Steven Scott v. George Miller, Jr.

361 F. App'x 650
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 12, 2010
Docket08-6034
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 361 F. App'x 650 (Steven Scott v. George Miller, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steven Scott v. George Miller, Jr., 361 F. App'x 650 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Chief Judge.

Elizabeth Scott, the deceased wife of Steven Scott, underwent bariatric “gastric bypass” surgery performed by Dr. George Miller in November 2001. Following Mrs. Scott’s death from complications due to the surgery, Mr. Scott filed suit against Dr. Miller and the matter proceeded to a jury trial. On appeal, Mr. Scott challenges the district court’s failure to give a jury instruction that would have allowed attribution of fault for Mrs. Scott’s death to a non-party, her mother Carolyn Wooten, who was trained as a nurse and who helped to care for Mrs. Scott after her release from the hospital. Because Mr. Scott failed to pursue an objection to the jury instructions during the trial — and, indeed, stated that he had no objection to the instructions as given, we affirm the district court’s judgment on the jury verdict apportioning fault equally between Mr. Scott and Dr. Miller.

I.

Dr. Miller performed gastric bypass surgery on Elizabeth Scott at Centennial Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee, on November 15, 2001. Following the surgery, Mrs. Scott returned home to Ross-ville, Georgia, on November 18, and her condition quickly began to deteriorate. There is some factual dispute as to the actual progression of her condition and her family’s communication with Dr. Miller on November 18 and 19, 2001. But the end result was that Mrs. Scott entered a local hospital on the evening of November 19, and ultimately succumbed to an infection connected with complications from the surgery.

Mr. Scott filed a medical malpractice action against Dr. Miller, claiming that his negligence was responsible for Mrs. Scott’s death. Dr. Miller countered, affirmatively pleading the doctrine of comparative negligence, and claiming that it was the failure of Mr. Scott and Mrs. Scott herself to follow his discharge instructions, and to seek prompt medical attention when Mrs. Scott’s condition worsened, that was responsible for her death. During the trial, Mr. Scott called Ms. Wooten, Mrs. Scott’s mother, to testify about her daughter’s deteriorating condition and the information she had relayed to Dr. Miller during the course of the day leading up to Mrs. Scott’s returning to the hospital. Dr. Miller extensively cross-examined her. The parties vigorously disagree about the thrust and intent of that cross-examination. Mr. Scott now contends that Dr. Miller attempted, through that cross-examination, to persuade the jury that Ms. Wooten was materially responsible for Mrs. Scott’s death because she failed to seek help for her daughter in a timely *652 manner, and failed to pass along to Dr. Miller critical information about her daughter’s condition. Further, Mr. Scott argues that the district court restricted the use that Dr. Miller could make of Ms. Wooten’s testimony during closing argument, and that Dr. Miller failed to abide by the court’s orders in that regard. According to Mr. Scott, Dr. Miller’s closing argument was designed to persuade the jury that Ms. Wooten’s failure to properly care for Mrs. Scott and to provide necessary information to Dr. Miller was responsible in some significant part for Mrs. Scott’s death.

Dr. Miller, on the other hand, contends that his cross-examination of Ms. Wooten was intended solely to undermine her credibility. Dr. Miller contends that Ms. Wooten did not advise him of the serious medical situation she described in her direct testimony, and his questions, as well as his closing argument, were not intended to demonstrate that Ms. Wooten was negligent in caring for her daughter; rather, they were designed to show the jury that the reason Ms. Wooten did not seek help for her daughter sooner or pass along allegedly critical information to the doctor was that Mrs. Scott’s condition was simply not so serious as Ms. Wooten, in her direct testimony, described it.

The attribution of fault to Ms. Wooten was addressed at length in the jury-charge conference before the district court. It is worth noting that during that conference, Mr. Scott’s counsel observed that:

And where it becomes important is where the jury does the calculations of whether somebody is 50 percent or less than 50 percent [at fault]. The Scott family, Steven Scott and the two girls, should not be penalized by virtue of a nonparty’s asserted misconduct. And that would be appropriate to charge 3.53.

Under Tennessee’s modified-comparative-fault regime, a plaintiff in a negligence action may recover damages only if his own fault was less than 50% of the total fault in the case. Therefore, if Dr. Miller were found to be only 50 percent at fault for Mrs. Scott’s death, Mr. Scott, whose own negligence was at issue in the case through Dr. Miller’s affirmative defense, could not recover any damages under the Tennessee comparative negligence scheme unless his own fault were reduced below 50% by Ms. Wooten’s negligence. However, at the conclusion of the conference, at the urging of Dr. Miller — who pointed out that he had never pled the comparative negligence of Ms. Wooten — and without any objection from Mr. Scott — even after the judge asked if there were “[a]ny other matters, either side?” — the district court removed from the jury instructions the entirety of Tennessee Pattern Instruction 3.53 (attribution of fault to a non-party), and struck from those instructions any mention of Ms. Wooten’s name. And the court instructed Dr. Miller’s counsel that he was not to raise in closing argument any negligence on the part of Ms. Wooten. Although Mr. Scott may have agreed to the changes in the jury instructions in order to prevent Dr. Miller from attempting in closing argument to reduce his own degree of fault by blaming Ms. Wooten, Mr. Scott failed to raise any objection either during or after closing argument, in which Dr. Miller did in fact refer to Ms. Wooten’s actions on the evening of Mrs. Scott’s death. Finally, after the jury had been charged, the trial judge asked the parties again if they had “[a]ny objection to the instructions as written?” and Mr. Scott again stated that he had none.

II.

The threshold issue in this appeal is whether Mr. Scott forfeited his objection to the jury instructions as written. If so, *653 our review is only for plain error. Puckett v. United States, — U.S. —, — - —, 129 S.Ct. 1423, 1428-29, 173 L.Ed.2d 266 (2009); Alsobrook v. UPS Ground Freight, 352 Fed.Appx. 1, 1-3 (6th Cir.2009).

At a minimum, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require at least one objection on the record to preserve an issue for review under a standard less stringent than that of plain error. See Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 51(c), (d). Moreover, we have long-held that in order to avoid waiver, an objection must not only be made prior to the jury’s being charged, but also renewed after it is charged. “ ‘The law in this circuit generally requires a formal objection, which should in most circumstances be made both before and after the jury instructions are read to the jury.’ ” Rogers v. Norfolk Southern Ry. Co., 126 Fed.Appx. 694, 697 (6th Cir.2005) (quoting Preferred RX, Inc. v. American Prescription Plan, Inc., 46 F.3d 535, 547 (6th Cir.1995)).

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Bluebook (online)
361 F. App'x 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steven-scott-v-george-miller-jr-ca6-2010.