Wilson v. Moon

2019 IL App (1st) 173065
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 29, 2019
Docket1-17-3065
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2019 IL App (1st) 173065 (Wilson v. Moon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Moon, 2019 IL App (1st) 173065 (Ill. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

2019 IL App (1st) 173065

FOURTH DIVISION March 28, 2019

No. 1-17-3065 ______________________________________________________________________________

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

ERNESTINE WILSON, as Special Administrator of the Estate of ) Appeal from BRIAN CURRY, Deceased, ) the Circuit Court ) of Cook County Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) 2014-L-006679 v. ) ) Honorable ERIC MOON, D.O., ) Gregory Wojkowski, ) Judge Presiding Defendant-Appellee. )

PRESIDING JUSTICE McBRIDE delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Gordon and Burke concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 After Ernestine Wilson’s 23-year-old son, Brian Curry, died from a saddle pulmonary

embolism (a blood clot that blocked the large pulmonary artery straddling his lungs), Wilson

sued emergency room physician Eric Moon and St. Bernard Hospital (St. Bernard), alleging that

the physician negligently failed to diagnose and treat her son’s condition and that the hospital

was liable because of its principal-agent relationship with the doctor. Dr. Moon denied

negligence and the hospital sought summary judgment on grounds that the doctor was an

independent contractor. Wilson reached a settlement with the hospital, but at the trial that ensued

six weeks later, the doctor called the hospital’s retained expert in pulmonary medicine, who

testified that Curry’s signs and symptoms did not suggest a pulmonary embolism and that what 1-17-3065 subsequently occurred was sudden and unsurvivable regardless of the doctor’s efforts. The

doctor’s retained expert in emergency medicine testified that the doctor also complied with the

standard of care for emergency medicine. The jury rejected the malpractice claim. The main

issue on appeal is whether a pretrial witness disclosure that concluded, “Defendant adopts herein

and reserves the right to call any Rule 213(f)(1), 213(f)(2) or 213(f)(3) witness disclosed by any

party,” adequately informed the plaintiff that an expert witness disclosed by a defendant who

subsequently settled would be called by the remaining defendant. Wilson contends that the

remaining defendant should have supplemented his witness list if he intended to call the settling

defendant’s witness and that his nondisclosure was prejudicial when she was unprepared for

cross-examination. Wilson raises four other contentions about the scope of other witness

testimony and the scope of the defendant’s closing arguments.

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 We will summarize the evidence presented at the trial that was conducted in March 2017,

and subsequently discuss the pretrial procedural history to the extent necessary to address

Wilson’s appeal. Wilson does not dispute that the manifest weight of trial evidence was in Dr.

Moon’s favor. Accordingly, we need not provide extensive detail of the witness testimony.

¶4 Wilson called Terrance L. Baker, M.D., as her retained expert in emergency medicine.

Dr. Baker testified that he earned his medical degree in 1984, and became board certified in

emergency medicine, family practice, geriatrics, and forensic medicine. Dr. Baker had 30 years’

experience as a physician and was working in Good Samaritan Hospital’s emergency department

in 2012.

¶5 Dr. Baker testified that deep veins are the ones inside the arms, legs, and body that return

blood from the feet and hands to the heart; a deep vein thrombosis (DVT) is a blood clot in one

-2- 1-17-3065 of those deep veins; and a pulmonary embolism (PE) occurs when one of those abnormal blood

clots travels to the lungs. Dr. Baker reviewed the paramedics’ report, the emergency room

records, the autopsy report and death certificate, and the deposition testimony of persons

involved in Curry’s medical care and this lawsuit. In Dr. Baker’s opinion, when Curry arrived at

the emergency room, he had the signs and symptoms of a blood clot in his left leg and other clots

in the periphery or outer margins of his lungs, including the sudden onset of shortness of breath,

tightness in his chest and throat, a cough, and his eyes rolling back in his head. In Dr. Baker’s

opinion, Dr. Moon breached the standard of care for emergency medicine by not ordering a chest

CT scan (a form of X-ray) to rule out peripheral PE and by discharging Curry prior to ruling out

PE. The standard of care also required Dr. Moon to start Heparin 1 until he could see the results

of the chest scan, i.e., to start Heparin around 12:35 or 12:40 a.m., when Dr. Moon started

ordering diagnostic tests. According to Dr. Baker, Heparin would have prevented the clot in

Curry’s left leg from growing and stabilized it so that it would not move to his lungs. Curry’s

electrocardiogram (EKG)—which showed a heart rate of 122 beats per minute, instead of 60 to

100, and a strain at the top and bottom of his heart—was also consistent with PE. However,

Curry felt better while in the emergency room because he was provided with Tylenol, oxygen,

fluids, and rest—which allowed his body to naturally dissolve the small clots in his lungs—and

because his young heart and lungs had reserve that allowed his body to compensate when it was

injured. According to Dr. Baker, when Curry was discharged at 3:05 a.m. with a diagnosis of

bronchitis, his movements caused blood clots to break loose and travel to his heart, where they

were pumped to his lungs and closed off circulation. Curry was able to return to emergency room

before going into cardiac arrest. The standard of care required that he be given tissue

1 Another witness, Dr. Overton, testified that Heparin is a drug that stops the clotting process so that existing clots do not grow larger and new clots are not formed.

-3- 1-17-3065 plasminogen activator (tPA) almost immediately upon his return to the emergency room and

collapse at 3:45 a.m. 2 It was also Dr. Baker’s opinion, that Curry probably would have survived

if he had been given Heparin and oxygen at 3:45 a.m.

¶6 On cross-examination, Dr. Baker said his only board certification was in family practice,

not emergency medicine, and he was not eligible for board certification in emergency medicine

because he had not completed a residency in that specialty. Dr. Baker had never written any

articles or performed studies regarding PE or emergency medicine, and he had never been

invited to present to the field of emergency room professionals. Wilson was paying Dr. Baker

$500 per hour. Dr. Baker was splitting his workweek between an emergency room, a family

practice office, a rehab facility, and a tattoo removal facility. Dr. Baker acknowledged that the

paramedics’ report did not document any shortness of breath, difficulty breathing, chest pain, leg

pain, or throat pain and that the report indicated Curry was ambulatory when the paramedics

arrived and had walked to the ambulance. The paramedics were told that Curry may have

suffered a seizure, but he was “symptom free” when the paramedics were on the scene and all his

vital signs remained normal. Similarly, in the emergency room, Curry did not complain of

shortness of breath or chest pain, other than saying that he had those problems historically. While

he was there, his blood pressure was “very good,” his respiration rate remained “well within

normal,” and his oxygen saturation levels “[were] all very good and above normal.” Dr. Baker

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2019 IL App (1st) 173065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-moon-illappct-2019.