Schwochow v. Chung

657 N.E.2d 312, 102 Ohio App. 3d 348, 1995 Ohio App. LEXIS 1202
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 31, 1995
DocketNo. S-94-006.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 657 N.E.2d 312 (Schwochow v. Chung) 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
Schwochow v. Chung, 657 N.E.2d 312, 102 Ohio App. 3d 348, 1995 Ohio App. LEXIS 1202 (Ohio Ct. App. 1995).

Opinions

Abood, Presiding Judge.

'This is an appeal from a judgment of the Sandusky County Court of Common Pleas, which, following a jury trial, found in favor of appellees on appellants’ medical malpractice claim arising out of the medical care provided to their son prior to his death.

Appellants set forth the following assignment of error:

“During the trial of medical malpractice claims predicated on negligent failure to diagnose, the trial court committed prejudicial error by prohibiting plaintiffs from eliciting testimony from any witness to establish that the words ‘no fever’— the entry critical to the defendant-doctor’s diagnosis—were not written at the time of the defendant-doctor’s examination of the decedent but in fact were added to the chart at least six months after that examination. Transcript of Jury Trial (filed June 17, 1994) at 37-38, 201-204, 689-693, and 901.”

The facts that are relevant to the issues raised on appeal are as follows. When eight-year-old Tony Schwochow awoke on the morning of November 16, 1990, he told his mother that he did not feel well and that he had not slept well during the night. Tony showered, dressed and went to school with his mother, Brenda Schowchow, who was working in the school library that day. Because Tony appeared tired and limped when he walked, Brenda told his teacher that he had not slept well the night before. When part way through the morning Tony fell asleep at his desk, his teacher, Carol Franks, was unable to awaken him. Franks called the principal to the classroom but he also was unable to awaken Tony, and *350 they summoned Brenda from the library. Brenda took Tony, who had awakened by then, back to the library with her briefly and then drove him directly to the office of appellee Soo W. Chung, the family’s pediatrician.

Brenda left Tony in the car while she went into the office to ask if Chung could see Tony right away. The receptionist responded that the doctor could, and Brenda carried her son into an examining room. Before the doctor came in, a nurse wrote on Tony’s chart that his chief complaint was “pain, right lower calf muscle, injury yesterday 11/15/90.” No one in the doctor’s office took Tony’s temperature. Chung observed that Tony limped when he walked from the examination table to the doorway and sent Tony to the hospital for an x-ray of his right ankle. Brenda drove her son directly to the hospital for the x-ray, and the results, reported to Chung’s office while Brenda and Tony waited at the hospital, showed no fractures. Brenda was told by the doctor’s receptionist that afternoon to contact Chung if the leg pain continued. Brenda took Tony home and laid him on the sofa, where he fell asleep. Prior to 6:30 p.m., Brenda carried Tony upstairs to his brother’s bed because it was closer to his parents’ room. Brenda and Tony’s father, Charles, decided to go out that evening as they had planned and a babysitter arrived at approximately 6:30. Brenda and Charles showed the babysitter where Tony was sleeping and left at approximately 7:00. When the babysitter checked on Tony at approximately 8:30 she took his temperature, which was one hundred one degrees, and gave him some pain medication. At approximately 10:00 she checked on Tony again. Brenda and Charles returned home around midnight and looked in on Tony, who was sleeping, before going to bed.

Tony awoke at about 6:00 a.m. on November 17, took a shower and dressed but then went back to bed. When Brenda checked on Tony at approximately 9:30, she could not awaken him and immediately called her husband. Charles came home from work and they took Tony to the emergency room at Fremont Memorial Hospital. When they arrived at the hospital at approximately 10:30 a.m., a nurse and a doctor in the emergency room each took Tony’s history. When the medical team began to suspect meningococcal meningitis, Tony was given intravenous antibiotics and was sent by life-flight to Toledo Hospital. By the time Tony arrived at Toledo Hospital, he was in a coma. Tony never regained consciousness and died on November 20, 1990.

On May 7, 1992, plaintiffs filed a wrongful death and survival action against Chung and his professional corporation, in which they alleged that as a direct and proximate result of appellees’ negligent conduct Anthony Schwochow sustained injuries and wrongfully came to his death on November 20,1990. On October 22, 1992, appellants took a discovery deposition of Chung, at which the doctor’s original office chart for Tony was marked as an exhibit. At the deposition, *351 Chung testified that when he examined Tony on November 16, 1990, he did not think that infection was the cause of Tony’s condition because the child’s history indicated that his ankle pain was the result of a trauma that occurred the day before. He stated that that was why no one took Tony’s temperature. The deposition concluded that day with an agreement to continue it as soon as it could be rescheduled. On December 3, 1992, the deposition resumed and counsel for appellees discovered that the office chart was missing. In response, counsel for appellants indicated that they had obtained the chart from the court reporter after the first deposition and had sent it to an expert for analysis. On April 5, 1993, the trial court ordered appellants to return the chart to the jurisdiction of the court but, over appellees’ objection, permitted appellants’ counsel to retain possession of it. On August 11, 1993, the trial court ordered that an examination by limited destructive testing could proceed and on December 2, 1993, the test was performed on the chart by a testing laboratory.

On January 18, 1994, the first day of trial, appellees filed a motion in limine which requested an order “prohibiting plaintiffs from introducing, or attempting to introduce, by comment or statement of counsel, or by any question or comment to any witness or otherwise, any evidence * * * [t]hat the words ‘no fever’ were added to Dr. Chung’s medical chart for Anthony Schwochow on a date other than November 16, 1990.” Appellees argued in support of the motion that the timing of the “no fever” notation was collateral to the medical negligence issue presented in the case and that the introduction of the evidence for the purpose of impeaching Chung was prohibited by Evid.fi. 608(B). Appellants responded that Chung had admitted in his pretrial deposition that the claimed absence of fever was the basis on which he had ruled out the possibility of infection when he examined Tony and that, therefore, evidence of whether Tony did have a fever at the time of the examination and whether Chung altered his office chart at a later date was not collateral but critical to the issue of whether competent medical care was provided. Appellants argued further that evidence of the alteration of the medical chart would be admissible to contradict Chung’s testimony on other matters that were relevant to the malpractice claim.

Prior to opening statements, the trial court entered its ruling on the motion, in which it found that appellants were offering the evidence that the chart was altered as proof of Chung’s character, pursuant to Evid.R. 404(A)(3), that extrinsic evidence attacking Chung’s testimony that he had not altered the chart was not allowed under Evid.R. 608(B), and that appellants were prohibited from eliciting testimony from any witnesses to establish that the chart had been altered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
657 N.E.2d 312, 102 Ohio App. 3d 348, 1995 Ohio App. LEXIS 1202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwochow-v-chung-ohioctapp-1995.