Stang v. Smith

39 Pa. D. & C.5th 428
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Carbon County
DecidedJuly 28, 2014
DocketNo. 09-3311
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Pa. D. & C.5th 428 (Stang v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Carbon County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stang v. Smith, 39 Pa. D. & C.5th 428 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2014).

Opinion

NANOVIC, P.J.,

The basic facts at issue in these proceedings are not uncommon. The negligence of multiple persons is alleged to have combined and caused injury to another — here death. Decedent’s estate files suit against all defendants. None of the defendants files a cross-claim against any other defendant. Prior to trial plaintiff settles with some, but not all of the defendants.

Under these circumstances, whether the names of the settling defendants should be included on the jury verdict slip in order that the liability of each defendant and the degree of their comparative fault can be assessed and determined by the jury, and whether an expert witness called by plaintiff to testify as to the causal negligence of a non-settling defendant, but who opined in response to pretrial discovery that the causal negligence of both settling and non-settling defendants was responsible for plaintiff’s injuries, can be cross-examined at trial on the witness’s earlier opinions critical of the settling defendants, are issues requiring the court’s attention. We address these issues below.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On November 21, 2007, John Stang (“decedent”) was found dead lying on the floor of the Intensive Care Unit (“ICU”) of the Gnaden Huetten Memorial Hospital (“hospital”). The cause of death was DVT/PE, pulmonary embolism caused by deep vein thrombosis from the lower extremities. In layman’s terms, he died of suffocation from clots in his pulmonary arteries which prevented the exchange of oxygen between his blood and lungs.

What caused decedent’s death is not in dispute; why, is. [431]*431This dispute begins with the events of November 15,2007. On that date, during the early morning hours, decedent awoke, dizzy and disoriented, and began to vomit. His wife, Lorrie Stang, contacted Dr. Neil Lesitsky, a primary care physician, who saw decedent for the first time on November 2,2007, for a physical examination. The results of this examination were characteristic of those expected for a fifty-six-year-old white male who was overweight and out of shape: hypertension, hyperlipidemia (high blood fats), hyperglycemia (high blood sugar) and diabetes. All are risk factors for stroke. Medication was prescribed.

When Mrs. Stang spoke with Dr. Lesitsky onNovember 15,2007, she described decedent’s symptoms. Dr. Lesitsky made a preliminary diagnosis of benign positional vertigo and recommended that decedent lie down and get rest. Dr. Lesitsky also advised that if decedent’s condition continued or worsened he should be taken to the Hospital for further evaluation. This conversation occurred at approximately 2:00 A.M.

Later that morning, between 6:00 and 6:30 A.M., Mrs. Stang left for work. She was employed as a pilot driver — an escort for oversized over-the-road motor vehicles — and was scheduled to be out of state. Expecting to be away most of the day, Mrs. Stang arranged for her sixteen-year-old son, Edward Curtis,1 a sophomore in high school, to stay at home and watch decedent. Edward was instructed that if decedent’s condition worsened to immediately call 911.

While she was away Mrs. Stang periodically checked with her son as to decedent’s condition. No change was noted. When Mrs. Stang returned home at 5:30 P.M., [432]*432she immediately noticed that decedent’s condition had worsened — he was paler than when she left — and took him to the hospital.

Decedent arrived at the hospital at 6:08 P.M. and was examined by Dr. Frank Penater, an emergency room physician, at 6:15 P.M. Dr. Penater found decedent to be dehydrated and suspected he had the flu. As a precautionary measure, decedent was admitted to the hospital by Dr. Deborah Smith, an internist, for continued observation.

Dr. Smith was decedent’s attending physician upon his admission to the hospital. During her initial assessment of decedent at 8:16 P.M., Dr. Smith detected signs of nystagmus and disconjugate gaze, and decedent reported experiencing double vision. Dr. Smith ordered a brain CT scan. The results of this exam revealed that decedent had suffered an acute ischemic stroke in the posterior inferior cerebellar artery, more commonly referred to as a PICA stroke. At this point, decedent was transferred to the hospital’s ICU upon Dr. Smith’s order. Also on this date, November 15, 2007, at 10:45 P.M., Dr. Smith requested a neurological consult from Dr. Rajinish Chaudhry, the on-staff neurologist for the hospital.

Between his admission on November 15,2007, and his death on November 21,2007, decedent was under the care of three separate attending physicians: Dr. Smith from November 15, 2007 to November 17, 2007; Dr. Joseph McGinley from November 17, 2007 to November 19, 2007; and Dr. Patrick Hanley, from November 19,2007 to November 21,2007. During this time, decedent’s attending physicians neither ordered nor provided prophylactic preventive care against DVT and PE (e.g., anticoagulation therapy such as low dose Heparin) to decedent.

Decedent was examined by Dr. Chaudhry on November [433]*43319, 2007, at 7:30 P.M., four days after the neurological consult was requested by Dr. Smith and two days before decedent’s death. Dr. Chaudhry ordered aspirin to prevent clot formation. He also recommended transfer to a tertiary care hospital to rule out vertebral artery dissection. As noted above, decedent died on November 21, 2007.

Decedent’s wife (“plaintiff”), individually and in her capacity as administratrix of decedent’s estate, commenced the instant suit by praecipe for writ of summons filed on November 2, 2009. Named as defendants were the hospital; Drs. Smith, McGinley, Hanley, Lesitsky and Chaudhry; and Neil Wesner, M.D.2 In her pleadings and in pretrial proceedings, including medical expert reports, plaintiff claimed that all of the defendants were negligent in their care and treatment of the decedent, that the Hospital was liable on either a respondeat superior or corporate negligence theory, and that the negligence of each caused or contributed to decedent’s death. Each of the defendants contested liability and obtained expert reports in support of their respective positions. No cross-claims were filed by any defendant against any other defendant.

Shortly before trial was scheduled to commence on December 3, 2012, plaintiff reached settlement with the hospital and decedent’s attending physicians, Drs. Smith, McGinley and Hanley (“settling doctors”). (The hospital and settling doctors are collectively referred to herein as the “settling defendants.”). As part of this settlement, plaintiff executed a pro rata joint tortfeasor release on November 27, 2012, (the “release”) in accordance with the Uniform Contribution Among Tort-Feasors Act (“UCATA”), 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 8321-8327. This release provided that if Drs. [434]*434Lesitsky and Chaudhry (“non-settling defendants”) were found to be joint tortfeasors with the settling defendants, the damages the non-settling defendants would be required to pay would be reduced in proportion to the extent fault was attributed to the settling defendants.

After settlement was reached, plaintiff moved to discontinue the action against the settling defendants, to preclude evidence that plaintiff had sued the settling defendants, and to bar the non-settling defendants from cross-examining her medical experts at trial about opinions they had previously rendered against the settling defendants. These motions were denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 Pa. D. & C.5th 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stang-v-smith-pactcomplcarbon-2014.