Taylor v. Interim Healthcare of Raleigh-Durham, Inc.

574 S.E.2d 11, 154 N.C. App. 349, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 1455
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 3, 2002
DocketCOA02-91
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 574 S.E.2d 11 (Taylor v. Interim Healthcare of Raleigh-Durham, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Interim Healthcare of Raleigh-Durham, Inc., 574 S.E.2d 11, 154 N.C. App. 349, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 1455 (N.C. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

MARTIN, Judge.

Plaintiff Larry Taylor, as administrator of the estate of William Taylor, Jr., (“decedent”) appeals the entry of an order and final judgment granting the motion of defendant Interim Healthcare of Raleigh-Durham, Inc., for a directed verdict at the close of plaintiffs evidence on grounds plaintiff had failed to produce sufficient evidence of proximate cause between defendant’s alleged breach of duty and decedent’s subsequent death. We reverse the entry of directed verdict and remand for a new trial.

The facts pertinent to the appeal are as follows: Decedent suffered from peripheral vascular disease. At all relevant times, decedent was being treated for complications from the disease by surgeons Joseph Mulcahy and Cynthia Robinson. Throughout the mid to late 1990’s, Drs. Mulcahy and Robinson performed various surgeries on the vascular structures in decedent’s left leg, including a 1995 surgery to graft the femoral artery of the right leg to the femoral artery of the left leg to improve circulation in the left leg. On 11 July 1997, Drs. Mulcahy and Robinson operated on decedent’s left leg to de-clot a saphenous vein graft and remove dead tissue from around the graft. The incision was closed with blue sutures, and decedent’s thigh muscle was mobilized in order to cover the graft. The surgery left decedent with two large wounds on his left thigh.

Decedent was discharged from the hospital on 17 July 1997. Defendant was engaged to provide decedent with home nursing care beginning 17 July, including twice-daily dressing changes to the two wounds on decedent’s left thigh. On the afternoon of 19 July, Corrine Taylor-Alien, a nurse employed by defendant, observed during a routine visit to decedent’s home that decedent had an area of swelling below the knee on his left leg. Taylor-Alien contacted Dr. Mulcahy, who advised that decedent be brought to the emergency room immediately. Decedent presented to the emergency room where Dr. Mulcahy performed a final surgery on his left leg wherein the bridge of skin between the existing wounds was cut, leaving only one wound. Dr. Mulcahy discharged decedent from the hospital that evening.

*351 On the morning of 20 July, Taylor-Alien again visited decedent’s home. She noted the two prior wounds were now one larger wound, and that there appeared to be a large amount of drainage in the wound. Taylor-Alien also noted that she saw what she believed to be a tendon visible in the wound bed. Taylor-Alien did not contact Drs. Mulcahy or Robinson to report the drainage or visible tendon. Taylor-Alien returned to decedent’s home late in the afternoon of 20 July. She recorded that what she had believed to be a tendon that morning was actually the femoral artery, and that the blue sutures used to close decedent’s saphenous vein graft following surgery were now visible. Taylor-Alien did not contact her supervisors or decedent’s doctors about the visible femoral artery and sutures, nor did she alert decedent that he should go to the hospital or contact his doctors.

In the early morning of 21 July 1997, decedent awoke his sons to alert them that he needed to be transported to the emergency room. Decedent’s sons observed “squirts of blood” coming from decedent’s left leg, decedent’s bed sheets were completely soaked with blood, and there was a pool of blood one inch deep beside decedent’s bed. Decedent’s son Ricky testified that when he came to his father’s aid, decedent stated twice that “[t]he nurse said it might burst.” Decedent arrived via ambulance at the hospital shortly after 2:00 a.m. and died minutes thereafter. The cause of death was determined to be a hemorrhage due to a breakdown of the wound from the vascular surgery. Dr. Mulcahy examined decedent’s leg wound postmortem and observed that parts of the saphenous vein graft were visible and exposed in the wound bed.

On 3 May 1999, plaintiff initiated this action for wrongful death, alleging defendant was negligent in failing to render care to decedent consistent with the applicable standard of practice and that such negligence resulted in the rupture of decedent’s femoral bypass, causing him to bleed to death. On 19 March 2001, plaintiff moved to change the venue to Vance County, where plaintiff had initiated a related medical malpractice action against decedent’s doctors; plaintiff’s motion was denied.

At trial, plaintiff presented the testimony of Dr. Bruce Morgan, an expert in general and vascular surgery. Dr. Morgan testified that had Taylor-Alien alerted decedent’s treating physician to the fact his femoral artery was visible in the wound bed, any reasonable physician would have immediately admitted decedent to the hospital and performed a ligation, wherein the graft would be tied off. Dr. Morgan testified that had a ligation been performed on decedent’s graft, dece *352 dent would not have experienced a hemorrhage since the graft was the only source of blood to decedent’s left leg. Dr. Mulcahy testified that if he had known the femoral artery was visible in the wound bed, he would have admitted decedent to the hospital and ligated the graft due to the “great risk” of the wound opening up and bleeding. Dr. Robinson testified that had she been alerted to the fact a nurse believed decedent’s femoral artery was visible in the wound bed, she would have requested decedent be brought to the hospital immediately for evaluation.

Dr. Mulcahy testified that, in his opinion, decedent most likely died of a hemorrhage to the saphenous vein graft. He further testified that during his postmortem examination of decedent’s wound, he observed what he thought was a possible tear in decedent’s graft. However, Dr. Mulcahy was not certain that the hemorrhage occurred where he believed he saw a tear, or whether it occurred at a location on the saphenous vein graft that was visible in the wound bed, or elsewhere on the graft.

Additionally, plaintiff presented evidence from an expert in the field of nursing, who testified a visible or exposed artery in a wound bed constitutes a “medical emergency,” and Taylor-Allen’s failure to alert decedent’s doctors to the state of the femoral artery and sutures on 20 July, among other of her actions, fell below the reasonable standard of care for the profession. Taylor-Alien testified she knew decedent’s wound was a “high risk” wound due to the lack of structures surrounding the femoral artery, and that, depending on decedent’s activity level, the artery could possibly rupture.

At the close of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant moved for a directed verdict. During arguments on the motion, the trial court stated that for purposes of the motion, it would assume Taylor-Alien had violated every conceivable standard of care in failing to alert decedent’s doctors to the state of the wound, but that because plaintiff had not presented evidence that decedent’s hemorrhage occurred on a portion of the saphenous vein graft actually visible to Taylor-Alien, plaintiff had failed to show the necessary connection between Taylor-Allen’s breach of duty and decedent’s subsequent hemorrhage. Accordingly, the trial court granted defendant’s motion on grounds that “Plaintiff’s evidence as to proximate cause of death is insufficient as a matter of law and that Defendant is entitled to judgment on the merits of this action.” Plaintiff appeals.

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Bluebook (online)
574 S.E.2d 11, 154 N.C. App. 349, 2002 N.C. App. LEXIS 1455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-interim-healthcare-of-raleigh-durham-inc-ncctapp-2002.