Robert Thornhill v. Commonwealth Eye Center, P.C.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 13, 2025
Docket0635234
StatusUnpublished

This text of Robert Thornhill v. Commonwealth Eye Center, P.C. (Robert Thornhill v. Commonwealth Eye Center, P.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert Thornhill v. Commonwealth Eye Center, P.C., (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Beales, Athey and Callins Argued at Arlington, Virginia

ROBERT THORNHILL MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 0635-23-4 CLIFFORD L. ATHEY, JR. MAY 13, 2025 COMMONWEALTH EYE CENTER, P.C., ET AL.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CULPEPER COUNTY Dale B. Durrer, Judge

E. Kyle McNew (D. Cory Bilton; MichieHamlette PLLC, on briefs), for appellant.

Paul T. Walkinshaw (Kathleen S. Ryland; Kristina L. Fattoum; Byron J. Mitchell; Wharton Levin; Mitchell & Simopoulos, PLLC, on brief), for appellees.

Robert Thornhill (“Thornhill”) sued Commonwealth Eye Center, P.C. and Dr. D. Russell

Brear (collectively “Commonwealth Eye”), alleging that Commonwealth Eye committed medical

malpractice when it failed to meet the applicable standard of care when treating Thornhill’s eye

condition. Without objection, the Circuit Court of Culpeper County (the “circuit court”)

subsequently entered a scheduling order requiring the parties to identify and file their list of

exhibits and witnesses with the circuit court on or before 15 days prior to trial. Although

Thornhill timely mailed his proposed list of exhibits and witnesses to Commonwealth Eye, he

failed to timely file his proposed list of exhibits and witnesses with the circuit court. Based upon

Thornhill’s failure to comply with the scheduling order, Commonwealth Eye objected in limine

to Thornhill being permitted to call any witnesses on his behalf during his case in chief or to

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). introduce any exhibits in evidence. Commonwealth Eye also moved for summary judgment

conditioned upon successfully prevailing upon its objections to Thornhill’s proposed witnesses

and exhibits. Following a hearing on Commonwealth Eye’s objections to all of Thornhill’s

proposed witnesses and exhibits, the circuit court held that Thornhill’s failure to timely file the

exhibit and witness list with the court was in violation of the scheduling order. The circuit court

further held that the untimely filing did not fall within any of the exceptions to compliance

enunciated in section V of the scheduling order. As a result, the circuit court barred Thornhill

from presenting any evidence either through testimony or by the introduction of exhibits during

his case in chief. The circuit court then proceeded to hear argument on Commonwealth Eye’s

motion for summary judgment. The circuit court concluded that since Thornhill was prohibited

from introducing any evidence during his case in chief, summary judgment was appropriate and

granted the motion for summary judgment ending the case. Thornhill appealed from the entry of

summary judgment. Finding no abuse of discretion, we affirm the circuit court’s grant of

summary judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

In October of 2021, Thornhill filed a medical malpractice suit against Commonwealth

Eye, alleging that Dr. Brear breached the standard of care of an eye surgeon thereby directly and

proximately causing injury to Thornhill’s vision. Commonwealth Eye filed their answer in

November of 2021, denying the allegations and simultaneously demurring to Thornhill’s request

for attorney fees. In December of 2021, the parties entered a consent order, stating that

discovery conducted by the parties in a previously nonsuited case involving the same allegations

“is adopted and incorporated into this action.” Commonwealth Eye’s demurrer as to attorney

fees was also sustained without objection. In August of 2022, Commonwealth Eye filed a

motion to compel discovery, alleging that Thornhill’s discovery responses were more than 10

-2- weeks overdue, and on September 27, 2022, the circuit court granted Commonwealth Eye’s

motion to compel discovery responses without objection.

On December 13, 2022, the parties jointly executed a scheduling order, which the circuit

court entered at their request, and the case was set for a four-day jury trial commencing on

March 20, 2023. The scheduling order, in section “V. Exhibit and Witness List,” provided that

all exhibits sought to be entered in evidence at trial were to be identified and filed with the court

at the same time the proposed exhibits were sent to opposing counsel not later than 15 days

before trial.1 Section XII of the scheduling order, “Waiver or Modification of Terms of Order,”

further provided that “[u]pon motion, the time limits and prohibitions contained in this order may

be waived or modified by leave of court for good cause shown.”

On February 10, 2023, Commonwealth Eye filed a motion in limine requesting that the

circuit court strike any request for “lost income” because Thornhill did not request lost income in

his complaint. Commonwealth Eye also moved the court to sanction Thornhill for failing to

provide full and complete discovery responses pursuant to the terms in the scheduling order.

Following a hearing, by order dated March 10, 2023, the circuit court granted the motion in

limine, holding that Thornhill would “not be permitted to introduce evidence regarding lost

income at trial.”

1 The exact text of the relevant portion of the order states:

Counsel of record shall exchange fifteen (15) days before trial a list specifically identifying each exhibit to be introduced at trial, copies of any exhibits not previously supplied in discovery, and a list of witnesses proposed to be introduced at trial. The lists of exhibits and witnesses shall be filed with the Clerk of the Court simultaneously therewith but the exhibits shall not then be filed. Any exhibit or witness not so identified and filed will not be received in evidence, except in rebuttal or for impeachment or unless the admission of such exhibit or testimony of the witness would cause no surprise or prejudice to the opposing party and the failure to list the exhibit or witness was through inadvertence. -3- Five days before the scheduled jury trial was set to commence on Monday, March 20,

2023, the circuit court emailed counsel for both parties advising them that while Commonwealth

Eye had timely filed their exhibit and witness list with the circuit court on March 6, 2023, the

court “did not see where [Thornhill] has filed any exhibit/witness list.”2 Later that afternoon,

Commonwealth Eye filed “Defendants’ Objections to Plaintiff’s List of Witnesses and Exhibits,”

objecting to the introduction of specific exhibits from Thornhill’s list of exhibits. After

Commonwealth Eye filed this objection, Thornhill advised the circuit court by email that

although he had timely mailed his exhibit and witness list to Commonwealth Eye on March 1,

2023, he had “inadvertently” failed to timely file the pleadings with the circuit court. Thornhill

also indicated that the original witness and exhibits lists would be shipped overnight to the

circuit court. At 3:15 p.m., Commonwealth Eye filed “Defendants’ Objection to Plaintiff’s

Witness and Exhibit Lists and Motion for Summary Judgment,” seeking to exclude any

witnesses or exhibits Thornhill proposed in his case in chief because Thornhill had violated the

scheduling order when failing to timely file with the circuit court his witness and exhibit lists

while “provid[ing] no explanation to establish good cause for the Court to amend the Order and

allow a late filing.”

The following day at 4:51 a.m., Thornhill emailed the circuit court his brief in opposition

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