Stimmler v. Chestnut Hill Hospital

981 A.2d 145, 602 Pa. 539, 2009 Pa. LEXIS 2037
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 2009
Docket12 EAP 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 981 A.2d 145 (Stimmler v. Chestnut Hill Hospital) 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
Stimmler v. Chestnut Hill Hospital, 981 A.2d 145, 602 Pa. 539, 2009 Pa. LEXIS 2037 (Pa. 2009).

Opinions

OPINION

Justice McCAFFERY.

In this medical malpractice appeal, we restate and apply to the record herein the standards and conditions appropriate for granting summary judgment. Determining that the trial court and Superior Court misapplied the appropriate standards in this case, and inappropriately determined this case on “deemed admissions” under the circumstances here present, we reverse and remand for further proceedings. Additionally, we deny the Application for Post-Submission Communication of Ann Stimmler (“Appellant”).

[544]*544Appellant gave birth to her first child at Chestnut Hill Hospital in Philadelphia on May 12, 1965.1 Several hours after the delivery, she developed peripheral circulatory failure and, within three days, experienced various other complications of delivery, including a hematoma of the pelvic wall. As part of her medical care, Richard T. Padula, M.D. (“Dr. Padula”) performed an antecubital cutdown2 on the inside of Appellant’s right elbow on May 13, 1965; and on the following day, he performed the same procedure on the inside of her left elbow.3 Appellant’s condition improved and she was discharged on May 22, 1965. However, because of ongoing complaints of sometimes severe pain, as well as shortness of breath, Appellant received medical care for circulatory and respiratory problems over the course of the next thirty-six years. Appellant was diagnosed with thrombophlebitis and a pulmonary embolism on August 23, 1965; and on various occasions over the years, she was diagnosed as suffering from thrombosis, phlebitis, and/or pulmonary emboli. None of her treating physicians could determine the cause of these conditions until Appellant underwent an echocardiogram on December 30, 1999, which uncovered an echogenic abnormality. [545]*545Subsequent echocardiograms on January 19, 2000, and February 8, 2000, revealed the presence of a twelve- to eighteen-inch catheter, with a chronic appearance, coiled in the right atrium of her heart, passing into and through the right ventricle to the outflow tract.

On October 6, 2001, Appellant filed a medical malpractice action against Chestnut Hill Hospital (the “Hospital”) and Drs. M. Brown, William O’Connell, Samuel Watterson, Walter Matteucci, B. Smith, Jayashekara Murthy, Bangloor Surry, and Padula, all of whom had treated Appellant during her hospitalization in May 1965. Appellant filed a third amended complaint on September 18, 2003, in which she alleged that the catheter observed in the echocardiogram was one of the ones used in the 1965 cutdowns. Specifically, Appellant alleged that the doctors had failed to 1) appropriately perform the cutdowns; 2) take appropriate steps to avoid leaving the catheter or a portion thereof in her body following the procedures; 3) recognize that the catheter or a portion thereof remained in her body; 4) properly evaluate and/or interpret her ongoing and deteriorating physical condition after the procedures; 5) order and obtain appropriate diagnostic studies when her condition continued to deteriorate; and 6) inform her of the risks of the cutdown procedures. Appellant also alleged that the Hospital was negligent in that it had failed to 1) use reasonable care to maintain safe and adequate facilities; 2) select and train competent physicians; 3) properly oversee the persons practicing medicine in its facility; 4) formulate, adopt or enforce rules with respect to the performance of cutdowns; 5) properly train doctors, nurses, and staff to detect signs indicating that a catheter still remains in the body; 6) train doctors, nurses, and staff to warn patients of the risks associated with a cutdown procedure; and 7) appropriately supervise its agents. In addition, she alleged that because the catheter in her heart has fragmented, it cannot be safely removed. For this reason, she alleged that her medical conditions would continue to adversely affect her into the future.4

[546]*546On March 24, 2004, Dr. Padula filed a request for admissions in which he asked Appellant to admit that she had had intravenous (“IV”) “catheter devices” inserted during sixteen hospitalizations subsequent to May 1965, namely, at the Hospital, at Roxborough Memorial Hospital, and at Elkins Park Hospital between August 29,1965 and November 5,1999. Dr. Padula’s discovery document included a request to explain, if Appellant denied having had any IV catheterizations during those hospitalizations, how medications had been administered and procedures accomplished without the use of catheters. Further, Dr. Padula requested that Appellant admit: “[Appellant] has no other information from any source that the foreign object in her body is a piece of IV catheter from her Chestnut Hill Hospital: May 12, 1965 — May 22, 1965 admission — the time period at question in this lawsuit — is not from one of the other catheters she has had placed in her medical history.” Request for Admission of Defendant, Richard T. Padula, M.D. addressed to Plaintiffs [sic], dated March 24, 2004, No. 3, at 4.

Although Dr. Padula’s request for admissions directed that pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 4014, Appellant was to admit or deny the assertions within thirty days after the date of service, Appellant failed to provide a timely response. Her untimely response was apparently mailed to Dr. Padula’s counsel on or about May 10, 2004, approximately forty-seven days after the date the requests for admissions were served. Appellant’s unverified response denied that the catheter found in her heart came from any procedure except the May 1965 cut-downs. Appellant asserted that the only time during which she had had a catheter inserted into her, which had not been [547]*547removed, was during that hospital admission. She further asserted that her “treating physicians have related the catheter wire loss into her cardiovascular system to her admission at Chestnut Hill Hospital in August [sic] of 1965.” [Appellant’s] Response to the Request for Admission of Defendant, Richard T. Padula, M.D., dated April 12, 2004, No. 3, at 2. Moreover, Appellant generally denied having had the sixteen IV catheterizations identified in the request for admissions. Dr. Padula did not move to strike Appellant’s response.

Motions for summary judgment were filed by Dr. Watterson and the Hospital (on May 3, 2004), Dr. Padula (on May 4, 2004), and Dr. Matteucci (on May 21, 2004), and Appellant filed timely responses in opposition. On July 14, 2004, the trial court entered separate orders granting the three summary judgment motions. After her motion for reconsideration was denied, Appellant filed a praecipe to discontinue her cause of action against the remaining defendants. The trial court issued a final order discontinuing the action as to all parties on October 1, 2004, and Appellant filed a timely appeal to the Superior Court.

In its opinion supporting its decision to grant the motions for summary judgment, the trial court concluded that “[Appellant’s] experts’ reports, taken as a whole, failed to establish, to a degree of medical certainty, that [Appellant’s] injuries were caused by a fragmented catheter left behind during the removal of catheters from cutdown procedures in May 1965.” Amended Trial Court Opinion, dated July 25, 2005, at 4.5 Appellant had submitted reports and supplemental reports from two expert witnesses: James A. Reiffel, M.D., and Nicholas L. DePace, M.D. As noted by the trial court, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
981 A.2d 145, 602 Pa. 539, 2009 Pa. LEXIS 2037, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stimmler-v-chestnut-hill-hospital-pa-2009.