Christopher R. Glock, M.D. v. Rickey D. Kennedy ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                            FILED
    Oct 10 2019, 6:05 am
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                     ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    Michael G. Smith                                           Eric A. Frey
    Wooden McLaughlin LLP                                      Frey Law Firm
    Evansville, Indiana                                        Terre Haute, Indiana
    ATTORNEY FOR AMICUS
    CURIAE INDIANA TRIAL
    LAWYERS ASSOCIATION
    Sara A. Langer
    Langer and Langer
    Valparaiso, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Christopher R. Glock, M.D.,                                October 10, 2019
    Appellant-Defendant,                                       Court of Appeals Case No.
    18A-CT-2486
    v.                                                 Appeal from the Vigo Superior
    Court
    Rickey D. Kennedy,                                         The Honorable Lakshmi Reddy,
    Appellee-Plaintiff.                                        Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    84D02-1501-CT-382
    Brown, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019                           Page 1 of 27
    [1]   Christopher R. Glock, M.D. (“Dr. Glock”) appeals the trial court’s denial of his
    motion for judgment on the evidence and motion to correct error. Dr. Glock
    raises several issues which we consolidate and restate as:
    I.     Whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying his motion
    for judgment on the evidence; and
    II.     Whether the court abused its discretion in denying his motion to
    correct error.
    We affirm. 1
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   This case arises from Dr. Glock’s treatment of a crush injury to Rickey D.
    Kennedy’s left hand, which he endured while at work in May 2010 and which
    resulted in burst lacerations to the index and middle fingers and in his middle
    finger “pointing in the wrong direction.” Transcript Volume III at 33. Dr.
    Glock, whom Kennedy did not know and from whom he had no prior medical
    treatment, cleaned and debrided the injuries and fixed the middle finger with pins
    and the index finger with plate and screws.
    [3]   “[A]bout a year later” Dr. Glock amputated Kennedy’s index finger from the
    tip to the first knuckle. Transcript Volume II at 160. He performed a repeat
    1
    We heard effective oral argument in this case on September 25, 2019, in Indianapolis, and thank counsel for
    their oral advocacy and written presentations in this matter.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019                            Page 2 of 27
    amputation which removed an infection and Kennedy’s finger “[d]own to the
    nub,” resulting in a “stump” near the knuckle nearest to his palm. Id. at 162.
    [4]   On October 3, 2011, Dr. Glock provided treatment (the “neuroma procedure”)
    for a neuroma, or a “painful end” of a nerve that has been traumatized and is
    “swelling . . . in its response or attempt to heal.” Transcript Volume III at 23-24.
    Following the procedure, Kennedy experienced pain in his thumb, called Dr.
    Glock’s office “concerned that his thumb was still numb,” and appeared for a
    post-operative visit “probably within a week” of the procedure. Id. at 50-51. On
    November 2, 2011, Dr. Glock performed a “repair of the ulnar digital nerve to
    the thumb with an autologous nerve graft from the radial digital nerve of the
    index finger.” Exhibits Volume I at 58.
    [5]   On October 24, 2014, a medical review panel, which included Dr. Dale K.
    Dellacqua, issued an opinion after considering evidence Kennedy had submitted
    to the Indiana Department of Insurance against Dr. Glock. The opinion stated:
    The panel is of the unanimous opinion that the evidence does not
    support the conclusion that the defendant failed to meet the
    applicable standard of care, and that his conduct was not a factor
    of the resultant damages, but there is a material issue of fact, not
    requiring expert opinion, bearing on liability for consideration by
    the court or jury, with regard to the informed consent of the
    patient before the fourth surgery.
    Exhibits Volume I at 4.
