporting system regarding the negligence of its staff that would have informed him that he had suffered actionable harm. He further alleged that the hospital had been engaged in a continuous course of conduct, consisting of treatment of him for the injuries he had suffered in the December 30, 1971 operation, and that, as a result, the statute of limitations governing his cause of action does not begin to run until that course of conduct ceases.

[241]*241The defendants all pleaded the statute of limitations as a special defense, as well as denying the essential allegations of the complaint.4 In reply, Robbins alleged that: (1) the defendants should be estopped from asserting the statute of limitations because, due to their negligence, he had suffered brain damage that affected his ability to understand completely the nature and extent of what had happened to him, and to understand whether he could have had a claim for damages against the defendants; (2) the statute of limitations, General Statutes § 52-584,5 would be unconstitutional if applied to him; and (3) as to Van Gilder, the statute of limitations had been tolled in part pursuant to General Statutes § 52-590.6

On these pleadings, the case was tried to a jury in February and early March, 1991. At the end of the plaintiffs case and at the end of all the evidence, the defendants moved for directed verdicts in their favor. The trial court, D. Dorsey, J., reserved decision on these motions.

[242]*242The trial court submitted to the jury five special interrogatories, described and discussed infra. In its instructions to the jury, the trial court ordered the jury to return verdicts for the defendants on the second and third counts, for the following reasons. With respect to the second count, based on fraudulent concealment, the trial court stated that the claim “is subsumed in the plaintiff’s reply to the statute of limitations defense . . . that [the] defendants fraudulently concealed [the] plaintiff’s cause of action. It would only confuse you if I left the Second Count in the case and the removal does not, in fact, prejudice the plaintiff.”

With respect to the third count, alleging independent negligence against the hospital and a continuous course of treatment by the hospital to overcome the statute of limitations defense, the trial court stated that the independent negligence claim failed for lack of expert testimony. With respect to the continuing course of treatment allegation, the court stated that “[t]his claim is also subsumed in plaintiff’s reply to the special defense of the defendant. This states the defendant continuously treated the plaintiff on or about December, 1971, and through and beyond July, 1984. Here again, permitting this to remain would cause confusion. Its removal from the complaint will not prejudice the defense since my instruction put this claim as well as fraudulent concealment in proper perspective under the reply. Therefore I’m directing you to return a defendant’s verdict on the Third Count.”

On March 11, 1991, the jury returned a verdict on the first count (1) in favor of the plaintiff, in the amount of $1,550,000, against Van Gilder and the medical school, and (2) in favor of the hospital.7 With regard [243]*243to that count, however, the jury also answered the five special interrogatories submitted to it as follows: (1) Van Gilder was negligent in connection with the surgery he performed on Robbins on December 30,1971; (2) Van Gilder’s negligence was the proximate cause of Robbins’ injuries and the damages claimed by Robbins; (3) Van Gilder was an agent of the hospital in connection with the surgery; (4) the claims of Robbins as to negligence and damages in connection with the performance of the surgery were barred by the statute of limitations; and (5) Robbins had not proven by clear, precise and unequivocal evidence that Van Gilder had fraudulently concealed the fact that Robbins “had suffered some form of actionable harm during the course of the surgery on December 30, 1971, so as to toll or suspend the statute of limitations.”8 The ver[244]*244diet and the interrogatories conflicted with each other, therefore, in at least the following ways: (1) the verdict found Van Gilder and the medical school liable to Robbins, despite the specific findings that Robbins’ claim was barred by the statute of limitations and that Robbins had not proven that Van Gilder had fraudulently concealed the cause of action; and (2) the verdict found the medical school, but not the hospital, liable as Van Gilder’s principal, despite the specific finding that Van Gilder had been the agent of the hospital.

After the clerk read the verdict and inquired of the jury whether it was their verdict,9 the court directed the clerk to read the interrogatories and answers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
622 A.2d 555, 225 Conn. 238, 1993 Conn. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-van-gilder-conn-1993.