Roetenberger v. Christ Hospital

839 N.E.2d 441, 163 Ohio App. 3d 555, 2005 Ohio 5205
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 30, 2005
DocketNo. C-040009.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 839 N.E.2d 441 (Roetenberger v. Christ Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roetenberger v. Christ Hospital, 839 N.E.2d 441, 163 Ohio App. 3d 555, 2005 Ohio 5205 (Ohio Ct. App. 2005).

Opinions

Doan, Presiding Judge.

{¶ 1} On July 2, 2001, 42-year-old Karen Roetenberger went to The Christ Hospital for endoscopic retrograde cholangio-pancreatography (“ERCP”), an outpatient procedure to remove bile duct stones. Defendant-appellee Dr. Zahid Saeed, a gastroenterologist, performed the procedure. During the ERCP procedure, the surgeon guides a small tube down the patient’s esophagus and into the intestines. ERCP is performed while the patient is medicated to a state of conscious sedation. Conscious sedation is achieved through the use of drugs that render the patient calm but responsive.

*559 {¶ 2} Approximately 50 minutes into the procedure, Karen Roetenberger’s blood-oxygen saturation level plummeted. She became hypoxic, a condition characterized by too little oxygen in the blood. The ERCP was aborted and a code was called. Karen Roetenberger’s oxygen level was restored, but she suffered cardiac arrest. Although The Christ Hospital code team was able to resuscitate Karen Roetenberger, she never regained consciousness, and she died nine days later.

{¶ 3} Karen Roetenberger’s husband, plaintiff-appellant, John Roetenberger (“Roetenberger”), filed a complaint for wrongful death and medical malpractice. Prior to trial, defendants The Christ Hospital and Anesthesia Associates of Cincinnati, Inc., were dismissed. The claims against Saeed and his practice group, defendant-appellee Greater Cincinnati Gastroenterology Associates, Inc. (“GCGA”), were tried to a jury. Following an 11-day trial, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of Saeed and GCGA. Roetenberger has appealed.

{¶ 4} The first assignment of error alleges that the trial court erred in permitting defense counsel to make improper and inflammatory statements to the jury during his closing argument.

{¶ 5} During his closing argument, defense counsel stated to the jury, “The plaintiff thinks it’s just about money. They think they can just throw it up on the wall and give you some testimony and you will walk back into this courtroom and make them rich people. * * * They don’t want a reasoned debate. They have not wanted that from opening statement and they don’t want it now. They want money. * * * You have to find that if you are giving all this money. * * * But I suggest to you that that’s the type of manipulations going on here for money. * * * That’s the medical truth. Not their money truth. * * * What on earth is going on in this case? I’ll tell you what’s going on. Money. Nine million dollars. Let’s get rich on this case at [Dr. Saeed’s] expense. * * * It has nothing to do with medicine. It has to do with money. That’s all it has to do with. * * * Because [the plaintiffs case is] calculated to try to get you to go back in the jury room and feel terribly sympathetic for this family, this nice guy and his two nice children, and give them nine million dollars, and that’s wrong. That would be in my view an absolute wrong thing to do. But they don’t care. They just want the money. They come in here and talk about the constitution. You speak for this country. I do not. When you walk back into this courtroom with your verdict it will say a lot of things, a lot of things about this kind of conduct in American courts. And if you want to verify it, if you want to be part of it, that will be your choice. * * * There hasn’t been one recognition in this courtroom that [Dr. Saeed is] a human being over there. That’s not an ATM machine. * * * Well, you carry back in this courtroom — whether you agree with that kind of conduct you will carry a verdict back which says yes to that kind of conduct, to that kind *560 of greed, and you’ll affirm that behavior. And if you do, that’s your prerogative. I don’t think you will because you know the answer.”

{¶ 6} Regarding Roetenberger’s counsel, defense counsel stated to the jury, “[Roetenberger’s counsel] don’t want a reasoned debate. They have not wanted that from opening statement and they don’t want it now. They want money. If they wanted a reasoned debate about the medical components of a medical case they would know how to ask medical questions. * * * That’s an absolute and utter misrepresentation and manipulation of the burden of proof. * * * Manipulation, manipulation, manipulation. Don’t let them do it. It’s wrong. * * * That’s the only thing they can do in front of you because they don’t know how to ask the people questions. That’s what’s going on here. They stand up here and malign my three experts. They had a chance to cross-examine these people and ask them intelligent questions and pronounce the drugs appropriately and ask them questions about medicine and they didn’t do it. Why? Because they didn’t know how. They didn’t have a clue. I’m going to talk to you for a minute how they still after two and a half years don’t understand the case. * * * Is this the way people are going to be treated in an American courtroom? Is this the way with this kind of deplorable evidence, where they don’t know the medicine and if they can’t cross-examine experts they have to try to insult them as they’ve insulted Dr. Saeed in this courtroom? And they want nine million dollars for that? * * * Their hearts are empty. Their souls are empty for what they’ve done in this courtroom to this doctor. * * * They’ve tried every trick in the book. And let me show you the trick because you know I’m right. The game they played in this courtroom is deplorable.” Defense counsel also warned the jurors that returning a verdict in Roetenberger’s favor would “affirm” the behavior of plaintiffs counsel.

■ {¶ 7} Defense counsel maligned Roetenberger’s experts, accusing them of “manipulating” the case and “participating in this creation of this lawsuit against this good doctor to make all kinds of money.” Defense counsel called one of Roetenberger’s medical experts an idiot, arguing that the expert was not credible because he wore “gym shoes and baggy pants.” Defense counsel also argued to the jury that returning a verdict in Roetenberger’s favor would brand Saeed “with malpractice for the rest of his life” and reward Roetenberger’s greed.

{¶ 8} Defense counsel injected his personal views on the evidence into the trial, stating, “I think that [a nurse who testified] was a spectacular witness. * * * I don’t think money should be awarded. Not a penny. * * * They have treated [Dr. Saeed] in a deplorable fashion in my view, deplorable. * * * [Compensating Roetenberger] would be in my view an absolute wrong thing to do.”

{¶ 9} Closing argument presents counsel with the opportunity to comment on the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from the *561 evidence. See Wilson v. Ahn, 1st Dist. No. C-020615, 2003-Ohio-4305, 2003 WL 21946756. Remarks or arguments that are not supported by the evidence and are designed to arouse passion or prejudice to the extent that there is a substantial likelihood that the jury may be misled are improper. See Brokamp v. Mercy Hosp. Anderson (1999), 132 Ohio App.3d 850, 726 N.E.2d 594; Jones v. Olcese (1991), 75 Ohio App.3d 34, 598 N.E.2d 853. “When argument spills into disparagement not based on any evidence, it is improper.” Clark v. Doe

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Bluebook (online)
839 N.E.2d 441, 163 Ohio App. 3d 555, 2005 Ohio 5205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roetenberger-v-christ-hospital-ohioctapp-2005.