Tammy Wollam, Administrator of the Estate of Douglas Allen Hicks, Sr. v. ACV, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 26, 2024
Docket0483233
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tammy Wollam, Administrator of the Estate of Douglas Allen Hicks, Sr. v. ACV, Inc. (Tammy Wollam, Administrator of the Estate of Douglas Allen Hicks, Sr. v. ACV, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Tammy Wollam, Administrator of the Estate of Douglas Allen Hicks, Sr. v. ACV, Inc., (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Humphreys,* Friedman and White UNPUBLISHED

Argued at Christiansburg, Virginia

TAMMY WOLLAM, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF DOUGLAS ALLEN HICKS, SR. MEMORANDUM OPINION** BY v. Record No. 0483-23-3 JUDGE KIMBERLEY SLAYTON WHITE MARCH 26, 2024 ACV, INC.

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF ROANOKE David B. Carson, Judge

E. Kyle McNew (M. Bryan Slaughter; Les S. Bowers; Christina R. Dimeo; MichieHamlett, PLLC, on briefs), for appellant.

Carlyle R. Wimbish, III (Bradley D. Reeser; Wimbish Gentile McCray & Roeber, PLLC, on brief), for appellee.

Tammy Wollam appeals the trial court’s giving of a jury instruction proposed by ACV,

claiming it does not properly reflect Virginia law and is argumentative and misleading. She

argues that a newly approved, but not yet published, revised version of the model jury instruction

should have been used instead. Whether the trial court’s jury instructions were proper are

viewed under an abuse of discretion standard. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial

court’s ruling.

* Judge Humphreys participated in the hearing and decision of this case prior to the effective date of his retirement on December 31, 2023. . ** This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413. BACKGROUND

Beginning in 2016, Mr. Hicks received care for an infection. Eventually, Mr. Hicks’s

symptoms progressed to the point where he was checked into Carilion Roanoke Memorial

Hospital emergency room. Mr. Hicks’s symptoms included difficulty breathing due to a mass in

his neck that was causing his airway to be pushed to the side and compressed. Dr. Bernier, the

original examining physician, stated that she could see the neck mass increasing each time she

examined him. Dr. Bernier did not secure Mr. Hicks’s airway nor do anything to stop the growth

of the mass. Dr. Boring, the second examining physician, also observed a large mass, and

therefore ordered a CT scan. Dr. Boring also ordered a “difficult airway” cart to be placed near

him in the ICU.

Dr. Shafer was the anesthesiologist on call at the time and date when Hicks was admitted

to the ICU. Dr. Shafer was called in to consult once the CT scan confirmed the mass on Hicks’s

neck. Dr. Shafer performed an examination on Hicks and determined he needed an urgent

intubation to secure his airway.

Despite examining Mr. Hicks, Dr. Shafer was unaware that he presented a “difficult

airway.” Others knew of the neck mass, but Dr. Shafer stated that he did not and, therefore,

never considered an awake intubation. Because Mr. Hicks had a “difficult airway,” if the

process of intubation took too long, the doctors ran the risk of the patient not being able to

breathe while under anesthesia.

Dr. Shafer attempted multiple times unsuccessfully to do a normal intubation. A surgical

team then had to do an emergency tracheostomy. This procedure, as a whole, took longer than

expected and resulted in significant blood loss and trauma to the throat. Several hours after the

surgical airway was placed, Mr. Hicks experienced a series of cardiac arrests. Mr. Hicks passed

away in the hospital seven days after the surgery. -2- Tammy Wollam, Administrator of the Estate of Douglas Allen Hicks, Sr., (Wollam) filed

an amended wrongful death complaint against Dr. Shafer and his employer, ACV, Inc. (ACV).

Wollam alleged one count of negligence, arguing that Hicks’s “death was avoidable and would

have been avoided if the defendants had complied with the applicable standard of care” and that

“[t]he defendants, either directly or by and through the employees, agents, servants, partners,

and/or joint venturers, breached the standard of care and were medically negligent in their care

and treatment of” Hicks.1

Before the scheduled jury trial, the parties submitted proposed jury instructions. Relevant

to this appeal, ACV proposed a jury instruction that stated “[t]he fact that Dr. Shafer was unable

to successfully intubate Mr. Hicks does not, by itself, establish a breach of the standard of care or

entitle [the estate] to recover in this case.” (Proposed Instruction 9). For this instruction, ACV

cited Virginia Model Jury Instructions (“VMJI”), Civil Instruction Nos. 4.015 and 35.040. This

instruction often is referred to as the “Unsuccessful Outcome” instruction.” Wollam requested

the circuit court instead instruct the jury that “[t]he mere fact that Mr. Hicks died does not mean

that [ACV] was negligent. However, you may consider Mr. Hicks’s outcome, along with the

other evidence, in determining whether the defendant was negligent.” (Proposed Instruction G).

The parties convened for trial. At the close of evidence, the circuit court heard argument

on the parties’ objections to the jury instructions. Wollam argued that Proposed Instruction 9

was “essentially an instruction that the VMJI and numerous Virginia Supreme Court justices

have recognized is tilted toward the defense, unfairly so.” Wollam argued that a new version of

1 Connie Hicks, who was at the time the administrator of the estate of Douglas Hicks, her late husband, initially filed the complaint and named Carol Bernier, D.O., Jonathan M. Boring, D.O., and their employer, Carilion Clinic (“Carilion”) as defendants. The circuit court later substituted Wollam, Hicks’s daughter, as the plaintiff. After filing the original complaint, Wollam non-suited the case against Drs. Bernier, Boring, and Shafer, and settled the case with Carilion. -3- VMJI No. 35.040 shifts towards “equitableness” and “fairness.”2 Wollam alleged that “a jury

instruction saying that the fact of being unable to intubate doesn’t establish a breach of the

standard of care, that directly comments on [ACV’s] theory of the case and endorse[d] it.” ACV

responded that Proposed Instruction 9 was “an appropriate instruction based on the evidence in

this case.” ACV stated that the circuit court provided the instruction during a trial in the

previous year.

The circuit court refused Proposed Instruction G. The circuit court accepted Proposed

Instruction 9 and instructed the jury that “[t]he fact that Dr. Shafer was unable to successfully

intubate Mr. Hicks does not, by itself, establish a breach of the standard of care or entitle the

Plaintiff to recover in this case.” (Jury Instruction 9). After receiving all of the instructions of

the circuit court and hearing the closing arguments of counsel, the jury returned a verdict in

ACV’s favor. The circuit court entered judgment on the verdict on February 23, 2023.

On appeal, Wollam argues that the circuit court committed reversible error by giving Jury

Instruction 9. Wollam alleges that Jury Instruction 9 “spoke only in the negative, of what does

not establish negligence,” and that the circuit court “must balance that by identifying what can

prove negligence and by contextualizing how the outcome may be considered in determining

negligence.” Wollam contends that the new version of VMJI No. 35.040 “provides the

necessary balance by speaking first in the negative of what mere fact does not establish

negligence and then speaking in the positive of how that fact can still play into the negligence

determination.” Wollam claims that Jury Instruction 9, “took all of the deficiencies of the old

model and then added the fundamental errors of isolating part of the evidence, contradicting

other evidence, and adding argumentative language at the end.” Specifically, Wollam argues

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