Spohn Hospital v. Mayer

104 S.W.3d 878, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 604, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 49, 2003 WL 1923002
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 2003
Docket02-0443
StatusPublished
Cited by223 cases

This text of 104 S.W.3d 878 (Spohn Hospital v. Mayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spohn Hospital v. Mayer, 104 S.W.3d 878, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 604, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 49, 2003 WL 1923002 (Tex. 2003).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In this medical negligence case, the parties appealed portions of the trial court’s judgment following a jury trial. The jury found the defendant Spohn Health System Corporation d/b/a Spohn Hospital liable and awarded damages to the plaintiffs, Karen Mayer and Sandra Hilbrich, individually and as representatives of the estate of their deceased father, Raymond Hil-brich. Spohn argued on appeal that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding pre-judgment interest such that the damages award exceeded the limits of the statutory cap and in ordering as discovery sanctions that certain facts be taken as true at trial. Mayer and Hilbrich asserted on appeal that the Stowers doctrine made the statutory cap limiting the damages award in medical negligence cases inapplicable. The court of appeals did not reach plaintiffs’ statutory cap argument, reversed the award of pre-judgment interest, and affirmed the judgment as modified. 72 S.W.3d 52, 69. All parties petitioned for review.

We decide only the discovery issues in this opinion, 1 and hold that the sanctions imposed by the trial court do not comport with the standards we established in TransAmerican Natural Gas Corporation v. Powell, 811 S.W.2d 913 (Tex.1991). We further conclude that the trial court’s abuse of discretion in ordering these sanctions probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and remand the case to the trial court.

Plaintiffs Mayer and Hilbrich alleged that the negligence of Spohn’s staff resulted in the death of their father. Mr. Hil-brich was admitted to Spohn on August 1, 1995. He was 86 years old, suffering from *880 heart problems, and experiencing confusion and disorientation. On August 3, a nurse observed Mr. Hilbrich attempting to get out of his hospital bed for the third time. In response, Spohn moved him to the telemetry floor of the hospital in a room that was near the nurses’ station. On the telemetry floor, he was able to call for a nurse by pressing a button that activated a call light at the nurses’ station, and he was fitted with a medical monitoring device that relayed his vital signs to a monitoring station near the nurses’ station. A telemetry technician at the monitoring station kept track of the patient’s vital signs and was to notify the medical staff of any noteworthy changes in these signs. As a further precaution, Mr. Hilbrich was restrained with a Posey vest, which is a cloth device designed to limit a patient’s ability to get out of bed.

Gary Schmidt, the telemetry technician on duty at the hospital the night of August 4,1995, noted in his witness statement that Mr. Hilbrich made four calls after 11:00 p.m. requesting a nurse’s assistance. Schmidt further indicated that the nursing staff did not respond to the calls. The evidence established that at approximately 12:01 a.m., Mr. Hilbrich’s telemetry monitor indicated that he was suffering from ventricular fibrillation. A nurse ran to Mr. Hilbrich’s room and found him beside his bed with the Posey vest caught on the bed and wrapped around his neck. The nurse removed the vest to free Mr. Hil-brich, but, despite resuscitation efforts, he was pronounced dead a short time later.

Mayer and Hilbrich sued Spohn on August 31, 1995. While preparing for trial, Spohn interviewed and took written statements from Schmidt, Aurora Silva, and some of the other nurses who had been on duty while Mr. Hilbrich was in the hospital. In April 1999, the plaintiffs propounded requests for disclosure on Spohn, including a request for disclosure of witness statements, as provided in Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 192.3(h). (“A party may obtain discovery of the statement of any person with knowledge of relevant facts — a “witness statement’ — regardless of when the statement was made.”) In June 1999, Spohn responded to the request for witness statements by producing the statements of two nurses. Spohn did not produce the statements of Schmidt, Aurora Silva, a nurse on duty the night Mr. Hil-brich died, or two other nurses, but stated in its response that documents were being withheld based on the attorney work-product doctrine. Mayer and Hilbrich threatened to file a motion to compel, but never did. On December 10, 1999, 31 days before trial, Spohn voluntarily produced the statements of Schmidt, Silva, and the two other nurses. At that time, Spohn stated that it had withheld the statements believing them to be exempt from discovery but that recent case law had convinced Spohn that the statements were now discoverable.

Mayer and Hilbrich moved for sanctions, arguing that Schmidt’s and Silva’s written statements had a direct bearing on the issue of breach of the standard of care and that Spohn’s late production of the statements prejudiced the plaintiffs’ case.

Schmidt’s witness statement indicated that immediately prior to Mr. Hilbrich’s death, Mr. Hilbrich called for a nurse four times. Schmidt stated that he either informed the nurses of each call, or had a nurse’s aide inform them, but the nurses ignored the calls. Plaintiffs called Schmidt as a witness at the sanctions hearing, and his testimony was generally consistent with his written statement.

Silva’s witness statement concerned her actions the night of Mr. Hilbrich’s death. When these events occurred, she was acting as the charge nurse, or the supervisor, of the 3:00 p.m. to 11:00 p.m. shift. She *881 gave the instructions to move Mr. Hilbrich to a room near the nurses’ station and place him in the Posey vest. In her statement she says that it “never occurred to her” that “she had not written the physicians’ order” regarding the Posey vest restraint in Mr. Hilbrieh’s medical charts. Her statement did not say that Mr. Hil-brich was placed in the restraint without a physician’s order. Silva testified at trial, but Schmidt did not.

The trial court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions and ordered that facts in Schmidt’s and Silva’s written statements be taken as established, pursuant to Rule 215.2(b)(3). 2 The court instructed the jury, pursuant to its order of January 6, 2000, that:

[T]he following facts are to be taken as established in this case: Number one, that immediately prior to midnight on the date of his death, Raymond Hilbrich made four requests for assistance using the nurse’s call button, spaced five minutes apart, each of which was noted and each of which was ignored by the nursing staff; and, two, Raymond Hilbrich was placed in the Posey vest, a physical restraint, without physician’s order, either written or telephonic.

At trial, in response to questioning by the plaintiffs, Spohn’s nurses acknowledged that a failure to answer four calls from a patient would violate the standard of care. Spohn filed two bills of exceptions containing testimony from two other nurses on duty the night of Mr. Hilbrich’s death. The two nurses would have testified that Schmidt never called them, contrary to his statement and to the court’s instruction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 S.W.3d 878, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 604, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 49, 2003 WL 1923002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spohn-hospital-v-mayer-tex-2003.