Sohm v. DIXIE EYE CENTER

2007 UT App 235, 166 P.3d 614, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 253, 2007 WL 2084144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 6, 2007
Docket20060274
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2007 UT App 235 (Sohm v. DIXIE EYE CENTER) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sohm v. DIXIE EYE CENTER, 2007 UT App 235, 166 P.3d 614, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 253, 2007 WL 2084144 (Utah Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

GREENWOOD, Associate Presiding Judge: ‘

{1 Plaintiff Kathryn Sohm appeals the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants Dixie Eye Center; Ronald L. Snow, M.D.; and Jeffry R. Ricks, O.D. Plaintiff alleges that summary judgment was improper because (1) the trial court granted judgment on the basis of damages, an issue that was not raised nor briefed by the parties, and (2) even if the parties did not address the issue, Plaintiff met her burden with respect to damages. We reverse and remand.

BACKGROUND 1

12 Plaintiff is approximately eighty-four years old and has suffered from glaucoma *616 since 1980. She also suffers from cataracts, diabetes, and high blood pressure. Defendants treated Plaintiff for her glaucoma from 1995 through 2001. At the time of Plaintiff's initial visit with Defendants, she exhibited intraocular pressures of sixteen and seventeen, and her glaucoma was "well controlled." Over the next three years, Plaintiff's intrao-cular pressures increased slightly, and her glaucoma was under "adequate to marginal control." During 2000, however, Plaintiffs intraocular pressures increased significantly, and Dr. Snow, Plaintiff's opthomalogist, characterized her glaucoma as being under "inadequate control." For the duration of her patient-physician relationship with Defendants, Plaintiffs intraocular pressures remained elevated, and her glaucoma remained "out of control."

T3 During a February 9, 2001 appointment, Plaintiff's intraocular pressures were measured at thirty-four and thirty-eight, and not responding to eye drops. In spite of her worsening condition, Dr. Snow recommended that Plaintiff return for a re-check in four to six months. Instead of waiting that long, Plaintiff returned to the doctor in two months. At that time, her intraocular pressures were elevated to forty-two and forty, and a visual field test showed a significant change in her visual field. Without first decreasing her intraocular pressures, Dr. Snow performed cataract surgery on Plaintiff,

T4 Throughout the rest of her care with Defendants, Plaintiff's intraocular pressures continued to elevate, at one point up to sixty and forty-eight, respectively. Even Dr. Snow testified that when eye pressures hit sixty, "you have to wonder what's going on." Dr. Snow also admitted that intraocular eye pressures of sixty could damage the optic nerve.

[ 5 While Dr. Snow was away on vacation, Plaintiff saw one of his associates, Dr. Ricks. Plaintiff again had high intraocular pressures and raised several complaints about her eyes. Dr. Ricks responded with a poem, which he wrote on a prescription pad, entitled "Medication for Attitude." The poem read: "For every problem under the sun, there is a solution or there is none. If there is one hurry and find it, if there is none, never mind it." Dr. Ricks also recommended that Plaintiff make an appointment in "10 days or so." At her daughter's urging, Plaintiff instead made an appointment with Dr. Kenneth Tuck, a glaucoma specialist in Roanoke, Virginia. Upon seeing Dr. Tuck almost two months later, Dr. Tuck was immediately alarmed by Plaintiff's high intraocular pressures and referred her to Dr. Frank Cotter for "emergent" 2 treatment. Dr. Cotter scheduled an emergency trabeculectomy and brought Plaintiff's intraocular pressures down to ten. In a follow-up letter to another physician, Dr. Cotter stated that Plaintiffs "markedly elevated intraocular pressures caused [her] to develop atrophy of the neuro-retinal rim which is contributing to the visual field deterioration."

I 6 Plaintiff has since become legally blind in her right eye. Looking through her left eye "is like looking through a fog." Moreover, her eyes water, and she must wear sunglasses most of the time. Among several other detrimental life changes, Plaintiff can no longer drive, watch television, cook, sew, or read. She also requires assisted living. 3

17 In 2001, Plaintiff filed a complaint against Defendants, alleging medical malpractice for the negligent treatment of her glaucoma. Dr. Robert Stein, Plaintiff's expert, testified during a deposition that Defendants repeatedly breached the standard of care while treating Plaintiffs glaucoma, i.e., that "proper visual field testing was not done" while Plaintiff was in Defendants' care; that Defendants did not "document {[Plaintiff's] optic nerve appearance" properly; that *617 Defendants improperly performed cataract surgery on Plaintiff before first lowering her intraocular pressure; and that Defendants improperly attended to Plaintiffs "wildly fluctuating intraocular pressures [and] ... discomfort." Dr. Stein further stated that Defendants "essentially ignore{d Plaintiff's] emergent problem," while Dr. Tuck more appropriately treated her condition "as it should have been, as an acute emergency requiring immediate attention."

[8 Dr. Stein further concluded that Defendants' negligent care "contributed to [Plaintiffs] dramatic loss of vision." More specifically, he stated that there was "some visual loss prior to [Plaintiff's cataract] surgery that really never should have happened," and that "there's a much greater likelihood that [Plaintiff] would not have suffered these visual field losses to this degree had there been intervention." Dr. Stein also stated, however, that loss of vision in a case like Plaintiff's "can occur even with the best of care." And although Dr. Stein believed that with proper treatment Plaintiff "might not have suffered any field loss at all," Dr. Stein could not specify, to a reasonable degree of medical probability, what percentage of vision loss Plaintiff would have had under appropriate care.

19 After Dr. Stein's deposition, Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, . arguing that Plaintiff failed to "establish the element of causation" because Dr. Stein "was unable to state, within a reasonable degree of medical probability, what level of vision [Plaintiff] would have had if Defendants had given" her appropriate care. Defendants further asserted that it would be "entirely speculative and impossible to attempt to state what causative damages may have occurred due to the asserted breach of care."

' 10 Plaintiff filed a Memorandum in Opposition to Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment, to which she attached an affidavit of Dr. Stein. Among other things, Dr. Stein stated the following in his affidavit:

14. As I previously testified in my deposition, it is my expert opinion to a reasonable degree of medical probability that the breaches set forth herein are responsible for the damage to [Plaintiff's] eyes and the significant loss of vision she sustained in her right eye.
15. ... As I testified during my deposition, I eannot, nor could any intellectually honest physician, testify to a reasonable degree of medical probability with respect to "percentages" of damage caused by the Defendants' negligence or that would have existed, if any, in the absence of negligence.
16. On the other hand, I did testify ... that "there's a much greater likelihood that [Plaintiff] would not have suffered these visual field losses to this degree had there been intervention."
17.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 UT App 235, 166 P.3d 614, 2007 Utah App. LEXIS 253, 2007 WL 2084144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sohm-v-dixie-eye-center-utahctapp-2007.