Street v. Hedgepath

607 A.2d 1238, 1992 WL 89154
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 1992
Docket89-CV-181, 89-CV-1331
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 607 A.2d 1238 (Street v. Hedgepath) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Street v. Hedgepath, 607 A.2d 1238, 1992 WL 89154 (D.C. 1992).

Opinion

TERRY, Associate Judge:

These are consolidated appeals in two separate but related cases. In Street v. Hedgepath (“the Hedgepath case”), appellant Joseph Street sued Dr. Leslie Hedge-path, his late wife’s physician, for medical malpractice allegedly resulting in Mrs. Street’s death from cancer. 1 The case proceeded on the theory that Dr. Hedgepath breached the applicable standard of care by failing to diagnose Mrs. Street’s thyroid cancer in time to prevent its fatal spread to other parts of her body. After a trial before Judge Hamilton, the jury was un *1240 able to agree on a verdict, and the judge declared a mistrial. Hedgepath then filed a motion for directed verdict. From the order granting that motion, Street noted the first appeal (No. 89-CV-181). 2

Mr. Street then filed a civil action, Street v. Georgetown University, et al. (“the Georgetown case”), against Dr. Hedge-path’s attorney, Steven A. Hamilton, Mr. Hamilton’s law firm, three physicians who had treated Mrs. Street after her cancer had been diagnosed, and Georgetown University Hospital. This was not a medical malpractice action. The basis of Street’s complaint was his allegation that the treating physicians, in the course of ex parte communications with Mr. Hamilton, had improperly disclosed information they had learned while treating Mrs. Street. The complaint alleged that some of the treating physicians had testified at trial that any negligence on the part of Dr. Hedgepath could not have proximately caused Mrs. Street’s injuries. Mr. Street sought damages for this supposed breach of the confidential physician-patient relationship, asserting that the breach had “resulted in a hung jury” in the Hedgepath case. Appel-lees filed an answer and then moved to dismiss the complaint under Super.Ct.Civ.R. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Judge Shuker granted the motion, and Mr. Street noted the second appeal (No. 89-CV-1331). 3

In the Hedgepath case we hold that the trial court did not err in striking the testimony of Mr. Street’s expert witness. Because that was the only testimony offered by Mr. Street to establish the relevant standard of care, we further hold that the evidence properly before the jury was insufficient to prove his malpractice claim. In the Georgetown case we hold that by filing the malpractice complaint in the Hedgepath case, Mr. Street waived, as a matter of law, the physician-patient privilege on which his tort claim in the Georgetown case was based. Accordingly, we affirm the dismissal of the latter claim.

I

A. The Hedgepath case

Victoria Street first saw Dr. Hedgepath for treatment of her diabetes in 1982. Over the next three years Mrs. Street saw Dr. Hedgepath approximately every four to six weeks. On each of these occasions, Dr. Hedgepath examined Mrs. Street and made notes of his examinations. When Mrs. Street visited Dr. Hedgepath on September 6, 1985, her thyroid appeared normal, with no swelling.

On October 19, 1985, Mrs. Street had her portrait taken at a social gathering. This photograph, which was introduced into evidence at trial, purports to show a swelling in Mrs. Street’s neck, in the general area of the thyroid gland. Mrs. Street saw Dr. Hedgepath a few days later, on October 24, and again Dr. Hedgepath did not notice any swelling in her thyroid. When she saw him again on December 13, however, Dr. Hed-gepath observed that the right lobe of her thyroid was enlarged. He referred her to the Washington Hospital Center for some thyroid tests.

On January 2, 1986, Mrs. Street called Dr. Hedgepath to complain about a pain in her right shoulder which she had first noticed on Christmas Day. Dr. Hedgepath prescribed a pain killer, and on January 10, when he next saw her, he continued her on the prescription. A few days later, on January 15, Mrs. Street saw Dr. Herbert Ba-raf, a rheumatologist, for treatment of the pain in her shoulder. Dr. Baraf soon discovered that Mrs. Street had cancer of the thyroid, which had metastasized to the bones in her shoulder. Mrs. Street was admitted to Georgetown University Hospital, where Dr. John Dillon removed her thyroid on January 28. She was then re *1241 ferred to Dr. Jerry Earll, Chief of the Division of Medicine at Georgetown University Hospital, for treatment of her cancer. Unfortunately, Mrs. Street’s cancer progressed, and she died on November 24, 1986.

Mr. Street then sued Dr. Hedgepath for medical malpractice. He proceeded on the theory that Dr. Hedgepath had a duty to diagnose Mrs. Street’s illness correctly, and that he had breached that duty by failing to notice her enlarged thyroid during the office visit on October 24, 1985.

At trial, after an extensive voir dire, the court accepted Dr. Christopher Asplin as an expert in the field of endocrinology. Mr. Street presented Dr. Asplin’s testimony to establish the applicable standard of care and to prove that Dr. Hedgepath had breached that standard. Street also relied on Dr. Asplin’s testimony to prove that the failure to diagnose Mrs. Street’s thyroid cancer in a timely manner proximately caused her injuries and untimely death.

Dr. Asplin testified that he had reviewed the pertinent medical records in the case as well as the photograph of Mrs. Street which we have already mentioned. Dr. Asplin looked at the photograph and testified that he could see a swelling in her neck. He said that if the photograph was taken on October 19, 1985, then the swelling evident in the photograph should have been detected by Dr. Hedgepath when he saw Mrs. Street in his office on October 24. Asplin further testified that Dr. Hedgepath had breached the applicable standard of care by failing to notice the swelling during that office visit and then failing to take steps to diagnose and treat the swelling as thyroid cancer. He stated that, in his medical opinion, Dr. Hedgepath’s failure to diagnose Mrs. Street’s thyroid cancer on October 24 was “a substantial contribution to the poor outcome in this case,” and that Dr. Hedgepath's alleged negligence was the proximate cause of Mrs. Street’s death.

Dr. Asplin admitted on cross-examination that he was not an expert in photography. He also admitted that he could not tell from the photograph whether the swelling he saw there was a hard. or soft spot, whether it was tender or not, or whether the skin was attached to it. He further conceded that he would have to speculate in order to say that the swelling he saw in the photograph was the enlarged thyroid that was ultimately removed. Finally, he acknowledged that all of his opinions in this case were based on his evaluation of the photograph. If that evaluation was wrong, he said, all of the opinions he had rendered in the case would have to be “withdrawn.”

Dr. Earll, Mrs. Street’s treating physician, testified for the defense. He gave his opinion that even if the cancer had been detected during the October 24 office visit, by that point the cancer had spread throughout Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
607 A.2d 1238, 1992 WL 89154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/street-v-hedgepath-dc-1992.