Rohe v. Shivde

560 N.E.2d 1113, 203 Ill. App. 3d 181, 148 Ill. Dec. 516, 1990 Ill. App. LEXIS 1411
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 14, 1990
Docket1-87-1439
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 560 N.E.2d 1113 (Rohe v. Shivde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rohe v. Shivde, 560 N.E.2d 1113, 203 Ill. App. 3d 181, 148 Ill. Dec. 516, 1990 Ill. App. LEXIS 1411 (Ill. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

PRESIDING JUSTICE COCCIA

delivered the opinion of the court:

This action was brought on behalf of Patrick Rohe (Patrick), by his mother and next friend, Mary Rohe, and by Mary and Dennis Rohe, to recover for injuries sustained by their minor son as a result of alleged medical malpractice. Specifically, plaintiffs’ complaint, filed in April 1982, charged that Dr. Pinakini Shivde (Dr. Shivde) was negligent in failing to diagnose and treat Patrick’s bilateral, congenital hip dislocation and that Little Company of Mary Hospital (the Hospital) was both primarily and vicariously liable for the negligent medical care which Patrick received. The complaint also requested damages for Patrick’s pain, suffering and disability, and for the parents’ related medical expenses. Following protracted discovery, and a negotiated settlement with a later-added physician defendant, the trial court entered a final and appealable order on April 10, 1987, granting summary judgment in favor of the Hospital and denying plaintiffs’ motion to vacate a previous order granting summary judgment to Dr. Shivde. From these orders, plaintiffs now appeal.

The record discloses that Patrick was born at 3:35 a.m. on September 5, 1981, at Little Company of Mary Hospital in Chicago. Immediately after birth, he was taken from the delivery room to the Hospital’s neonatal intensive care unit, suffering from respiratory distress. Dr. Shivde was contacted by the intensive care nursery at approximately 4 a.m., and again at 5 a.m., and gave telephone orders to his attending nurse at these times. Dr. Shivde first saw Patrick on her regular daily rounds of the neonatal intensive care unit later that day and conducted a physical examination sometime prior to 12:50 p.m. The results of this examination included a diagnosis of polycythemia and secondary hypoglycemia. During the next five days, Patrick remained in the intensive care unit, where he was visited and examined by Dr. Shivde on a daily basis. Dr. Shivde also spoke with Mary Rohe several times about his condition. Despite the onset of jaundice on the third day, Patrick made gradual progress. By September 10, when he was discharged from the Hospital, his respiratory distress and other diagnosed medical problems had disappeared, with the exception of a mild heart murmur. At discharge, Dr. Shivde informed his mother about the heart murmur and advised her to make an appointment with a pediatrician to have it checked. At no time, from his admission to the intensive care nursery until his discharge from the Hospital, did Dr. Shivde note anything in Patrick’s medical chart relating to his hips or discuss the condition of his hips with his mother.

In a discovery deposition taken December 10, 1982, Mary Rohe testified that when Patrick was about one month old, she first noticed that his right foot turned outward. When this condition did not change during the next few months, she had Patrick examined by an orthopedic specialist in February 1982. The specialist determined that Patrick had congenitally dislocated hips and arranged his admission to Christ Hospital in Oak Lawn, Illinois, for immediate treatment with traction. This treatment was followed by surgery to reposition and cast the hips. Four subsequent hospitalizations were required in order to recast Patrick’s hips until they were properly repositioned. In July 1982, the cast was removed and Patrick was fitted for a brace. At the time of the deposition, he was still required to wear the brace at night.

Little Company of Mary is a licensed not-for-profit hospital which in September 1981 maintained newborn nurseries and a neonatal intensive care unit. The Hospital entered into a written contract with Dr. Shivde’s professional corporation, Neonatologist, Limited, in July 1977. Under the terms of the agreement, Dr. Shivde received an annual salary in return for carrying out specific administrative duties. These included supervising the operations of the newborn nurseries and intensive care unit, formulating medical policies for these units consistent with Hospital regulations, staffing these facilities under the direction of the department of pediatrics, providing educational programs in the field of neonatology to Hospital staff, and providing 24-hour coverage of the newborn facilities, with a neonatologist available for assistance at high-risk deliveries. The contract further provided that all infants admitted to the neonatal intensive care unit of the Hospital were to be admitted under the name of physicians employed by Neonatologist, Limited, which assumed full responsibility for their care. Although compensated by the Hospital for the above-mentioned administrative responsibilities, Dr. Shivde’s professional corporation billed the infants’ parents directly for the medical services which she provided in the Hospital’s neonatal intensive care nursery. The contract, executed July 1, 1977, was by its terms automatically renewable from year to year, absent 90-day written notice prior to the expiration of a term.

In her discovery deposition of August 30, 1983, Dr. Shivde stated that her relationship with the Hospital changed somewhat after 1978. She explained that between 1978 and 1982, when she left the Chicago area to practice in another State, she did not operate under a written contract with the Hospital or receive an annual salary. Instead, the Hospital paid her “minimal compensation,” essentially for arranging for a neonatologist to be available on call, 24 hours per day, for its high-risk newborns. She further stated that, during those years, she and the Hospital considered all of the infants in the neonatal intensive care unit to be her “private patients,” and that all admissions to the unit were made in her name. In other words, she regarded the newborns admitted to the Hospital’s intensive care nursery as “[her] practice,” and billed their parents directly for her medical services. Although a small number of pediatricians, all of whom had staff privileges at the Hospital, were also permitted to treat newborns there, she estimated that she provided about 90% of the newborn care at the Hospital during the relevant period. In addition, any sick infants, such as Patrick Rohe, were exclusively under her care. From the record before us, it is not clear whether Dr. Shivde and the Hospital were, in fact, still operating under the terms of the July 1, 1977, contract in September of 1981. We note that the Hospital’s motion for summary judgment, which it amended, by leave of the court, specifically to “clarify the status of Dr. P. Shivde vis-a-vis *** [the] Hospital,” refers to the attached, July 1, 1977, “service agreement executed between it and Dr. Shivde as support [for the premise] that there was no employment relationship between the two for professional services actually rendered to patients by Dr. Shivde or her corporation in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit at [the] Hospital at the time of this incident.” (Emphasis added.) In any event, the defendants’ consistent position throughout this litigation has been that Dr. Shivde was not an employee of the Hospital at any time relevant to this case.

Dr. Shivde’s discovery deposition further reveals that she was certified in pediatrics by the American Board of Pediatrics in December 1980. Although she stated that she was preparing to take a subspecialty Board examination in November 1983, she was not Board certified in any pediatric subspecialty as of August 1983. Her medical training in pediatrics, and to a lesser degree, in neonatology, was quite extensive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
560 N.E.2d 1113, 203 Ill. App. 3d 181, 148 Ill. Dec. 516, 1990 Ill. App. LEXIS 1411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohe-v-shivde-illappct-1990.