Ruthie Gatlin v. Central Mississippi Medical Center

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1998
Docket1999-CA-00269-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Ruthie Gatlin v. Central Mississippi Medical Center (Ruthie Gatlin v. Central Mississippi Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruthie Gatlin v. Central Mississippi Medical Center, (Mich. 1998).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI NO. 1999-CA-00269-SCT RUTHIE GATLIN v. METHODIST MEDICAL CENTER, INC. AND DR. DAVID CARLSON

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/26/1998 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ERMEA JACKSON RUSSELL COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ROBERT L. WELLS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: STUART ROBINSON, JR. C. STEPHEN STACK, JR. SHERRY S. FERNANDEZ JAMES T. McCOLGAN, III NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WRONGFUL DEATH DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 12/14/2000 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED: 1/4/2001

BEFORE PRATHER, C.J., MILLS AND COBB, JJ.

PRATHER, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

STATEMENT OF THE FACTS

¶1. On January 14, 1995, twenty-one year old Donaly Floyd Williams, Jr. ("Williams") of Jackson was shot three times while he was being robbed. Williams was taken by ambulance to the Methodist Medical Center ("Methodist") in Jackson. Williams was conscious upon his arrival at the hospital, although unable to speak due to the presence of a breathing tube in his throat. Williams was kept in the emergency room until 11:00 a.m. while hospital staff waited for the anesthesiologist, defendant Dr. David Carlson, to arrive. During this time, Williams's mother, Ruthie Gatlin ("Gatlin") arrived at the hospital.

¶2. At 11:25 a.m. Dr. Fred Rushton, a surgeon on staff at Methodist, with the assistance of Dr. Carlson, began a surgical procedure to "patch up the holes" in Williams's body. Dr. Rushton testified that "at some point during the operation ... we received word through a nurse at the blood bank that there was no further blood available in the hospital or in the city." Gatlin contends that this (apparently erroneous) conclusion was the result of a tragic and negligent miscommunication between Dr. Carlson and the hospital's blood bank personnel.

¶3. Jane Allison, formerly the blood bank supervisor at Methodist, testified at trial that the Methodist hospital blood bank "did not run out of blood" on January 14, 1995. Allison further testified that it was the responsibility of the physician to make requests for changes in the blood type and that the blood bank fulfilled all blood requests which were made by the physicians operating on Williams. Dr. Carlson, by contrast, testified that he was relying on the blood bank personnel to make the necessary changes in the blood type and that it was their responsibility, rather than his own, to ensure that these changes were made. Dr. Carlson acknowledged that, after he was informed that the hospital was out of blood, he did not make additional inquiries with the blood bank.

¶4. Williams died during surgery at 1:40 p.m. Although Dr. Rushton testified that hypothermia was the "terminal event" causing Williams's death, he also conceded that loss of blood was "a factor" in Williams's death and that "we would have certainly liked to have had more blood." Dr. Herbert Ferrari, Gatlin's expert witness as to Dr. Carlson's negligence, testified that, in his opinion, Williams would have "probably" had a "seventy percent" chance of survival if he had received proper treatment. Dr. Ferrari testified that, in his opinion, Dr. Carlson had failed to exercise the minimal level of care required of an anesthesiologist, and that, as a result, Williams' chances of survival were "probably close to zero."

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

¶5. On January 10, 1997, Gatlin filed suit against Methodist and Dr. Carlson for their alleged negligence in the death of her son. On August 27, 1998 the circuit judge directed a verdict in favor of Methodist, finding that Gatlin had failed to establish that any of the hospital's blood bank personnel were negligent. The judge also directed a verdict in favor of Dr. Carlson, finding that, although Gatlin had established a fact issue as to Dr. Carlson's negligence, she had nevertheless failed to legally establish a right to recover any damages for the wrongful death of her son. Feeling aggrieved, Gatlin appeals to this Court.

ISSUES

I. Did the court err when it granted Methodist Medical Center's motion for directed verdict on the grounds that there was no proof that any negligence by it caused or contributed to Mr. Williams' death?

¶6. The first issue on appeal arises from the trial court's decision to grant a directed verdict in favor of Methodist as to liability. This Court conducts a de novo review of directed verdicts. If the Court finds that the evidence favorable to the non-moving party and the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom present a question for the jury, the motion should not be granted. Pace v. Financial Sec. Life, 608 So.2d 1135, 1138 (Miss.1992). Additionally, this Court has held that "[a] trial court should submit an issue to the jury only if the evidence creates a question of fact concerning which reasonable jurors could disagree." Vines v. Windham, 606 So.2d 128, 131 (Miss.1992).

¶7. On appeal, Gatlin raises two theories under which Methodist might be held liable. The first theory of recovery is a direct respondeat superior theory for the negligence of the blood bank personnel who, Methodist concedes, are employees of the hospital.(1) The testimony at trial clearly established that there was confusion between the surgical staff and blood bank personnel as to the availability of blood which could be used by Williams. The evidence at trial indicated that Williams had type B- blood, and that persons with this blood type can receive that blood type, as well as types B+, O- and O+ in the event that the hospital runs out of the patient's primary blood type. A central issue at trial involved whether the anesthesiologist or blood bank personnel were responsible for failing to secure the blood which was available for Williams's surgery.

¶8. Gatlin's only expert witness at trial, Dr. Ferrari, testified that the party responsible for coordinating the blood transfusion was the anesthesiologist, Dr. Carlson. Dr. Ferrari testified that, upon being informed that there was no blood available, a minimally competent anesthesiologist should "call or have someone to call anybody that has authority to procure blood all the way up to the director of the blood bank." Although not called as an expert witness by the plaintiffs, Dr. Rushton similarly testified that "generally it's the anesthesiologist who asks for any further blood."

¶9. The general rule is that medical negligence may only be established by expert medical testimony, unless a layman can observe and understand the negligence as a matter of common sense and practical experience. Coleman v. Rice, 706 So.2d 696, 698 (Miss. 1997). Gatlin presented no expert testimony at trial as to the standard of care of blood bank personnel,(2) and it appears that Gatlin's theory is that the primary negligence lay with Dr. Carlson. Methodist notes that Dr. Carlson argued in his own defense that responsibility for failing to secure the blood needed by Williams lay with the blood bank personnel, rather than himself. However, Dr. Carlson was not qualified to testify as to the standard of care of blood bank personnel and, as a defendant in this case, he obviously had an interest in testifying that responsibility for the failure to use the blood that was available to save Williams lay elsewhere.

¶10. By only eliciting expert testimony as to an anesthesiologist's standard of care, it appears that Gatlin made a conscious decision to focus her case upon the alleged negligence of Dr. Carlson. Indeed, Gatlin's primary argument on appeal is that Methodist should be held vicariously liable for Dr. Carlson's negligence based upon this Court's decision in Hardy v. Brantley, 471 So.2d 358 (Miss. 1985).

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