Snawder v. Cohen

804 F. Supp. 910, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16695, 1992 WL 312701
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedOctober 28, 1992
DocketCiv. A. 89-0629-L (CS)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 804 F. Supp. 910 (Snawder v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snawder v. Cohen, 804 F. Supp. 910, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16695, 1992 WL 312701 (W.D. Ky. 1992).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

SIMPSON, District Judge.

This matter is before the court on the renewed motion of defendant, Dr. Stuart Cohen, for summary judgment.

Plaintiff, Kimberly Marie Snawder, filed this product liability action alleging that she contracted poliomyelitis from an oral polio vaccine administered by Dr. Cohen twenty-one years ago. Snawder claims that Dr. Cohen failed to warn her, or her mother, of the known dangers inherent in the oral polio vaccine’s use. In a previous motion for summary judgment, Dr. Cohen contended that (1) he had no duty to warn Snawder of the risks involved in taking the oral polio vaccine, and (2) his alleged failure to warn did not cause Snawder’s injuries. In an opinion dated April 20, 1990, Judge Thomas A. Ballantine, Jr. of this district denied Dr. Cohen’s motion. Snawder v. Cohen, 749 F.Supp. 1473 (W.D.Ky. 1990). In the presently pending motion for summary judgment, Dr. Cohen essentially renews the same two arguments rejected in his first motion for summary judgment, claiming that the disputed issues of material fact have now resolved in Dr. Cohen’s favor.

First, Dr. Cohen contends that the deposition testimony of Snawder’s mother establishes that his failure to warn did not cause plaintiff’s injury and, thus, there is no genuine material fact on the issue of causation. With respect to this argument, Dr. Cohen presents no new supporting evidence, but relies upon the same evidence previously considered. Dr. Cohen again claims that Snawder’s mother’s testimony reveals that she would have had Snawder vaccinated even if she had been given any warning and that she had her second child, who was born after Snawder, vaccinated with the oral polio vaccine. In his 1990 opinion, Judge Ballantine noted that, in failure to warn cases, the plaintiff was entitled to a rebuttable presumption that she would have heeded a warning and acted to minimize the risk. 749 F.Supp. at 1479. Judge Ballantine concluded that the evidence upon which Dr. Cohen relied was insufficient to rebut this presumption because (1) Snawder’s mother’s testimony was ambiguous and, although damaging in some places, was rehabilitative in other places, and (2) it was not clear whether Snawder’s mother ever had been adequately warned of the danger before deciding to have her second child vaccinated with the same oral vaccine. Id. at 1480. We believe that Judge Ballantine’s opinion was correct.

Second, Dr. Cohen contends that plaintiff cannot satisfy Kentucky law by producing any expert medical testimony establishing that he had any duty to warn of the vaccine’s risks. In his previous motion, Dr. Cohen relied upon the deposition testimony of Dr. Auerbach, Snawder’s treating physician. Judge Ballantine concluded that Dr. Auerbach’s testimony did not “establish, as a matter of fact, that standard medical practice in 1971 dictated that physicians not inform patients of the odds of contracting *912 polio from oral vaccines.” Id. at 1482 (emphasis added). In addition, Judge Ballan-tine was not persuaded that, “as a matter of law, the standard of practice among doctors is the only relevant consideration.” Id. (emphasis added). A minority of jurisdictions recently have adopted the view that “a physician’s duty to inform his patient is measured, not by a professional medical standard, but by the patient’s need for information material to his decision either to accept or to reject the proposed treatment.” Id. at 1483. Because Kentucky courts had not spoken clearly on the law of informed consent, Judge Ballantine concluded that “[a]s a matter of law, this court is not yet convinced that some disclosure may not have been required regardless of the custom of disclosure (or nondisclosure) among local physicians.” Id. (emphasis added).

In addition to Dr. Auerbach’s testimony, Dr. Cohen now relies upon the deposition testimony of Dr. Crawford, a pediatrician, as support for his contention that he had no duty to warn. Dr. Crawford testified as follows on the issue of informed consent:

Q. In 1971 was it common for pediatricians across the country to make known to their patients and to their patient’s parents the content of these warnings that were referred to by Mr. Miller in his questions?
A. No sir.
Q. Why was that?
A. Basically it got back to a pattern of general acceptance of reasonable safety and as far as in relationship specifically to the oral polio process, this had been accepted.
The immunizations were mandated by state law in most instances, and the only exemptions to that at that time were religious conscientious objection and the feeling obviously from a polio standpoint the only way to prevent the transmission and recurrence of epidemic was the continuation of essentially mandatory immunization. The- risk has always been rather nebulous to determine but extremely slight in our mind, and there was no pattern at that particular point for any effort to say, well, there’s one in a million or one in five million or there is a possible chance that something might happen.

[Crawford Depo. 26-27]. Dr. Cohen contends, and we agree, that this testimony allays the concerns articulated in the earlier opinion by providing affirmative expert testimony that informing patients of the risk of contracting polio from the oral vaccine was not the standard of the medical profession at the time Snawder received her vaccine. Dr. Cohen contends that Snawder cannot rebut this testimony with contrary expert evidence and, thus, cannot prove her case.

Relying upon Holton v. Pfingst, 534 S.W.2d 786 (Ky.1975), Dr. Cohen also contends that the earlier opinion incorrectly suggests that Kentucky courts would adopt the minority position that expert medical testimony is not necessary in informed consent cases. In Holton, the court did not decide whether expert medical testimony is necessary in all informed consent cases, but explained that:

[i]t is our view that the cases considering the extent of required disclosure have failed in many instances to relate the requirement to the overall policy consideration. If it is the law, and it surely is, that a physician ordinarily is not liable for an honest mistake in judgment, when he follows acceptable medical standards for examination and diagnosis and treatment, then the extent of disclosure relevant to securing the patient’s consent must be evaluated in terms of what the physician knew or should have known at the time he recommended the treatment to the patient.

Id. at 789. 1

When a federal court is confronted with an issue of state law in a diversity action, it *913 is the court’s responsibility to decide the issue as a Kentucky court would. Zanella v. City of Grand Rivers, 687 F.Supp. 1105, 1107 (W.D.Ky.1988). A recent Kentucky Supreme Court guides us in this task. In Keel v. St. Elizabeth Medical Center,

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Related

Kimberly Marie Snawder v. Stuart P. Cohen, M.D.
5 F.3d 1012 (Sixth Circuit, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
804 F. Supp. 910, 1992 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16695, 1992 WL 312701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snawder-v-cohen-kywd-1992.