    [6]   In January 2015, Kennedy filed a Complaint For Medical Negligence, and in
    January 2016, Dr. Glock filed a motion for partial summary judgment. On
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019       Page 3 of 27
    May 26, 2016, the parties tendered a proposed agreed order on the motion for
    partial summary judgment that identified the five surgeries, including Surgery
    Four as the neuroma procedure, and “would grant summary judgment” in
    favor Dr. Glock on all of Kennedy’s claims “arising out of Surgery 1, Surgery 2,
    Surgery 3, and Surgery 5,” and all claims “arising out of the Surgery 4, except
    for a claim of ‘informed’ consent with respect to that procedure, which the
    court granted on June 1, 2016.” May 26, 2016 Proposed Agreed Order at 2.
    [7]   On June 26, 2018, the court held a jury trial. Kennedy’s stepsister, Terri Lynn
    Coleman, testified that she accompanied him to the neuroma procedure and
    answered in the negative when asked if Dr. Glock had told Kennedy: “that
    surgery had a serious possibility of not being functional? Of not working,” “there
    was going to be nerve injury, nerve damage,” and that “there was any risk of
    nerve damage.” Transcript Volume II at 138-139. She testified that she believed
    there was a time when Dr. Glock told Kennedy that he had cut the nerve and
    that she remembered “[t]hat it was an accident” and “they were going to do the
    fifth one to correct it.” Id. at 139. She answered in the negative when asked if
    she ever heard Dr. Glock say that the proposed treatment might not alleviate all
    of Kennedy’s pain that he experienced from the original injury. Id. at 140. She
    indicated that Kennedy told her that it hurt “[m]ainly in his thumb and his hand”
    “so bad that he can’t stand it somedays.” Id. at 142. When asked if Dr. Glock
    indicated “at any time during your conversation” that there might be a need for
    future procedures or surgery, she answered in the negative and stated “[i]t would
    fix everything.” Id. at 143.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019      Page 4 of 27
    [8]   Kennedy testified that he lived with his mother, daughter, girlfriend, and her
    son and that he moved in about two-and-one-half to three years prior to help
    take care of his mother, who has been going blind, and his ill father. He
    indicated that he did not have a college education and, at the time of the
    accident, the nature of his work was physical labor. After describing how the
    crush injury occurred and the first two surgeries, he stated that after the first
    surgery there “was always something.” Id. at 161. He answered affirmatively
    when he was asked if he had a conversation with Dr. Glock in his office about
    the neuroma procedure on September 28, 2011, and stated “Oh, it was going to
    get better” and “I mean it’s gonna be good” when asked if Dr. Glock told him
    what would be the outcome of that surgery. Id. at 166. He answered in the
    negative when asked whether Dr. Glock ever told him that there was a
    likelihood that it would not work and whether he ever told him that there was a
    risk of further nerve injury. Id. He responded “No. Cause he’s the one that cut
    it, so he was gonna fix it” when asked if Dr. Glock ever told him “the surgery in
    your palm was, there’s a likelihood it wouldn’t work.” Id. He indicated that he
    would not have had the surgery if Dr. Glock had told him that he might die
    from it.
