Rodrigues v. Georgia-Pacific Corp.

661 S.E.2d 141, 290 Ga. App. 442, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 680, 2008 Ga. App. LEXIS 223
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 29, 2008
DocketA08A0755
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 661 S.E.2d 141 (Rodrigues v. Georgia-Pacific Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodrigues v. Georgia-Pacific Corp., 661 S.E.2d 141, 290 Ga. App. 442, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 680, 2008 Ga. App. LEXIS 223 (Ga. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Blackburn, Presiding Judge.

In this toxic tort action, plaintiff Ronnie Rodrigues appeals the grant of summary judgment to defendant Georgia-Pacific Corporation, arguing that competent evidence showed that Rodrigues’s exposure to chlorine chemicals at a Georgia-Pacific plant proximately caused Rodrigues’s pneumonia. We hold that the expert affidavit submitted by Rodrigues, in which a physician testified to a reasonable medical certainty that the chlorine exposure caused his pneumonia, showed this causal connection, despite the physician’s later deposition testimony indicating the causal connection was only a possibility. We further hold that even if the physician’s testimony only showed a possible causal connection, the nonexpert evidence on causation sufficiently supplemented the physician’s testimony to create an issue of fact. Accordingly, we reverse.

Summary judgment is only proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. OCGA § 9-11-56 (c). A de novo standard of review applies to an appeal from a grant of summary judgment, and we view the evidence, and all reasonable conclusions and inferences drawn from it, in the light most favorable to the nonmovant. Matjoulis v. Integon Gen. Ins. Corp. 1

So viewed, the evidence shows that while working for a contractor at a Georgia-Pacific plant in March 1998, Rodrigues was dismantling old machinery when he was suddenly exposed to a significant amount of chlorine or chlorine dioxide as he was unscrewing a valve, even though Georgia-Pacific was to have disabled the chlorine pipes leading to the machinery. Rodrigues immediately became ill, experiencing respiratory difficulties and nausea. His health worsened to pneumonia over the next few days, causing him to seek medical *443 treatment at a hospital emergency room, where he reeked of chlorine. The emergency room physician diagnosed Rodrigues with pneumonia due to chlorine inhalation before she referred him to a treating physician.

Rodrigues filed an action against Georgia-Pacific to recover for his injuries, asserting that Georgia-Pacific had negligently exposed him to the chlorine chemicals. Georgia-Pacific moved for summary judgment, submitting a scientific expert’s affidavit that chlorine chemicals do not cause the bacterial pneumonia as suffered by Rodrigues, and that such a disease is commonly caused by smoking cigarettes. The expert noted that for years leading up to the incident at issue, Rodrigues had smoked heavily, and that the treating physician who cared for Rodrigues (after the emergency room physician) had diagnosed him with “tobacco pneumonia.”

In response, Rodrigues submitted the affidavit of the emergency room physician, who noted that earlier in the same month that Rodrigues came to the hospital, 13 other workers from the Georgia-Pacific plant had presented to the hospital with respiratory problems caused by exposure to chlorine at the plant. Based on her examination of Rodrigues, she testified, “to a reasonable degree of medical certainty,” that Rodrigues’s bacterial pneumonia was “substantially contributed to by his exposure to chlorine or chlorine dioxide.” She explained that chlorine’s extremely irritating effect on respiratory membranes could result in pulmonary edema (such as was experienced by Rodrigues) and could substantially contribute to the development of pneumonia, particularly if the patient was a smoker.

Georgia-Pacific then took the deposition of the emergency room physician, in which the physician repeatedly characterized the causal link between the chlorine and Rodrigues’s pneumonia as a possibility rather than a probability. Nevertheless, the physician did testify, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that Rodrigues’s pulmonary edema as presented in the emergency room was most likely caused by chlorine gas inhalation. She further testified, based on her “sense of things,” that the symptoms Rodrigues exhibited in the emergency room were consistent with exposure to chlorine chemicals.

Citing Maurer v. Chyatte 2 and other cases, Georgia-Pacific argued to the trial court that the physician’s deposition showed she could only testify that the causal link between the pneumonia and the chlorine was a mere possibility as opposed to a probability, which could not withstand a motion for summary judgment. The trial court agreed, finding that despite the physician’s affidavit establishing a *444 causal link based on a reasonable degree of medical certainty, her subsequent deposition testimony “never reaffirmed the causative link to a reasonable degree of medical certainty or probability, even when the question was specifically put to her by Plaintiffs counsel.” Accordingly, the court determined that the “entirety” of the physician’s testimony demonstrated “not a probability, but rather merely a possibility,” of the requisite causal link between the exposure to chlorine and the bacterial pneumonia. Citing Maczko v. Employers Mut. Liability Ins. Co., 3 the court ruled (on this ground alone) that summary judgment was proper. That order is the subject of this appeal.

In toxic tort cases, proof of causation generally requires reliable expert testimony. Fulmore v. CSX Transp. 4 Such proximate cause testimony should generally not speak in terms of possibilities, but should be “based, at the least, on the determination that there was a reasonable probability that the negligence caused the injury.” (Punctuation omitted.) Zwiren v. Thompson. 5 See Maczko, supra, 116 Ga. App. at 250 (“[t]he testimony must show at least a probable cause, as distinguished from a mere possible cause”).

Nevertheless, medical testimony stated only in terms of a “possible” cause may be sufficient when supplemented by probative nonexpert testimony on causation. As reiterated in Estate of Patterson v. Fulton-DeKalb Hosp. Auth.: 6

There are a number of cases which, while apparently admitting that medical evidence showing only a possibility of causal relation between an accident or injury and subsequent death or physical or mental impairment is not, by itself, sufficient to establish such relation, uphold the view that such evidence, in conjunction with other evidence, non-expert in nature, indicating that such a relation exists, although likewise not sufficient by itself to establish the relation, or in conjunction with admitted or obvious facts and circumstances of the case showing that death or physical disability would naturally and probably result from the injury, is sufficient to establish the causal relation.

*445 (Punctuation omitted; emphasis supplied.) See Ga. Cas. & Surety Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
661 S.E.2d 141, 290 Ga. App. 442, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 680, 2008 Ga. App. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodrigues-v-georgia-pacific-corp-gactapp-2008.