Rodgers v. Higgins

871 P.2d 398, 1993 WL 120855
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 15, 1994
Docket79,454
StatusPublished
Cited by90 cases

This text of 871 P.2d 398 (Rodgers v. Higgins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodgers v. Higgins, 871 P.2d 398, 1993 WL 120855 (Okla. 1994).

Opinions

OPALA, Justice.

The single issue for our decision is whether the general unreserved jury verdict in this common-law action became the “filed judgment” in the § 990A [12 O.S.1991] sense by operation of 12 O.S.1991 § 696.11 [§ 696.1]. We answer in the affirmative and dismiss the appeal as untimely.

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

James G. Rodgers [Rodgers] brought a common-law claim against two physicians and their employers [doctors or defendants]2 for bodily injury caused by a tainted blood transfusion, from which he contracted “Type C” hepatitis,3 a fatal disease. Although in support of his single claim4 Rodgers urged several alternative theories of recovery, the trial court confined the case on submission to but one of them — that of negligence. Rodgers’ wife sued for loss of consortium. Her claim was derivative of that pressed by the husband.5 Both claims went to the same jury concurrently. Its verdict in favor of all the defendants6 — accepted below without judicial reservation7 — was received by the [402]*402clerk on March 6,1992 and became the “filed judgment” by operation of § 696.1.8 A me-morialization of proceedings that led to the verdict, including the trial court’s presubmission ruling which confined the plaintiffs’ claims to the single theory of negligence, was incorporated in a journal entry filed March 26, 1992.9 The Rodgers’ petition in error came here on April 17, 1992, less than thirty days after the March 26 journal entry’s filing, but more than thirty days after the clerk’s March 6 record entry of judgment in conformity with the verdict. The appeal is hence fraught with a fatal jurisdictional infirmity.

I

THE GENERAL UNRESERVED JURY VERDICT, RATHER THAN THE TRIAL COURT’S PRESUBMISSION RULING ON THE APPLICABLE THEORY OF RECOVERY, DISPOSED OF THE RODGERS’ CLAIMS

The doctors seek this appeal’s dismissal for untimeliness. They urge us to apply the teachings of Jaco Production Company v. Luca,10 which holds that a judicially unreserved general verdict — entered by the clerk in a common-law action — becomes transmuted into a filed judgment eo instante by force of 12 O.S.1991 § 696.1.11

The Rodgers argue the verdict did not resolve all the issues because the district court had “sustained defendants’ demurrer to the evidence ” on some of the “claims.” They would have us treat each of their multiple alternative theories of recovery as a distinct cause of action (or as a separable claim ).12 According to the Rodgers, no judgment was entered until the trial court memorialized both the jury’s verdict and its presubmission ruling in the single journal entry of March 26, 1992.13

Oklahoma jurisprudence utilizes the transactional approach for its definition of a “cause of action.”14 Although different theo-[403]*403ríes of liability may be pressed in support of each claim, only a single cause of action can ordinarily be predicated upon one occurrence or transaction.15 The single offending event that Rodgers (husband) complains of is the pathogenic blood transfusion. His evidence shows that when he was hospitalized for a colonoscopy, Dr. Hood recommended a pre-procedure blood transfusion. According to Rodgers, when he objected and questioned its necessity, Dr. Hood told him the physicians would try to do without it. Later, a nurse brought the blood and told him Dr. Higgins had ordered it. Rodgers told Dr. Higgins that (1) he was concerned about the blood and (2) his brother in Arkansas, who had the same blood type, could be summoned at once to donate the needed quantity. Rodgers testified that Dr. Higgins (1) assured him it was not necessary for his brother to donate blood, (2) repeated the “just-don’t-worry-about-it” phrase three or four times and (3) told him “everything will be fine.” Although Rodgers’ signature appears on a consent form for authorizing the transfusion, he does not remember signing it. A few months after the procedure he began to exhibit symptoms of a liver disease later diagnosed as hepatitis.

At pretrial Rodgers identified what he called his “claims” or “causes of action” as: (1) fraud and misrepresentation, (2) breach of warranty and (3) execution of a blood transfusion without his informed consent.16 In law all of his asserted grounds constitute nothing more than three distinct and alternative theories of recovery.17 Defendants “demurred” to the evidence at the close of the case; they contended the proof was insufficient to support any claim against them, especially one founded on breach of warranty or on fraud and misrepresentation. The trial court ruled the facts warranted the claim’s submission on a want-of-due-care theory of the plaintiffs’ allegations that (a) the doctors did not completely and accurately inform Rodgers about the risks from the ■blood transfusion, (b) as a result of their omission he withdrew his objection to the procedure’s execution and (c) later suffered bodily injury. In short, the critical nisi prius mid-trial ruling withheld from submission two of the three theories tendered by the plaintiffs: (1) breach of warranty and (2) fraud and misrepresentation.18

A plaintiff who states a claim and proves its facts is entitled to any relief affordable by law;19 the pleader need not correctly identify any applicable theory of recovery.20 The trial court must charge the jury on all the legal issues the evidence tenders?21 In this case, the trial court ruled the evidence called for instructions on the theory of negligence and on the wife’s loss of consortium. Plaintiffs’-pressed submission of the claim on other theories was rejected as unwarranted by their proof.

[404]*404Nisi prius refusal to instruct the jury on alternative theories of recovery is distinguishable from an order that sustains a demurrer to the evidence in support of a cause of action or of a claim. If the trial court’s presubmission ruling had (1) withheld either Rodgers’ or his wife’s claim in its entirety or (2) severed from jury trial claims against some of the four defendants, the general verdict might not have been disposi-tive of all the issues in this common-law action.22 An adjudication of all multiple claims and the settlement of the rights and liabilities of all the parties to those claims is a sine qua non of an appealable event unless there be “an [earlier] express [judicial] determination that there is no just reason for delay [of an appeal]” and “an express direction for the [immediate] filing of judgment.”23 The verdict in this case did not leave any issue or claim undecided.

When the trial of this case began (1) Rodgers had but one claim ex delicto

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
871 P.2d 398, 1993 WL 120855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodgers-v-higgins-okla-1994.