Ruiz v. The City of Chicago

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 29, 2006
Docket1-04-1740 & 1-04-2591 cons. Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Ruiz v. The City of Chicago (Ruiz v. The City of Chicago) 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
Ruiz v. The City of Chicago, (Ill. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION FILED: JUNE 29, 2006

1-04-1740, 1-04-2591 (Consolidated)

OMAYDA RUIZ, Individually and as Independent ) Appeal from the Administrator of the Estate of HAROLD ) Circuit Court of SEPULVEDA, Deceased ) Cook County. ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 00 L 9461 ) THE CITY OF CHICAGO, a Municipal Corporation, ) Honorable ) Mary A. Mulhern, Defendant-Appellee ) Judge Presiding. ) (IGNACIO FORNARIS, Individually and as Agent, ) Servant and/or Employee of NORWEGIAN ) AMERICAN HOSPITAL d/b/a PRO-HEALTH ) MEDICAL CENTER, INC. ) ) Defendant). )

JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the court:

On August 21, 1999, Harold Sepulveda died as the result of a severe asthma

attack. As administrator of the estate of Harold Sepulveda, plaintiff filed suit against the

City of Chicago (the City) alleging that paramedics took an unreasonable amount of

time to arrive at the scene and failed to properly treat Harold. Plaintiff also alleged that

Dr. Ignacio Fornaris failed to properly treat Sepulveda from the age of four until his

death. Finally, plaintiff advanced a product liability claim against Schering-Plough

Health Care Products, Inc. (Schering-Plough), alleging the inhaler it manufactured was

ineffective.

Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed Schering-Plough after the company demonstrated 1-04-1740, 1-04-2591 (Consolidated)

its inhaler was not defective. Also prior to trial, Fornaris filed a contribution claim

against plaintiff alleging that she was negligent in caring for Sepulveda. The City filed a

motion in limine to bar plaintiff=s two expert witnesses that were to opine that the

paramedics did not comply with the standard of care for the situation. The trial court

granted the City=s motion and subsequently granted its motion for a directed verdict

because plaintiff no longer had an expert to establish the standard of care, the threshold

element of a medical malpractice claim.

The jury returned a verdict against Dr. Fornaris and awarded plaintiff $4 million

for the wrongful death count and the estate $4.25 million on the survival count.

However, the jury found plaintiff 35% at fault; thus, her damages were reduced to $2.6

million. Plaintiff then settled with Fornaris for the $1 million limit on his insurance policy.

Counsel for plaintiff was awarded costs and attorney fees of $262,500 pursuant to

section 2-1114 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1114 (West 2004)) and

costs of $29,374.32 for a total of $291,874.32. In addition, $10,000 was to remain in the

client trust account for purposes of plaintiff=s appeal. With plaintiff=s approval, counsel

petitioned the trial court for an enhancement of fees to 33 1/3% or $333,333. Therefore,

$70,833.33 was also set aside and placed in an interest-bearing escrow account

pending this appeal.

Plaintiff now appeals the trial court=s granting of the City=s motions. Plaintiff=s

counsel appeals the denial of his petition for an enhanced fee. This court consolidated

these two claims and for the following reasons, affirms the trial court.

3 1-04-1740, 1-04-2591 (Consolidated)

I. BACKGROUND

According to records from the City of Chicago Office of Emergency

Communications (OEC), on August 21, 1999, at 1:18:59 a.m., a call was received for

assistance with a child having an asthma attack at 1438 North Artesian Avenue.

Plaintiff made this 911 call to request help for her 10-year-old son Harold Sepulveda,

who was having a severe asthma attack. Plaintiff stated that it was the worst attack

Sepulveda had ever had. Plaintiff tapped on the side of his chest, administered a

nebulizer and made him walk around to exercise his lungs. Plaintiff then went to the

outside door of their apartment building to wait for the paramedics.

Paramedics Johnny Musa and Kerry Pakucko, along with student trainee Ken

Cardenas, responded to the call from the fire station located at West Potomac Avenue

and North Western Avenue. According to the OEC records, the paramedics were

aboard ambulance A44 en route to plaintiff=s apartment at 1:21:08 a.m. and arrived at

1438 North Artesian Avenue at 1:26:23 a.m. The OEC records also indicate that two

additional 911 calls were made from plaintiff=s apartment at 1:22:43 a.m. and 1:24:53

a.m. These two calls were made by plaintiff=s sister, who remained in the apartment

with Sepulveda.

Musa was a regular driver on ambulance runs in other areas of the city and had

been assigned to this fire station as a one-day substitute for another paramedic. The

paramedics were informed that they were responding to a call about an asthmatic child

located in the second-floor apartment at 1438 North Artesian Avenue. Although the fire

4 1-04-1740, 1-04-2591 (Consolidated)

station was approximately three blocks from plaintiff=s apartment, the paramedics took

over five minutes to arrive because Musa first missed North Artesian Avenue. After

missing this turn, Musa was unable to turn north for two streets as they were one-way

streets in the wrong direction. Musa stated that ambulance drivers are to avoid

speeding and driving the wrong way down a one-way street. Eventually, worried about

the delay, Musa made the turn north on North Rockwell Avenue, then turned and

traveled the wrong way on a one-way street to again go the wrong way on North

Artesian Avenue and reach plaintiff=s apartment.

Upon arrival, the paramedics came upon plaintiff, who was standing in the street.

Plaintiff told the paramedics that Sepulveda was very sick and had been having an

asthma attack for two days. The paramedics grabbed oxygen, a jump bag and a

monitor, and ascended the stairs to plaintiff=s apartment. Musa testified that plaintiff=s

apartment was poorly lit and that they found Sepulveda in the living room, slumped over

a sofa. They placed him on the sofa and determined that he was not breathing and did

not exhibit a pulse.

Musa picked Sepulveda up and carried him downstairs to the rig while he

performed cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and Pakucko performed ventilations on

Sepulveda with the ventilator bag. Musa admitted they could have intubated Sepulveda

in the apartment; however, as the apartment was dark, the rig was a better place to

work and this also eliminated the risk of the tube becoming dislodged when carrying him

down to the ambulance. In the rig, Pakucko intubated Sepulveda and Musa started an

5 1-04-1740, 1-04-2591 (Consolidated)

intravenous line, connected the monitor and EKG machine, and administered

epinephrine and atropine.

At 1:37:38 a.m., Musa drove the ambulance from 1438 North Artesian Avenue to

St. Elizabeth Hospital while Pakucko continued to administer CPR. They arrived at the

emergency room at St. Elizabeth Hospital approximately two minutes later. However,

the emergency room doctors were unable to resuscitate Sepulveda and he was

pronounced dead at 2:28 a.m.

On August 18, 2000, plaintiff filed a complaint against the City, Schering-Plough,

and Dr. Fornaris. Plaintiff=s amended complaint dropped Schering-Plough and retained

the City and Dr. Fornaris as defendants. Plaintiff brought wrongful death and survival

claims against the City alleging that prior to, and during, the course of treatment of

Sepulveda, the paramedics willfully and wantonly violated AParamedic Standing

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