    [9]   The court admitted diagrams of a hand as Plaintiff’s Exhibits 4 and 5, and
    Records from the Terre Haute Regional Hospital as Defendant’s Exhibits B and
    C and Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2 and 3. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 5 is a cross-section
    diagram labeling the arteries and nerves of the palm. Defendant’s Exhibits B
    and C contain forms with Kennedy’s signature that are titled “Consent for
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019        Page 5 of 27
    Anesthesia,” dated July 1, 2011 and October 3, 2011, and contain the statement
    that “rare, unexpected severe complications with anesthesia . . . include the
    remote possibility of infection, bleeding, drug reactions, blood clots, loss of sensation,
    loss of limb function, paralysis, stroke, brain damage, heart attack, or death.” Exhibits
    Volume II at 90-91, 194-195. Both Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2 and 3 include a form,
    which includes Kennedy and Dr. Glock’s signatures beside a date of “9-28-11,”
    is titled “Consent for Administration of Anesthesia and for Performance of
    Operations and Other Procedures,” and which states in relevant part, “I, Rickey
    Kennedy . . . consent to and authorize the performance of the following
    treatment, procedure, examination or test: left index finger neuroma excision of
    radial digital nerve to palm by or under the direction of Christopher R. Glock.” 2
    Exhibits Volume I at 72, 131. The form also states:
    B. Explanation
    1. The general nature of my condition, the purpose, benefits and
    expected outcome of the Procedure, reasonable alternative
    methods of treatment along with their material risks, benefits and
    side effects, the possible outcome without the Procedure or
    alternative treatment, the Procedure or alternative treatment, and
    the possibility of complications have been fully explained to me
    by the Physician or an affiliated doctor (“Doctor”), and all of my
    questions have been answered. I acknowledge that no guarantees
    have been made to me concerning the results of the Procedure. I
    understand the nature of the Procedure to be (description of
    2
    Both names and the phrase, “left index finger neuroma excision of radial digital nerve to palm,” are written
    by hand onto the form. See Exhibits Volume I at 72, 131.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019                             Page 6 of 27
    Procedure in layman’s language): Get pain out of hand by
    removing nerve from nub.[ 3]
    Id. Both Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2 and 3 include a record from Terre Haute
    Regional Hospital that describes the neuroma procedure and which states that
    Kennedy was a patient with “left index finger neuroma pain at the stump” and
    who “had improvement on the ulnar side with persistence on the radial side,” 4
    the “branches to the proper digital nerve to the index finger radial border and
    the common digital nerve to the second web space index and middle were
    identified each,” the “common digital nerve to the second web space was
    preserved,” the “flexor tendons to the index finger were assessed, and the
    proper digital nerve to the radial border of the index finger was identified,” and
    that “[i]t was tensioned, and there was no corresponding tension in the thumb,
    only to the radial border of the stump.” Id. at 66-67, 129-130.
    [10]   Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2 includes a “History & Physical Report #24,” which details a
    “followup for left index finger” after a “neuroma transposition” and states
    “Physical Exam (Christopher R Glock; 10/12/2011 8:39 AM)” and that
    Kennedy
    called postop, the day after, and stated that his thumb was very
    numb. I thought it was still the anethestic. He comes back today
    3
    The phrase, “Get pain out of hand by removing nerve from nub,” is written by hand onto the form. See
    Exhibits Volume I at 72, 131.
    4
    In his testimony, Dr. Glock explained that “radial” means “away from the small finger” and “ulnar” means
    “on the small finger side.” Transcript Volume III at 50.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019                         Page 7 of 27
    for his normal followup and he states that it is still numb in the
    thumb. It looks like the whole thumb, radial and ulnar sides are
    numb.
    PHYSICAL EXAMINATION: . . . He no longer has any pain at
    the index finger stump. He has numbness and tingling on the
    radial and ulnar borders of the left thumb . . . . At the time of
    surgery, the nerve was tested for its distribution and it seemed to
    be only coming from the area of the index finger stump,
    however, there can be branches from the stump to the thumb and
    so this needs to be evaluated surgically in my opinion.
    Id. at 24. Both Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2 and 3 include a record from Terre Haute
    Regional Hospital of the November 2, 2011 procedure that states, subsequent to
    the procedure, Kennedy “has had numbness on the ulnar side of the left thumb”
    and that it “was felt that he had a common digital nerve, which was previously
    suspected in the first web space between the index and thumb accounting for
    the numbness and thumb after division.” Id. at 58, 133. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2
    includes a “History & Physical Report #26,” which details a “follow-up for
    [Kennedy’s] left thumb and index finger” and states “Physical Exam
    (Christopher R Glock; 11/10/2011 2:18 PM)” and that
    since I have last seen him, at the time of surgery, we found that
    he did have a common digital branch to the index finger and the
    ulnar side of thumb. This was branched after I already cut it
    from the previous procedure. . . . He is made aware that I did
    not do the test intraoperatively that I did on the procedure that
    originated in the cut of the nerve . . . . I explained to him that
    what we did at surgery, to reconstruct it.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019         Page 8 of 27
    Id. at 22. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2 further includes a “History & Physical Report
    #31,” which states “Physical Exam (Christopher R Glock; 1/16/2012 9:58
    AM),” “since I have last seen him he is having difficulty when he uses his hand
    for heavy activity or touches it to the steering wheel right in this first web space,”
    and “IMPRESSION: Left hand wound with revision amputation and neuroma
    transposition, and repair of iatrogenic nerve injury to the thumb.” 5 Id. at 17.
