Robert Repin v. State of Washington and Washington State University

392 P.3d 1174, 198 Wash. App. 243
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 21, 2017
Docket34049-0-III
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 392 P.3d 1174 (Robert Repin v. State of Washington and Washington State University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Repin v. State of Washington and Washington State University, 392 P.3d 1174, 198 Wash. App. 243 (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinions

[248]*248Fearing, C.J.

¶1 Robert Repin sues Washington State University (WSU) and WSU veterinarian Dr. Margaret Cohn-Urbach for conduct arising from the euthanasia of his beloved Alaskan Malamute, Kaisa. Repin alleges that Cohn-Urbach, with gross negligence, performed the euthanasia and thereby caused Kaisa pain and prolonged her death. Cohn-Urbach also purportedly failed to fully inform him of the repercussions of the method of euthanasia. Repin pleads causes of action in breach of contract, reckless breach of contract, professional negligence, lack of informed consent/ negligent misrepresentation by omission, intentional or reckless infliction of emotional distress, and conversion/trespass to chattels or trespass on the case. WSU and Cohn-Urbach moved for summary judgment to dismiss all claims. The trial court dismissed the lack of informed consent/ negligent misrepresentation by omission, intentional and/or reckless infliction of emotional distress, conversion, and trespass claims. The trial court also ruled, as a matter of law, that Repin could not recover emotional distress damages for a reckless breach of contract. We affirm all of the trial court’s rulings.

FACTS

¶2 Since the trial court granted WSU and Dr. Margaret Cohn-Urbach (collectively WSU) summary judgment in part, we recount the facts in a light favorable to Robert Repin. This factual statement occasionally, however, adds WSU’s version of the facts.

¶3 Plaintiff Robert Repin is a single man, with no children, who works as a gold prospector. In 2001, Repin adopted Kaisa, an Alaskan Malamute puppy, whom his niece rescued. Kaisa grew to become an indispensable part of Repin’s reclusive life.

¶4 In September 2012, Kaisa fell ill. After a grim night, Robert Repin took Kaisa to an emergency veterinarian. The veterinarian diagnosed Kaisa with cancer and prescribed [249]*249medication for her. Repin then transported Kaisa to Kaisa’s regular veterinarian, who recommended a visit to the WSU Veterinary Teaching Hospital.

¶5 On September 26, Robert Repin drove Kaisa from Cle Elum to Pullman and presented Kaisa to WSU’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Jasmine Feist and another fourth-year veterinary student registered Kaisa with the hospital. Feist placed Kaisa in the intensive care unit and inserted a catheter in Kaisa’s left front leg. Hours later, defendant Dr. Margaret Cohn-Urbach, an intern at the hospital, examined Kaisa. During this time, Repin remained with Kaisa.

¶6 Following radiographs, Veterinary Teaching Hospital clinicians diagnosed Kaisa with metastatic cancer. Staff predicted Kaisa would live only several months. Robert Repin insisted on a consultation with an expert. Repin spoke, on the phone, with Dr. Kevin Choy, an oncologist, who agreed with the diagnosis of metastatic cancer. WSU veterinarians recommended euthanasia.

¶7 After reflection, Robert Repin directed the Veterinary Teaching Hospital to euthanize Kaisa. Repin viewed the WSU hospital to be the best at veterinary medicine. He did not wish Kaisa to undergo weeks of agony.

¶8 Robert Repin requested that he sign paperwork before the euthanasia because he did not trust his mental state after the procedure. He signed a Washington State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital consent for euthanasia form. The form read, in relevant part:

I, the undersigned, do hereby certify that I am the owner (or duly authorized agent of the owner) of the animal described above; that I hereby give the clinicians of the Washington State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital full and complete authority to humanely destroy the aforementioned animal. . . .
I hereby release the Washington State University Veterinary Teaching Hospital, their agents, and representatives, from any and all liability for said animal.

[250]*250Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 126. Repin denies seeing the release language because of his distraught state of mind. No hospital employee discussed the language with him. Repin checked the form’s box directing Kaisa’s remains be returned to him rather than studied at the hospital. Repin paid $260.56 for the euthanasia.

¶9 Robert Repin and a Veterinary Teaching Hospital attendant walked Kaisa from the intensive care unit to the euthanasia room, euphemistically labeled the “quiet room.” Dr. Margaret Cohn-Urbach then described the procedure to Repin. Cohn-Urbach advised that Kaisa would be administered a mild sedative to relax her and thereafter dispensed Euthasol, a drug that would stop the Malamute’s heart and allow a peaceful death. According to Dr. Cohn-Urbach, she informed Robert Repin that, as Kaisa passed, she may have deep gasps, tremors, and other adverse effects. Repin claims Cohn-Urbach warned only that Kaisa might take a deep breath and exhibit a slight leg twitch.

¶10 Robert Repin laid on the quiet room floor with Kaisa. Dr. Margaret Cohn-Urbach told Robert Repin the hospital procedure would commence. According to Margaret Cohn-Urbach and Jasmine Feist, Feist performed the euthanasia, while Cohn-Urbach supervised. Repin contends that Cohn-Urbach performed the procedure.

¶11 According to Robert Repin, he heard Jasmine Feist exclaim: “[0]h, look, Kaisa has chewed off the end of her catheter, should I go get another one?” CP at 62. Margaret Cohn-Urbach responded: “[N]o. I will show you how to still make this one work.” CP at 62. Repin did not look at the catheter and never observed Kaisa chewing the catheter. Feist and Cohn-Urbach deny any such conversation or Kaisa chewing the catheter.

¶12 Robert Repin contends that no hospital staff member flushed the catheter to ensure patency, a medical term for open or unobstructed. Dr. Margaret Cohn-Urbach and Jasmine Feist both declare that one of them flushed 20 milliliters (ml) of saline solution through the catheter. Each [251]*251avers that the saline flushed unimpeded and that she lacked any concern regarding patency.

¶13 Kaisa slept on the quiet room floor when the veterinarians began the euthanasia. After the flushing, either Dr. Margaret Cohn-Urbach or Jasmine Feist injected 1.1 ml of acepromazine into the catheter. Five to ten minutes later, either Cohn-Urbach or Feist started the second injection. Repin turned from observing the injection. Repin describes the ensuing events:

[Kaisa] woke up screaming. She was on her feet panicking, screaming in agony. I said, What the fuck is going on here? I said, this can’t fucking be happening. I had to wrestle [Kaisa] back to the floor. I had to hold her down and listen to her scream. [Dr. Cohn-Urbach] and [Feist] had backed up against the wall. They didn’t know what the fuck to do. Jasmine said, My God, it’s not working. What should we do, she says? My dog didn’t know what the fuck was going on. She would have tore those girls apart if I let go of her. All she knew was she was in fucking pain and she wanted to get out of there and I had to hold her down. . . . [Feist] said somewhere, What do we do? Should I go get another catheter? [Dr. Cohn-Urbach] says, I’m out of medication. I said, This can’t be fucking happening.

CP at 67-68.

¶14 According to Robert Repin, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
392 P.3d 1174, 198 Wash. App. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-repin-v-state-of-washington-and-washington-state-university-washctapp-2017.