TAYLOR Et Vir v. Spencer Hospital

292 A.2d 449, 222 Pa. Super. 17, 1972 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1230
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 22, 1972
DocketAppeal, 402
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 292 A.2d 449 (TAYLOR Et Vir v. Spencer Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TAYLOR Et Vir v. Spencer Hospital, 292 A.2d 449, 222 Pa. Super. 17, 1972 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1230 (Pa. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hoffman, J.,

This is an appeal from the denial of appellant’s motion for a new trial, following a jury verdict in favor of appellee hospital. Appellants contend that the lower court committed reversible error by (1) refusing to allow a medical doctor to give testimony as to the accepted standards, customs, and practice for hospital care of psychogenic patients, (2) refusing to allow a licensed practical nurse to give testimony as to the accepted standards for nursing care of psychogenic patients, and (3) refusing to permit a licensed practical nurse to give her education, experience, and other qualifications to establish her expertise.

On November 15, 1965, appellant Lela Taylor, age 64, appeared to be ill and acting abnormally. Relatives called the family doctor, and he came to Mrs. Taylor’s home. After observing that Mrs. Taylor was disoriented, the doctor arranged her admission to appellee hospital the same day. The family doctor turned Mrs. Taylor over to Dr. Hendrik DeKruif, who, upon her admission to the hospital, arranged an examination and acted as her physician while she was in the hospital. The admitting nurse and Dr. DeKruif were apparently informed by the family doctor that Mrs. Taylor’s behavior had been somewhat unusual and that closer than usual patient observation was in order.

Dr. DeKruif made an initial tentative diagnosis of “arteriosclerosis.” Routine tests were ordered and the patient’s conduct and history for November 15 and 16 were not overtly abnormal. In the early morning of *20 November 17, Mrs. Taylor became restless and confused, and she could not sleep. She was given light medication, and for the remainder of that day she appeared relatively normal. In the evening of November 17, at approximately 10:00 p.m., Mrs. Taylor went into a treatment room not normally used by patients and attempted to block nurses from approaching her by holding the door closed. The nurses took her into custody and noticed that she seemed confused and disoriented. Two nurses escorted Mrs. Taylor back to her room.

Dr. DeKruif was called by telephone, and he authorized nurses to apply restraints to keep her in bed until he could arrive at the hospital. The restraints applied consisted of ankle and wrist straps fitted around her extremities and fastened to the bed and a posey belt fitted around the waist and then tied to the bed. A nurse’s aide was left with her for a short per riod until she calmed down and was resting quietly. Ten or fifteen minutes after the aide left the room, Mrs. Taylor was discovered out in the middle of the street in front of the hospital and was brought back to the hospital by nurses with some of the restraints still dangling from her extremities.

An investigation revealed that the screen in Mrs. Taylor’s room had been removed, and she apparently jumped out the window into a snow bank, fracturing a bone in her heel and her pelvis. She was transferred to St. Francis Hospital in Pittsburgh the next day and there treated medically and psychiatrically.

Mrs. Taylor could not explain why or how she had leaped from the hospital window. She testified that she had no recollection of being in the hospital or the accident.

At trial plaintiff-appellants called Dr. Robert Tuby to the stand, qualified him as an expert witness, and asked him the following hypothetical question: “With *21 reference to the hypothetical question and the hospital records which I have asked you to look at in addition, do you have an opinion whether treatment and care rendered Lola Taylor was, by the Spencer Hospital November, 1965, was in accordance with accepted standard customs of hospital practices?” Dr. Tuby replied affirmatively and then testified as to his opinion: “In my opinion the Spencer Hospital deviated from the accepted standard custom and practice in the handling and treating of Mrs. Taylor in that, when she evidenced psychogenic standard [sic], her psychogenic condition and the fact stated in the hypothetical question that she was wandering in the hallway and that she was agitated and that Dr. DeKruif ordered restraints and that Initially [the family doctor] told the nurse on admission that she was to watch her carefully for psychiatric condition, that she should have been attended at all times and that if they couldn’t attend her at all times that they should have put her in a room where she couldn’t get out, which would be a security room, which apparently, they did have in the hospital. Now if that security room was occupied and could not be spared at the time and they couldn’t handle her, they didn’t have enough nurses or aids [sic] to watch the patient at all times, I think they should have transferred to a hospital that did have facilities to watch her at all times.

“In other words, I feel that the nursing staff did not take the necessary measures to prevent her from getting out of her restraints and going out the window.”

Dr. Tuby was later cross-examined by the attorney for appellee hospital, and after this cross-examination the attorney renewed an earlier objection to the qualification of Dr. Tuby as an expert witness on nursing care. The trial judge at this point sustained the ob *22 jection and granted the motion of appellee’s attorney to strike all of Dr. Tuby’s testimony expressed as an opinion based upon his expertise in either nursing service, care, or hospital administration. This ruling was apparently the result of testimony elicited on cross-examination which indicated that Dr. Tuby had never been a hospital administrator and had never been responsible for nursing care in a hospital.

The trial judge in his opinion stated that “[j]ust because Dr. Tuby had worked with nurses in the past, had taught them limited medical courses, had served on the medical staff of hospitals in the past, was presently a staff ‘consultant’ at a hospital, did not give him the knowledge, understanding, training or judgment to opine that the hospital and nursing staff deviated from acceptable hospital and nursing standards in their handling of Mrs. Taylor.

“While the nursing and medical professions are compatible, their roles, duties, training standards and practices in treating and caring for patients are separate and distinct fields and being an expert in one profession does not necessarily qualify one as an expert in the other.” [emphasis in original]

Appellants contend that not allowing a medical doctor to give testimony on the standard of nursing care suggests that nurses are permitted to practice in some areas of medicine from which doctors are excluded. We agree with appellant and believe that the lower court erred when it granted the motion to strike Dr. Tuby’s testimony.

A witness should be qualified as an expert if he or she “has any reasonable pretension to specialized knowledge on the subject under investigation . . . and the weight to be given to his evidence is for the jury.” 1 *23 Moodie v. Westinghouse Electric Corporation, 367 Pa. 493, 501, 80 A. 2d 734 (1951), citing McCullough v. Holland Furnace Co., 293 Pa. 45, 49, 141 A. 631 (1928).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
292 A.2d 449, 222 Pa. Super. 17, 1972 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-et-vir-v-spencer-hospital-pasuperct-1972.