Winters v. Wright

869 So. 2d 357, 2003 WL 22098508
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 2003
Docket1999-CA-00483-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 869 So. 2d 357 (Winters v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winters v. Wright, 869 So. 2d 357, 2003 WL 22098508 (Mich. 2003).

Opinion

869 So.2d 357 (2003)

Tammy WINTERS and David Winters
v.
Bennie B. WRIGHT, Jr., M.D., Cleveland Clinic, P.A., and Bolivar County Medical Center.

No. 1999-CA-00483-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

September 11, 2003.
Rehearing Denied December 4, 2003.

*359 Robert W. Smith, Judy M. Guice, Biloxi, attorneys for appellants.

P. Scott Phillips, L. Carl Hagwood, Greenville, Lee Davis Thames, Jr., Jackson, R.E. Parker, Jr., attorneys for appellees.

SMITH, Presiding Justice, for the Court.

¶ 1. Tammy Winters ("Tammy") and her husband, David Winters ("David"), filed a complaint in Bolivar County Circuit Court against Dr. Bennie B. Wright, Jr. ("Wright") and his employer, Cleveland Clinic, P.A., Bolivar County Hospital ("BCH"), and Cincinnati Sub-Zero Products, Inc. ("Sub-Zero") on December 8, *360 1995. Tammy's claim arose from an injury to her buttocks and thighs that she claims was caused by a Sub-Zero heating blanket utilized during surgery performed on her by Wright at BCH. Prior to trial, plaintiffs settled their claim against Sub-Zero. Trial with the remaining defendants commenced on January 11, 1999, and ended on January 20, 1999. The jury found in favor of all three remaining defendants, and judgment was entered on February 1, 1999. On February 19, 1999, the trial judge denied the plaintiffs' motion for new trial and judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

FACTS

¶ 2. Tammy was out with two friends shooting at cans on the bridge over the Quiver River in Sunflower County late on the evening of December 12, 1994. Somehow, while reloading her .380 caliber pistol, Tammy accidentally shot herself in the abdomen. Her friends managed to load her into a vehicle and get her to the North Sunflower County Hospital in Ruleville, Mississippi. The facility was not equipped to treat Tammy, and thus an ambulance took her from there to BCH. Upon arrival at BCH, Tammy was taken to the emergency room. Wright, who was not on duty that night, had been called in by the emergency room physician to care for Tammy. Upon Wright's arrival, Tammy had coded, but had been resuscitated by the emergency room physician. Once she had been resuscitated, Wright ordered the nurses to give her 4,000 cc's of fluid, which is four times the amount normally given to a patient in eight hours. Further, in order to keep Tammy alive, he ordered that she be given uncross-matched blood.

¶ 3. The bullet had entered her left side beneath her ribs and exited out the lower part of her back causing multiple injuries. Wright then accompanied Tammy to the operating room. Once there, he left to change into scrubs and prep for surgery. While he was out, staff moved Tammy from the gurney to the operating table. Glenda Morton, an operating technician that evening, testified that when Tammy was transferred from the gurney to the table that she noted that her backside was blue. She asked Wright about this, and he informed her that Tammy was bleeding out and the blood was pooling in her back. Under Tammy, on the operating table, was a sterile operating sheet. Under that, was the Blanketrol II blanket manufactured by Sub-Zero. This blanket is attached to a unit which circulates water throughout the blanket. Water is heated or cooled and pumped from the unit to the blanket. The person operating the machine sets the desired temperature of the patient, and the machine pumps the water through the blanket accordingly to regulate the patient's temperature. The unit stands thirty-six inches tall and is seventeen inches wide.

¶ 4. Christy Tolbert, the circulating nurse on the evening of Tammy's surgery, testified that she turned on the Blanketrol unit that evening and that it was set at 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. She also testified that she checked the temperature periodically throughout the surgery and that she never saw it go above the original set point. Upon cross-examination, Tolbert did note that during her deposition she had stated that she did not check the machine every twenty minutes, as suggested by the unit's manual. Once Wright returned to the operating room, Tammy was on the operating table, and the nurse anesthetist, Paul Rayfield, had hooked up his monitors and put Tammy to sleep. Wright then draped Tammy for surgery and began the operation. Wright testified that when he made the initial incision blood spouted from Tammy's abdomen and he had to clamp her aorta to stop the blood *361 loss. This clamping cut off the blood supply to the stomach, liver, small intestine, pancreas, kidneys, uterus, legs, buttocks and spleen. Once some of the blood was cleared out of her abdominal cavity, Wright moved the clamp lower to get blood to her vital organs, but it was still cut off to the lower portion of her body. Following the operation, two operating technicians and a nurse noticed the imprint of the blanket on her backside and that her buttocks were discolored. Those personnel that had physical contact with Tammy prior to, during and following surgery all testified that her skin was not warm to the touch. Further, the nurse anesthetist testified that he monitored her temperature during surgery and that it was never above normal.

¶ 5. Due to problems Tammy suffered to her lower extremities due to insufficient blood circulation, Wright consulted with Dr. Rodney Frothingham, a neurosurgeon, and Dr. Hugh Gamble, a vascular surgeon. After Tammy was transferred to Delta Regional Medical Center in Greenville, Mississippi, Wright spoke with Gamble to tell him what problems Tammy might have. Gamble mentioned that there was something wrong with Tammy's buttocks. In Wright's opinion the injuries to Tammy's buttocks are the result of the constriction of blood flow back to her buttocks. When her aorta was clamped, blood flow to her buttocks was cut off. He testified that when this occurs, oxygen does not get to the tissue and the tissue dies. He further testified that this is why Tammy lost some of her toes. The staff and physicians that treated Tammy's injury to her buttocks referred to the injury as a burn. In early treatment notes, however, it is clear that no one was certain it was a burn. Dr. Robert Love, a plastic surgeon at Delta Regional Medical Center, noted the following in regard to Tammy's injury, "I cannot confirm or deny the etiology of this lesion. It certainly has the appearance of a burn, although it is hyperemic." According to Wright's testimony, hyperemic means that it was full of blood.

¶ 6. Tammy went through multiple skin grafts and treatment at various hospitals due to this injury. Tammy and David brought suit against Wright, Cleveland Clinic, BCH, and Sub-Zero, claiming they were responsible for her injuries and that she had been burned by the heating blanket utilized during her surgery. Following a jury verdict for the defendants, entry of judgment in accordance with that verdict and a denial of plaintiffs' motion for a new trial or a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, Tammy and David appeal to this Court.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 7. Our standard for review is de novo in passing on questions of law. Miss. Farm Bureau Cas. Ins. Co. v. Curtis, 678 So.2d 983, 987 (Miss.1996); Seymour v. Brunswick Corp., 655 So.2d 892, 895 (Miss.1995). In reviewing the denial of a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, peremptory instruction, and directed verdict,

This Court will consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the appellee, giving that party the benefit of all favorable inference that may be reasonably drawn from the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
869 So. 2d 357, 2003 WL 22098508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winters-v-wright-miss-2003.