Williams v. Lucy Webb Hayes National Training School for Deaconesses & Missionaries

924 A.2d 1000, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 249, 2007 WL 1434922
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 2007
Docket06-CV-644
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 924 A.2d 1000 (Williams v. Lucy Webb Hayes National Training School for Deaconesses & Missionaries) 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
Williams v. Lucy Webb Hayes National Training School for Deaconesses & Missionaries, 924 A.2d 1000, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 249, 2007 WL 1434922 (D.C. 2007).

Opinion

FARRELL, Associate Judge:

This appeal presents one question: Was the plaintiff/appellant required to present expert medical testimony on causation to support her claim of damages for pain and suffering allegedly caused by the negligence of hospital employees in transferring her onto a gurney for transport? We answer that question yes and no. The trial judge concluded that expert testimony was necessary to establish causation as to all aspects of appellant’s claim, and granted summary judgment to the defendants (hereafter “the Hospital”) when she did not designate such an expert. We conclude that, although expert testimony was required as to a key part of the causal link appellant alleged between the negligence and her injuries, she was entitled to go to a jury on the remainder of her claim without need for expert testimony on causation. We affirm in part and reverse in part, and remand for a trial.

I.

As alleged in her complaint and opposition to the summary judgment motion, plaintiff/ app ell ant Williams (hereafter *1002 Williams) was admitted to Sibley Memorial Hospital on November 1, 2001, to undergo a total left hip replacement. The surgery was performed on that date by Denis R. Harris, M.D., and Williams was returned to her room in the hospital. Immediately after the surgery, Hospital nursing staff had applied inflated, plastic sleeve-like devices, called circulation cuffs, to both of her legs to promote blood circulation. These devices were attached to plastic tubing and an air compressor to maintain adequate internal air pressure.

That same morning, two employees arrived with a gurney to be used to transport Williams to the radiology department of the Hospital. According to the complaint, the employees did not consult with the attending nurse, and no nurse was present to disconnect the cuffs before Williams was transferred to the gurney. Before the transfer, the employees did not remove the circulation cuff from her left leg, causing it to stay attached to the plastic tubing and air compressor. The complaint alleged that, despite Williams’ protests, the employees pulled her from the bed onto the gurney “with great force ... thereby dislocating the prosthetic hip joint within [her] left lower extremity, causing excruciating pain.” Williams alternatively claimed (particularly in opposing summary judgment) that, even if her hip had become dislocated from natural causes before the transfer to the gurney, the employees, by “pulling her onto the gurney without disconnecting the circulation cuff,” caused her “excruciating pain” during all or part of the next twelve hours.

Thereafter, Williams was taken to the radiology department where the left hip area was x-rayed and the prosthetic hip was found to be out of place and dislocated. As a result, according to the complaint, she “endured many hours of severe pain and discomfort until a second surgical procedure could be scheduled.” Approximately twelve hours after her transfer to the gurney, the prosthetic head and shaft were replaced in a second operation by Dr. Harris.

Dr. Harris testified in deposition that when he had visited Williams at about 7:30 a.m. following the original surgery, her replaced hip “seemed to be dislocated at that point in time” and she was in pain. For this reason, he ordered her to be transported for an x-ray to seek confirmation of the accident. Williams, by contrast, testified that at the time Dr. Harris visited her she was not experiencing pain, but when the employees tried to pull her onto the gurney, her pain was “immediate.”

II.

As explained, in her complaint Williams alleged principally that the negligence of the employees in transferring her had caused her replacement hip to become dislocated. For this negligence, she claimed damages not only for the pain and suffering she experienced in the succeeding hours, but also for the “substantial medical expenses” she incurred that stemmed partly from the second operation performed that evening. In moving for summary judgment, the Hospital contended that, even if its employees had been negligent in transferring Williams to the gurney, there were no triable issues of fact on causation because she had designated no medical expert to testify that the transfer, rather than natural causes such as movement in bed following a hip replacement performed on a woman with a conceded long history of back surgery, had caused the hip to become dislocated. This testimony was indispensable, the Hospital argued, in light of Dr. Harris’s testimony that the hip already appeared to be dislocated when he visited her that morning— which, indeed, was why he ordered her transported to radiology for an x-ray. The *1003 trial judge agreed that expert testimony was necessary to establish causation between the negligent transfer to the gurney 1 and the dislocation of Williams’ hip. We think the judge was correct in that regard.

Although “[t]here is no inflexible requirement in a personal injury case that the plaintiff produce expert medical testimony on causation,” Williams v. Patterson, 681 A.2d 1147, 1150 (D.C.1996), expert testimony is required unless “the issue of causation can be resolved within the realm of ordinary human knowledge and experience.” Lasley v. Georgetown Univ., 688 A.2d 1381, 1385 (D.C.1997) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). We agree with the Hospital that ordinary human knowledge would not enable a juror to find that the hip dislocation was caused by the transfer of Williams to the gurney. Implicit in Dr. Harris’s conclusion that the hip seemed to have become dislocated before the transfer is that such misadventures can occur naturally after hip replacement, particularly in the case of a patient with a long history of previous back surgery such as Williams. In her brief on appeal, Williams all but concedes this point, stating that “[f]or the purposes of this [ajppeal, it is not material whether appellant’s hip was dislocated prior to her being moved or during the transfer.” Br. for App. at 9; see also id. (“While the timing of the dislocation may impact upon the damages that may be claimed by the appellant, it does not negate the negligence of appellee’s employees [in failing] to disconnect the circulation cuffs at the time she was being transferred.”). The trial judge correctly ruled, in short, that without expert testimony on causation Williams could not go to a jury on whether the transfer to the gurney had caused the dislocated hip that in turn required further surgery.

This conclusion, however, does not mean that the Hospital was entitled to summary judgment altogether. As we have explained, Williams’ alternative claim in the pleadings, and the one she now presses on appeal, is that the act of forcing her onto the gurney against the restraint of the circulation cuff caused, or at least substantially contributed to, the intense pain and suffering she endured over the next twelve hours even if the hip had already become dislocated. See, e.g., District of Columbia v. Freeman, 477 A.2d 713, 716 n.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Green v. Costco Wholesale Corporation
District of Columbia, 2023
Vasquez v. District of Columbia
District of Columbia, 2023
Arias v. Dyncorp
928 F. Supp. 2d 1 (District of Columbia, 2013)
Taylor v. Fletcher Allen Health Care
2012 VT 86 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2012)
American Nat. Red Cross v. VINTON ROOFING COMPANY, INC.
697 F. Supp. 2d 71 (District of Columbia, 2010)
Cosio v. District of Columbia
940 A.2d 1009 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
924 A.2d 1000, 2007 D.C. App. LEXIS 249, 2007 WL 1434922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-lucy-webb-hayes-national-training-school-for-deaconesses-dc-2007.