Wall v. Fair View Hospital & Healthcare Services

568 N.W.2d 194, 1997 WL 522827
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedOctober 21, 1997
DocketCX-96-1137, C1-96-1138
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 568 N.W.2d 194 (Wall v. Fair View Hospital & Healthcare Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wall v. Fair View Hospital & Healthcare Services, 568 N.W.2d 194, 1997 WL 522827 (Mich. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

NORTON, Judge.

Former patients sued a nurse for negligence and violation of the Vulnerable Adult Act. They contend the trial court erred in granting a directed verdict in favor of the nurse. In a notice of review, the nurse alleges the trial court abused its discretion in various evidentiary rulings. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

*198 FACTS

In 1993, appellants Sandra Slavik and Ruth K. Wall brought this action against the estate of their psychiatrist, Dr. William Routt, his nurse, respondent Kathy House, R.N., and Fairview Hospitals. House was Dr. Routt’s sole nurse and assistant from 1985 until Dr. Routt committed suicide in 1991. Appellants began receiving treatment from Dr. Routt when they were hospitalized for depression and suicidal tendencies.

Their complaint against the doctor alleged violation of the Vulnerable Adult Act, Minn. Stat. § 626.557(VAA); negligent selection, appointment, and/or supervision; negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress; professional malpractice; sexual assault; sexual exploitation; ratification; re-spondeat superior; and punitive damages based on Dr. Routt’s alleged sexual abuse and mistreatment of the two patients. The complaint also alleged that House, as the doctor’s sole nurse and assistant, was aware of the doctor’s alleged malpractice, mistreatment, and abuse of Slavik and Wall, yet she failed to intervene or report the problem. They contend that, by these acts of omission, House negligently permitted Dr. Routt to abuse the victims and breached her duty as a nurse to patients under the VAA.

Before trial, the district court granted Fairview’s motion for summary judgment on all claims, granted House’s motion for summary judgment on the negligent permission claim, subsumed the malpractice claims into the claims under the VAA, denied House’s motion for summary judgment in all other respects, and granted appellants’ motions to amend their complaint to add a claim for punitive damages against House.

Sandra Slavik was 38 years old at the time trial began in 1995. She is married and has two teenage children. Slavik had been physically, emotionally, and sexually abused as a child at the hands of her father, stepmother, and neighbor. As an adult, she struggled with depression and attended in-patient chemical dependency treatment three times to address her addiction to prescription drugs. Slavik began seeing Dr. Routt as her in-patient psychiatrist in early 1990, after she was hospitalized due to problems that developed in an aftercare session. Between that time and when she terminated treatment with Dr. Routt in the spring of 1991, Slavik was hospitalized 18 times.

Ruth K. Wall was 45 years old at the time of trial. She is married with two children. Wall has a history of sexual and physical abuse at the hands of a farm worker and her grandfather, emotional abuse by her mother, and rape by a blind date in college. Wall began psychiatric counseling because she was anorexic and was dealing with grief over the death of newborn twin babies and other unexplainable memories and feelings. She worked with various therapists and psychiatrists before she was referred to Dr. Routt as her in-patient therapist. Dr. Routt treated Wall from 1988 until shortly before his death in 1991. Under Dr. Routt’s care, Wall was hospitalized more than ten times.

Both Slavik and Wall have been diagnosed with multiple personality disorder (MPD), which is now known as dissociative identity disorder (DID). The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) explains that the essential feature of DID is “the presence of two or more distinct identities or personality states * * * that recurrently take control of behavior.” The jury heard various experts testify about DID and its effects. A person with DID experiences a “failure to integrate various aspects of identity, memory, and consciousness.” Through therapy, Slavik and Wall came to dissociate and identify numerous alternate personalities, commonly referred to as “alters.” Sla-vik’s alters include Mary, Jessica, Elizabeth, Kate, Amelia, Grandma, and Anne. Wall’s alters include: Tootie Kay, Michael/Michelle, Kay, The Little Girls, Prudence, The Destroyer, Perseverance, the Silent One, and Daniel/Ruth.

Individuals with DID may “manifest post-traumatic symptoms (e.g. nightmares, flashbacks, and startle responses) or Posttrau-matic Stress Disorder. Self-mutilation and suicidal and aggressive behavior may occur.” American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 485 (4th ed.1994). One of Wall’s psychologists, Dr. Carol Swenson, testified that patients with dissociative disorders have an *199 internal turmoil that causes them to cut themselves. Both women suffered from suicidal ideation and repeatedly mutilated themselves while dissociating; Slavik routinely burned her arms with cigarettes, and both she and Wall cut the skin on then-bodies repeatedly with Exacto knives. Dr. Swenson testified that Wall often cut herself out of fear that she would reveal something she should not. “[F]or her to reveal anything frightened her and she would punish herself, probably in an effort to appease who she thought would punish her for revealing information.” During their course of treatment with Dr. Routt, Slavik’s and Wall’s levels of agitation and self-destruction increased.

At trial, Slavik and Wall testified that, during their therapy sessions, Dr. Routt would either hypnotize them or call forth their alter personalities without hypnosis, sexually abuse them, and swear them to secrecy while in their dissociative state. Slavik explained that Dr. Routt would say to her alters:

Okay, Mary, I want you to listen to me, and I want everyone else to listen to me. Anything that we did today or talked about today has got to be kept between us. Mary, you are to remember nothing, just that we had a conversation about you relaxing, and nobody else is to remember anything or tell anybody else. And when I say “anybody else,” that means your husband, that means Bette, that means any other doctor that you would see or anybody.

In addition to observing Slavik and Wall as they testified, the jury had the opportunity to observe Slavik and Wall testify in their dissociative states. Counsel called forth Slavik’s and Wall’s various alters, who each was then subjected to direct- and cross-examination. The alters testified to the abuse that Dr. Routt had perpetrated against them.

Counsel for Slavik called forth: Jessica, who witnessed the abuse of Elizabeth; Elizabeth, age four, who testified to sexual abuse from Slavik’s father and Dr. Routt; and Anne, age ten, who testified to abuse by Dr. Routt. Anne testified that Dr. Routt drank clear alcohol during therapy. When Elizabeth began to testify, she asked for “John,” who is John Slavik, Sandra Slavik’s husband. The court allowed John to stand next to Elizabeth, while she testified. Elizabeth testified that, during therapy, when she was nervous or scared about touching Dr. Routt as he directed, he would “put a needle in me and then I wasn’t as scared anymore.”

Similarly, counsel for Wall was able to call out: Kay, age eight, who testified to abuse by Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
568 N.W.2d 194, 1997 WL 522827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-fair-view-hospital-healthcare-services-minnctapp-1997.