Sedor v. Community Medical Center

16 Pa. D. & C.5th 193
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lackawanna County
DecidedJuly 19, 2010
Docketno. 05 CV 2143
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 Pa. D. & C.5th 193 (Sedor v. Community Medical Center) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lackawanna County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sedor v. Community Medical Center, 16 Pa. D. & C.5th 193 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

NEALON, J.,

A neurosurgeon who was struck by a hospital bed that was being transported by a hospital employee with the gratuitous assistance of an orthopedic implants sales representative has filed suit [195]*195against those individuals, their employers and the manufacturer and distributor of the orthopedic implants that were being delivered to the hospital by the independent contractor sales representative. Following a partial summaiy judgment ruling that no master-servant relationship existed between the implants distributor and the salesman for purposes of vicarious liability, the implants manufacturer and distributor filed another summary judgment motion arguing that the neurosurgeon cannot establish the duty and causation elements of a negligence claim as a matter of law. Since the record does not support in any manner the conclusion that the manufacturer or distributor had a duty to instruct an independent contractor’s employee to refrain from handling another party’s equipment, the neurosurgeon has not established that the manufacturer or distributor owed a duty to train a non-employee “not to handle or transport beds or any other large equipment within the hospital.” Consequently, the supplemental motion for summary judgment filed by the implants manufacturer and distributor will be granted.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

This personal injury suit arises from an incident which occurred on February 22, 2005 in the corridor of the operating room suite at defendant Community Medical Center (CMC). On that date, a neurosurgeon, plaintiff David J. Sedor MD. was reviewing a medical chart at the nurses’ station while a CMC employee, defendant Nadine Rudd, was attempting to transport a hospital bed through the hallway. Also present in the surgical suite corridor was an orthopedic products sales representative, defendant John Soy, who was employed by defendant [196]*196Sky Medical LLC.1 On his own initiative, Soy offered assistance to Rudd in transporting the bed and as they were negotiating a turn in the vicinity of the nurses’ station, they struck Dr. Sedor with the bed.2 (Deposition of Nadine Rudd dated 3/1 /06, pp. 25-26; deposition of John Soy dated 5/23/06, pp. 10-11, 27-30, 33-35, 37, 40-43, 46-60.) Dr. Sedor maintains that he suffered injuries and associated infections as a result of the impact, which ultimately required him to undergo a mid-thigh amputation of his right leg. (Plaintiffs’ second amended complaint, ¶¶18, 24, 38.)

At the time of the bed incident, Soy’s employer, Sky Medical, was a party to a distributorship agreement with [197]*197defendant Biomet Orthopedics Inc, which granted Sky Medical “the exclusive right to promote the sale of products of Biomet Orthopedics Inc.” in an 18-county region.3 The Biomet-Sky Medical agreement specifies that Sky Medical would act “as a commission sales representative for Biomet” with the full understanding that Sky Medical was “an independent contractor and not an employee of Biomet.” (Biomet-Sky Medical distributorship agreement dated 4/16/03, p. 1.) The agreement distinctly states that Sky Medical “will not be deemed an agent of Biomet for any purpose whatsoever and neither [Sky Medical] nor any of its agents or employees will have any right or authority to assume or create any obligation of any kind, whether express or implied, on behalf of Biomet.” (Id. p. 2.) Biomet agreed to indemnify Sky Medical only for those claims “arising from or alleged to arise from any deficiencies or defects in the design,manufacture, packaging or labeling of Biomet products causing bodily injury (including death) or property damage to others.” (Id., p. 11; deposition of Gerald Langan dated 6/18/08, pp. 45-47; deposition of William A. Hartman dated 8/27/08, pp. 11, 23-26.) It is undisputed that Biomet has never manufactured, sold or distributed hospital beds. (Langan depo., p. 38; Hartman depo., p. 23.)

[198]*198In his capacity as a sales representative for Sky Medial, Soy was responsible for (a) delivering orthopedic implants and instrumentation to surgeons for hip, knee, shoulder and elbow procedures and (b) being present during all orthopedic implant operations in order to provide technical assistance to the surgical team.4 (Soy depo., pp. 6-7, 9, 16; Langan depo., pp. 9, 49; Hartman depo., p. 24.) On the date in question, Soy was present in the CMC operating suite while he was “covering cases for Sky Medical.” (Soy depo., p. 44.) The movement of hospital beds was not within the scope of Soy’s employment responsibilities, and Soy was not promoting Biomet’s products or furthering its business interests when he assisted Rudd in transporting the CMC bed. (Gerald Langan depo., pp. 41-42, 50; Hartman depo., p. 24.) In fact, Dr. Sedor’s own liability expert, Elizabeth H. Arruda R.N., B.S.N., has opined that “[i]n his role of orthopedic sales representative, Mr. Soy should have had no contact with hospital equipment outside of his product line.” (Report of Elizabeth H. Arruda R.N., B;S.N. dated 8/12/08 at p. 4.) Ms. Arruda has concluded that “Mr. Soy worked outside of this role” when he assisted Rudd in pushing the bed. (Id.)

It bears noting that prior to his employment with Sky Medical, Soy worked as a nurses aide and scrub nurse at CMC from 1992 to 2003. (Soy depo., p. 7.) During [199]*199the course of his CMC employment, Soy viewed a training video which discussed the proper transportation of hospital beds and equipment. (Id, pp. 31-33.) Moreover, Soy has expressly testified that as of February 22,2005, he knew that he “shouldn’t handle any of the hospital equipment” as a Sky Medical sales representative. (Id., p. 69.)

Biomet filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to dismiss Dr. Sedor’s claim for vicarious liability based upon the actions of Soy or Sky Medical. In opposing Biomet’s motion, Dr. Sedor argued, inter alia, that he also has advanced a direct liability claim against Biomet for “failing to properly train agents, servants and employees not to handle or transport beds and other large equipment within hospitals.” (Plaintiffs’ second amended complaint, ¶37^).) Relying upon the language of the Biomet-Sky Medical distributorship agreement and the Sky Medical-Soy employment agreement, the depositions and discovery materials submitted by the parties and the governing precedent, Judge Robert A. Mazzoni granted Biomet’s motion for summary judgment “as it pertains to [Sedor’s] vicarious liability claim only” by holding as a matter of law that no master-servant relationship existed between Biomet and Soy/Sky Medical. (Trial court opinion dated 6/25/09 at p. 19.) However, Judge Mazzoni deferred any ruling with regard to Dr. Sedor’s “negligent training” claim and stated:

“This court’s inquiry is limited in scope. [Biomet’s] motion for summary relief addresses whether defendant Biomet is vicariously liable for the conduct of Sky Medical/Soy predicated on an alleged master-servant relationship. As reflected in plaintiffs’ second amended [200]*200complaint, there are direct claims of liability directed against Biomet. (See para. 37(a) of plaintiffs’ second amended complaint.)” {Id., at p. 4 n.2) (emphasis in original)

Following the completion of discovery, Biomet presented a supplemental motion for summary judgment seeking to dismiss Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Pa. D. & C.5th 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sedor-v-community-medical-center-pactcompllackaw-2010.