Rose v. Hakim

345 F. Supp. 1300, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12626
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedJuly 24, 1972
DocketCiv. A. No. 2132-68
StatusPublished

This text of 345 F. Supp. 1300 (Rose v. Hakim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rose v. Hakim, 345 F. Supp. 1300, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12626 (D.D.C. 1972).

Opinion

OPINION

JONES, District Judge.

On November 10, 1971, this Court filed herein its opinion (335 F.Supp. 1221) and on the same day entered an order effectuating the findings and conclusions set forth in the opinion. On November 19, 1971, there was entered herein a judgment on the jury verdict returned on February 19, 1971.1 The jury verdict was against the defendant Washington Hospital Center (Hospital) in favor of George W. Rose, Jr. (infant plaintiff) in the sum of $265,000.00 and in favor of George W. Rose, Sr. (father plaintiff) in the sum of $29,777.25.

Following the entry of the judgment on the verdict, Hospital filed a motion (1) for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, (2) for a reduction of the judgment by crediting the amounts paid in settlement by the other defendants, or alternatively for a reduction of the judgment by two-thirds of the amount, (3) for reform of the verdict and judgment to eliminate therefrom the unpaid portion of the Hospital’s bill recovered in full by father plaintiff, and (4) for a new trial. On December 7, 1971, that motion was denied by the Court. Thereafter, on January 5, 1972, Hospital filed its notice of appeal from the judgment on the verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and from the order denying its motion.2

In the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, Hospital filed a motion for summary reversal and remand to this Court for reconsideration of Hospital’s motion for credit of settlement payments against the judgment and for additional credit reflecting the exclusion of an unpaid item of expense in the calculation of a judgment in favor of father plaintiff for medical costs. The Court of Appeals granted Hospital’s motion for summary reversal and has remanded the record to this Court for reconsideration of its December 7, 1971 order denying credit on the judgment of the amount paid in settlement by defendant Hakim and defend[1302]*1302ants Associated Anesthesiologists and denying credit of the sum of $7,964.70 on the amount the jury awarded father plaintiff for medical costs. The Court of Appeals directed that such reconsideration be made in light of that Court’s December 10, 1971 Opinion in Snowden v. D. C. Transit System, Inc., D.C.Cir., 454 F.2d 1047.

In Snowden the plaintiff was injured while she was a revenue paying passenger on a bus owned and operated by defendant D. C. Transit System, Inc. (Transit). Her injuries resulted from a collision between the bus and an automobile owned and operated by defendant Ivey. She sued both Transit and Ivey and they in turn filed cross-claims against each other for contribution. The action went to trial before the court and a jury. During the course of the trial, counsel for plaintiff and counsel for Ivey announced to the court that plaintiff and Ivey had entered into a settlement agreement. By the terms of that settlement Ivey paid plaintiff $5,000.00. The jury was not made aware of either the settlement or its amount and the trial continued as though Ivey was actually a party. At the conclusion of the trial the jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against Transit in the amount of $12,500.00. At the same time the jury exonerated Ivey from liability to plaintiff and Transit. Following the entry of judgment, Transit filed a motion to reduce its judgment liability to plaintiff by $5,000.00 — the amount of the settlement between plaintiff and Ivey — from $12,500.00 to $7,500.00. The trial court denied the motion. On appeal the Court of Appeals reversed and instructed the trial court to reduce the judgment liability of Transit by $5,000.00 paid in settlement.

Hospital argues that Snowden requires this Court to reduce its judgment liability to the plaintiffs by the sum of $270,000.00 paid in settlement by Hakim and Associated Anesthesiologists.3 In other words, Hospital asserts it should have credited against its judgment liability of $294,777.25 the sum of $270,000.00; that is, it should only have to pay the plaintiffs $24,777.25 in satisfaction of its judgment liability.4

Plaintiffs challenge Hospital’s interpretation of Snowden,5 That case, they assert, differs from theirs in that in Snowden there was only “a single injury” while here the “singleness of injury” does not exist. The plaintiffs seek to support that proposition by referring to their pleadings, their November 30, 1970 trial brief, the December 10, 1970 pretrial and this Court’s findings of fact as set forth in its November 10, 1971 opinion.

Hospital, in responding, asserts that plaintiffs’ pleadings, the May 19, 1970 pre-trial order and plaintiffs’ settlement agreements with Hakim and Associated Anesthesiologists all evidence that plaintiffs’ claimed injury was infant plaintiff’s permanent brain damage and that all defendants were charged with causing it.

Plaintiffs’ complaint against Hakim and Associated Anesthesiologists alleged that these defendants through the acts of negligence charged caused infant plaintiff to become “comatose and caused [him] to suffer massive, irreparable, and possibly irreversible and permanent brain damage which has and will render him defective, blind, and crippled [1303]*1303for the balance of his life.” And that infant plaintiff “has further been caused to suffer great mental and physical pain and anguish and will continue to suffer such pain and anguish permanently for the balance of his life.” (|f 12, Complaint.) Subsequent to the filing of their original complaint, they filed an amended complaint stating their claim against Hospital. After charging certain acts of negligence against Hospital, they asserted the resulting injury to infant plaintiff in exactly the same language as they used in their complaint against Hakim and Associated Anesthesiologists with one exception. In their complaint they conditioned the “irreversible and permanent brain damage” by using the word “possibly.” The amended complaint did not so condition the brain damage. (¶[ 21, Amended Complaint.) The father plaintiff’s claimed injury was the same both in the complaint and the amended complaint in that in both he claimed that he had been and would be deprived of his son’s services and that he had and would in the future incur medical and other care and treatment expenses due to infant plaintiff’s brain damage. (¶ 13, Complaint; If 22, Amended Complaint.)

Plaintiffs at the May 10, 1970 pretrial conference stated that “the claimed injuries” sustained by infant plaintiff were: “1. Generalized brain damage. 2. Cortical blindness. 3. Quadriplegia. 4. Mental and physical pain and suffering.” In their pre-trial statement they did not distinguish between any of the defendants and those “claimed injuries.”

On October 9, 1970, before this case came on for trial plaintiffs entered into separate settlement agreements with Hakim and with Associated Anesthesiologists. In each agreement the pláintiffs accepted the amount paid “in partial satisfaction of the injuries and damages claimed to have been suffered” by plaintiffs with express reservation of rights of actions against all other persons. The Court approved those settlement agreements on October 9, 1970.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
345 F. Supp. 1300, 1972 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-hakim-dcd-1972.