Steltz, C. v. Meyers M.D., W., Aplts.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 22, 2021
Docket10 EAP 2021
StatusPublished

This text of Steltz, C. v. Meyers M.D., W., Aplts. (Steltz, C. v. Meyers M.D., W., Aplts.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steltz, C. v. Meyers M.D., W., Aplts., (Pa. 2021).

Opinion

[J-51-2021] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA EASTERN DISTRICT

BAER, C.J., SAYLOR, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

CRAIG STELTZ, : No. 10 EAP 2021 : Appellee : Appeal from the Judgment of : Superior Court entered on April 14, : 2020 at No. 179 EDA 2019 v. : (reargument denied June 18, 2020) : affirming the Order entered on : December 12, 2018 in the Court of WILLIAM C. MEYERS, M.D.; VINCERA : Common Pleas, Philadelphia CORE INSTITUTE AND VINCERA : County, Civil Division at No. 01720 INSTITUTE, : March Term 2016. : Appellants : ARGUED: September 21, 2021

OPINION

JUSTICE MUNDY DECIDED: December 22, 2021 We granted allowance of appeal to consider whether the Superior Court erred in

affirming the trial court’s award of a new trial. Because we conclude that the trial court

did not abuse its discretion in denying a mistrial based on a single, unanswered question

proposed to an expert witness, that decision alone cannot later serve as the basis for

granting a new trial. Accordingly, we reverse the order of the Superior Court and remand

for further proceedings.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In 2016, Craig Steltz filed this medical malpractice action against Dr. William

Meyers, Vincera Core Institute, and Vincera Institute (collectively Appellants). On May 1, 2014, Dr. Meyers performed surgery to repair Steltz’s athletic pubalgia. 1 That surgery is

not the basis of the alleged malpractice. Instead, while rehabilitating from that surgery,

Steltz, who was a player for the Chicago Bears of the National Football League, felt a pop

in his right leg on June 19, 2014. This led him to return to Dr. Meyers on June 30, 2014,

after the Chicago Bears’ team physicians performed a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

on June 27, 2014. At the June 30th follow-up appointment, Dr. Meyers also performed

an MRI on Steltz, discussed the MRI with Dr. Adam Zoga, a musculoskeletal radiologist,

and concluded Steltz had scar tissue breakup, a normal postoperative finding, and not a

new injury to his adductor muscle. However, Dr. Paul Read, a second musculoskeletal

radiologist, also independently reviewed the June 30th MRI shortly after the June 30th

appointment and issued a report concluding the MRI showed a complete tear of the

adductor tendon. Based on these conflicting interpretations of the June 30th MRI, Steltz

alleged Dr. Meyers was negligent in failing to diagnose and disclose the existence of the

tear as reported by Dr. Read.

The case proceeded to a two-week jury trial, from July 31, 2018 to August 13,

2018. Steltz presented Dr. Read as a fact witness, who testified that on July 3, 2014, Dr.

Zombor Zoltani, a resident, authored the primary report interpreting the June 30th MRI as

showing a complete tear, with which Dr. Read agreed and approved in his capacity as

the attending radiologist. N.T., 7/31/18, a.m. session, at 61-62; 7/31/18, p.m. session, at

13-14. At the time he interpreted the June 30th MRI, Dr. Read was unaware that Dr.

Meyers and Dr. Zoga had previously interpreted it as scar tissue breakup. N.T., 7/31/18,

p.m. session, at 13. At trial, Dr. Read substantially affirmed the conclusion of his report,

with the exception that he would classify the injury not as a “tear” but as a complete

1Athletic pubalgia is an injury to the muscles and tendons of the abdomen and leg that attach to the pubic bone. It has been commonly referred to as a “sports hernia.”

[J-51-2021] - 2 “discontinuity” of the common adductor tendon origin because “tear” connotes trauma,

and he was not certain the injury was traumatic. Id. at 22-23.

Steltz also presented Dr. Meyers, as if on cross examination, as part of his case-

in-chief. Dr. Meyers testified that he had interpreted the June 30th MRI with Dr. Zoga,

and he had concluded that Steltz “absolutely did not have a new injury to his adductor

muscle. He had scar breakup.” Id. at 50, 66. Dr. Meyers acknowledged that Dr. Zoga

did not issue a report of his read of the June 30th MRI. Id. at 49. Further, Dr. Meyers

stated that he did not see Dr. Read’s report “until much later,” when Steltz requested his

medical records, and he told Steltz that Dr. Read’s report was not correct. Id. at 51, 56.

As additional medical expert witnesses, Steltz presented Dr. David Treen and Dr.

Benton Emblom. Dr. Treen was qualified as an expert “in the area of sports hernia and

athletic pubalgia.” N.T., 8/1/18, a.m. session, at 28. Dr. Treen testified that, as a general

surgeon, he does not interpret MRIs and relies on radiologists’ interpretations. Id. at 22.

As he does not interpret MRIs, he stated that he could not resolve the conflicting

interpretations of Steltz’s MRIs. Id. at 92-93. Instead, based on his August 16, 2016

visual inspection of Steltz, Dr. Treen opined that “it looked as though the muscle had torn

away from the pelvis,” and it “would not be a salvageable reconstruction” at that time but

it was “more probable than not” that it could have been repaired closer to the time of the

injury, two years earlier. Id. at 56, 60-61. Dr. Treen also opined that it was below the

standard of care to not disclose the results of the June 30th MRI, assuming it showed a

complete tear of the adductor longus muscle, to Steltz. Id. at 62. Likewise, Steltz

presented the videotaped deposition of Dr. Benton Emblom, an orthopedic surgeon,

whose expert opinion, based on a September 2014 physical examination, was that Steltz

had a torn adductor muscle that was surgically unsalvageable and required physical

rehabilitation. N.T., 8/2/18, a.m. session, at 40-41; N.T., 8/2/18, p.m. session, at 83-84.

[J-51-2021] - 3 After presenting other witnesses not relevant to the issue in this appeal, Steltz rested his

case-in-chief. N.T., 8/6/18, p.m. session, at 27. Notably, Steltz did not present an expert

in radiology to support Dr. Read’s interpretation of the June 30th MRI and did not attempt

to present Dr. Read as an expert.

Appellants began their case by presenting Dr. Jana Crain, a musculoskeletal

radiologist whose practice involved reading MRIs for multiple professional, college, and

amateur sports teams. N.T., 8/6/18, p.m. session, at 39-40. On cross examination of her

voir dire, Steltz’s counsel inquired as to the number of radiologists in the United States

whose subspecialty was musculoskeletal radiology, to which Dr. Crain responded that

she did not know. Id. at 44 (asking “how many radiologists are there in the United States

that are musculoskeletal radiologists?” and how many radiologists are members of the

society of musculoskeletal radiologists). Further, Steltz’s counsel established that there

is not a board certification for the subspecialty of musculoskeletal radiology, which is

essentially a self-declared specialty. Id. at 46. Following voir dire, the trial court accepted

Dr. Crain as an expert in musculoskeletal radiology. Id. at 52. Dr. Crain testified that,

based on her review of the June 30th MRI in conjunction with Dr. Meyers’ operative report,

she disagreed with Dr. Read’s report that there was a complete tear of the common

adductor tendon origin. Id. at 64. Instead, her opinion was that the June 30th MRI was

consistent with Dr. Meyers’ postoperative report and showed “either the post[-]op release

area hasn’t healed or he’s torn some scar tissue in this area of post[-]op release.” Id. at

66.

Appellants next presented Dr. Zoga as a fact and expert witness.

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