Zaverl v. Hanley

64 P.3d 809, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 12, 2003 WL 346451
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 2003
DocketS-9312
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 64 P.3d 809 (Zaverl v. Hanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zaverl v. Hanley, 64 P.3d 809, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 12, 2003 WL 346451 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Margaret Zaverl’s estate sued her surgeon and her pulmonologist, alleging that they negligently diagnosed and failed to treat her aortobronchial condition in 1994, causing her death. The jury returned a verdict for both physicians. At trial the surgeon testified over the estate’s objection about matters his lawyer had instructed him not to address at his pre-trial deposition. Because it was error to permit this testimony at trial, we remand for a determination whether this error prejudiced the estate’s claims against either physician. We vacate the award of costs and attorney’s fees assessed against the individual beneficiaries of the estate, Margaret Zaverl’s husband and children, because they were not parties. We affirm as to all other issues the estate raises on appeal.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Margaret Zaverl coughed up a significant quantity of blood on October 2, 1994. 1 She was taken to Fairbanks Memorial Hospital where Dr. Eric Stirling, an emergency medicine specialist, examined her. She reported that she had coughed up and vomited bright red blood and that she experienced shortness of breath and wheezing. Her medical history included regular cigarette smoking, a left thoracotomy for coarctation of the aorta 2 at age seventeen, and removal of an anaerobic tumor of the abdomen in early 1970. Margaret was forty-five years old in 1994.

Dr. Stirling consulted with Dr. James Borden, a surgeon. Dr. Borden performed a bronchoscopy which “showed an apparent tumor in the bronchus to the right middle lobe and right lower lobe.” Dr. Borden could not remove the tumor during the bronchoscopy. The fiberoptic bronchoscope showed marked inflammation of the tracheal wall and blood clots. The right side of the bronchial tree appeared to be more inflamed than the left— a condition which Dr. Borden found to be consistent with the presence of the suspected tumor.

Dr. Borden consulted with a Fairbanks internist, Dr. Kenneth Starks. Chest X-rays revealed that infiltrates obscured the lower bases of Margaret’s lungs. Dr. Borden admitted Margaret to the hospital’s intensive care unit, made arrangements for a follow-up bronchoscopy, and arranged for her to see Dr. Owen Hanley, a pulmonologist, when Dr. Hanley returned to Fairbanks. Margaret underwent a variety of tests to determine the cause of her illness. Dr. Hanley saw Margaret on October 6. Dr. Hanley was unable to ascertain immediately the cause of her massive hemoptysis, 3 and he recommended another bronchoscopy. Margaret was discharged on October 8. Dr. Hanley made arrangements for a follow-up visit in ten days to perform a computerized axial tomography (CAT or CT) scan once the infiltrates had cleared from Margaret’s lungs.

*812 When the doctors told Margaret that they were uncertain what was causing her bleeding, she asked if the bleeding could be related to her aorta repair. There was evidence that the doctors assured Margaret that the bleeding was not related to her aorta repair.

Margaret began to cough up blood again on the evening of October 9. Her family took her to Fairbanks Memorial Hospital. Margaret lost consciousness en route and died at the hospital soon after. Autopsy revealed that sections of the graft on her aorta had adhered to the pulmonary parenchyma; 4 some of the tissue had died, leaving marked accumulation of blood in the pulmonary par-enchyma directly adjacent to the aortal graft. The autopsy summary concluded that this accumulation “most likely represents the origin of the patient’s severe hemoptysis.” 5

Margaret’s husband, William Zaverl, as personal representative of her estate, filed a superior court complaint against Drs. Borden and Hanley in October 1996. The superior court appointed an expert advisory panel at the defendants’ request. The case proceeded to trial beginning mid-May 1999. The estate offered evidence that Drs. Hanley and Borden failed to consider Margaret’s prior aorta repair in diagnosing her condition, but the jury returned a verdict for both physicians.

Drs. Hanley and Borden moved for awards of costs and attorney’s fees against William Zaverl as personal representative of Margaret’s estate and against the individual statutory beneficiaries jointly and severally. The court granted the motion and awarded Dr. Hanley costs and fees of $57,824.52 and Dr. Borden costs and fees of $67,149.40. These joint and several awards were against the estate, Margaret’s spouse, and her children. The caption on the final judgment names “WILLIAM ZAVERL, Personal Representa-five of the Estate of Margaret M. Zaverl.” But the final judgment states that it is against the estate and the individually named statutory beneficiaries.

This appeal followed. William Zaverl is the named appellant, acting as personal representative of the estate.

III. DISCUSSION

A. It Was an Abuse of Discretion To Permit Dr. Borden To Testify at Trial on Topics He Refused To Discuss at His Deposition.

The estate argues that it was an abuse of discretion to allow Dr. Borden’s trial lawyer to question him at trial about topics his attorney instructed him not to discuss at his deposition. We agree, 6 and remand to the superior court to determine the effect of this error.

1. Dr. Borden testified at trial about matters he refused to address at his deposition.

At Dr. Borden’s pre-trial deposition, the estate’s lawyer asked Dr. Borden, “Did Margaret Zaverl die because the connection between the massive hemoptysis and her history of prior aortic repair was not diagnosed?” Dr. Borden’s attorney objected and instructed Dr. Borden not to answer:

I object to the form of the question. He’s not an expert in that area.... He’s not going to testify as an expert in that area, and I won’t allow him to testify on this' — on the speculation of something nobody wiE ever know and he’s not a cardiovascular surgeon, cardiac thoracic surgeon, so he’s not going to answer that question.

*813 When the estate’s attorney asked Dr. Borden what treatment he would have provided if the aortobronchial fístula 7 had been diagnosed, Dr. Borden’s attorney stated:

I’m going to instruct him not to answer. He’s not going to speculate on something which he did not do_ He’s not an expert. I’m not going to offer him as an expert in the area of cardiovascular treatment and handling of aortic breakdown, I mean breakdowns of Coarctation repairs of the aorta.

Dr. Borden did not answer these questions at his deposition.

At trial, near the end of Dr. Borden’s direct testimony, his trial attorney asked Dr. Borden if he had “a fairly good understanding of what’s necessary to repair ... an aortobronchial fistula such as Margaret Za-verl had.” The estate’s attorney objected.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 P.3d 809, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 12, 2003 WL 346451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zaverl-v-hanley-alaska-2003.