St. Elizabeth Hospital v. Graham

883 S.W.2d 433, 1994 WL 502477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 1994
Docket09-93-253 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 883 S.W.2d 433 (St. Elizabeth Hospital v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Elizabeth Hospital v. Graham, 883 S.W.2d 433, 1994 WL 502477 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

BROOKSHIRE, Justice.

An appeal from a judgment adverse to St. Elizabeth Hospital. The district court case was a suit for damages brought by the plaintiff Floyd Graham (Graham) against St. Elizabeth Hospital (St. E.) claiming that Graham was negligently injured on or about February 17, 1989, while recuperating from a severe head injury sustained by him six days earlier.

On February 11, 1989, Graham apparently was driving alone in his truck quite late at night near Vidor. Graham’s vehicle left the road and struck an embankment. In that collision Graham’s head struck a part of his own truck. The blow resulted in a commi-nuted depressed skull fracture as well as a basilar skull fracture. In a comatose condition he was transported to St. E. Dr. Hir-schauer performed a craniotomy on Graham. Graham was taken to the Neuro Intensive Care Unit where he remained until February 18th. He was then transferred to the neurological unit of St. E. He was discharged on March 4, 1989.

*435 Graham instituted litigation seeking actual and punitive damages, alleging that St. E. was guilty of ordinary negligence and gross negligence, principally in failing to restrain him or to use restraints to keep him from falling out of a recliner chair in the Neuro IC Unit on February 17,1989. St. E. moved for a bifurcated trial in this civil suit. The bifurcated trial was denied. Over St. E.’s objection the plaintiff was successful in introducing the net worth of the hospital in the presence of the jury. The verdict declared St. E. guilty of ordinary negligence but not gross negligence. The damage award to Graham was in the sum of $1,250,000 in actual or compensatory damages. The court also rendered judgment in favor of Graham for pre-judgment interest in excess of $216,-000.

St. E. presents eight points of error. The first two are grouped and briefed together. The first two points are: (1) the trial court erred in denying the defendant’s motion for a bifurcated trial on punitive damages and erred in allowing the jury to hear or consider the net worth of St. E. The net worth, it is argued by St. E., was clearly prejudicial and constituted harmful error; and (2) that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of St. E.’s net worth during the trial of the case inasmuch as St. E. argues there was no evidence of gross negligence on the part of the hospital. Again, the jury failed to find gross negligence against St. E.

Graham, citing. Lunsford v. Morris, 746 S.W.2d 471 (Tex.1988), required St. E. to disclose its net worth to plaintiffs counsel. In Lunsford, it was held that a civil defendant’s net worth is a relevant and material factor on the issue of punitive or exemplary damages and therefore, net worth was discoverable. Lunsford did not require a threshold showing of gross negligence before offering evidence of net worth. Lunsford holds that in cases in which punitive or exemplary damages may be awarded the parties involved may discover and offer evidence of the defendant’s net worth. This information was obtained through answers to plaintiffs interrogatories. Plaintiff had pleaded for punitive damages.

Before the trial, St. E. filed a motion for a separate or bifurcated trial on the issue of punitive damages. St. E. argued that the results of refusing to grant the separate trial would be misleading, inflammatory, and prejudicial without first submitting to the jury the issues of causation, liability, actual compensatory damages, and gross negligence.

St. E. also cited and argued to the trial court Tbx.R.Cxv.P. 174 concerning separate trials. The trial court, in denying the bifurcated trial, ruled that once the district court had determined that there existed some evidence of conscious indifference, then the trial judge would allow the plaintiffs counsel to present evidence of St. E.’s net worth to the jury. Under these first two points of error St. E.’s able counsel argues also that the plaintiff presented no evidence at all of ordinary negligence and no evidence at all of gross negligence.

Graham counters, stating that he was very seriously injured and sustained damages resulting from a fall in the neuro ICU of St. E.’s on February 17, 1989. Graham was recuperating after a surgical procedure. Graham’s injuries, he alleges, occurred when, unrestrained and unattended, he fell from a recliner chair where he had been placed by a nurse employee of St. E.

Graham argues that on previous occasions St. E. and its employee-nurses had used restraints or other means of caring for patient Graham. Graham states that on the day before his fall in the hospital, he had been visited by his mother. On that immediately previous day, Graham maintains but for the intervention of his visiting mother standing next to the recliner chair that he would have fallen.

These facts were reported to the proper persons by Graham’s mother but the following day Graham was again placed in the recliner unrestrained. Graham was later discovered on the floor next to the recliner chair. He was disoriented and bleeding from his ear. His fall to the floor was hard enough and resulted in a loud noise that a nurse heard. She described the noise as a “bang”. Graham asserts that the nurse assigned to care for him had not restrained him *436 and was not observing Mm at the time of the fall.

Plaintiff, through Ms pleadings, had pointed out that St. E. had allegedly violated its own policies of safety and its own policies concerning the use of restraints in similar circumstances. Graham pleaded other grounds of negligence as well as gross negligence. Appellee argues in Ms responses to points of error one and two that he did demonstrate and offer evidence adequately raising the issue of gross negligence. The trial court at that time — but not before— ruled that Graham had satisfied the necessary evidentiary threshold matters and allowed Graham to introduce certain concise evidence of St. E.’s net worth.

Graham argues that at this time the only evidence of net worth that went before the jury was the plaintiffs attorney advising that some questions had been sent to the defendant which had to be answered under oath. One of the questions was: “Please state the net worth of Defendant, St. Elizabeth Hospital.” The answer to that question was: “$148,954,725.00”.

St. E. argues that the trial judge abused Ms discretion in not granting the separate trial; not surprisingly, Graham states that the trial court had broad discretion concerning bifurcation. Graham argues that it was St. E.’s burden to show an abuse of discretion by the trial judge and that St. E. has offered nothmg to show an abuse of discretion. Simply put, Graham pronounces that there was no evidence of any prejudice or harm to the detriment of St. E.

Further, Graham maintains that at the timé of the trial, the correct procedure did not mandate that evidence of net worth had to be presented in a bifurcated trial after the jury found gross negligence.

Graham and St. E. both argue that our Ninth Court should follow the gmdehnes in Transportation Insurance Co. v. Moriel. However, each argued a different interpretation of the February 2, 1994, opimon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
883 S.W.2d 433, 1994 WL 502477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-elizabeth-hospital-v-graham-texapp-1994.