    [11]   Kennedy testified about various records included in Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2 and 3.
    He stated he had written the explanation for the neuroma procedure included on
    the form and indicated that it said “[g]et pain out of” “[h]and by removing nerve
    from nub,” which correctly described his understanding of the operation.
    Transcript Volume II at 170. He stated that Dr. Glock “did not tell me how he
    was gonna cut it” and indicated he had not explained “any risks to the nerves
    being close together.” Id. at 173. When asked if he had pain in his thumb before
    the neuroma procedure, he answered in the negative and stated “[i]t had nothing
    to do with my thumb. It was just these two fingers.” Id. at 174. He indicated he
    did not have any other surgery on his thumb besides “the one that was done on
    the fifth surgery” subsequent to the neuroma procedure, and stated, “[i]n my
    thumb. My thumb mostly,” when asked about the location of the pain after the
    neuroma procedure. Id. He indicated that the pain did not “get out of [his] hand
    5
    “Iatrogenic” is defined as “induced inadvertently by a physician or surgeon or by medical treatment or
    diagnostic procedures.” MERRIAM-WEBSTER, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/iatrogenic
    (last visited September 30, 2019). See also AMERICAN HERITAGE DICTIONARY 867 (4th ed. 2006) (defining
    “iatrogenic” as “[i]nduced in a patient by a physician’s activity, manner, or therapy. Used especially of an
    infection or other complication of treatment”).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019                              Page 9 of 27
    from removing the nerve to the nub” after the neuroma procedure and stated
    “[h]e just put it in another spot.” Id. When asked when he first started having
    the “numbness [he] described and the sensation in [his] thumb,” he responded
    “[t]he same surgery.” Id. at 175. He testified that his writing on the diagram in
    Plaintiff’s Exhibit 4 stated “Point where nerve was cut,” that the diagram
    illustrated as best as he could recall “what Dr. Glock had told him about what
    happened in the surgery,” and that Dr. Glock told him that “[h]e was gonna re-
    attach it to get the sensation, he was gonna fix what he done.” Id. at 176. He
    further stated “You can feel it” when asked whether, as he sat there, he had pain
    in his thumb and testified that the problem with his thumb interferes with his
    work “[d]epend[ing] on what [he’s] doing.” Id. at 180.
    [12]   Kennedy presented and played for the jury the deposition of Dr. Dellacqua, a
    member of the medical review panel, who indicated that the neuroma procedure
    “was a resection of a neuroma.” Id. at 242. When asked what risks the hand
    surgeon should tell the patient about before completing a neuroma resection, he
    stated that the “standard risk is nerve injury, infection, blood vessel injury,
    wound healing, and then obviously loss of life and limb. We don’t always go
    into those. . . . But in a very general term, the gravity of surgery needs to be
    relayed to the patient.” Id. at 244. When asked if there should be a discussion
    about reoccurrence, Dr. Dellacqua stated in part, “Nerves are a very fickle
    instrument. And just in my opinion, I have in my own hands gone back several
    times on nerves to try to get them to not stick to either skin or muscle or bone or
    become a problem in the hand. [T]he answer to your question is, reoccurrence of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019        Page 10 of 27
    the pain or lack of getting rid of the pain is, to me, the number one.” Id. After
    the deposition concluded, the court took judicial notice without objection of the
    fact that the “life expectancy of a person . . . is thirty-seven point six years based
    upon the age that [Kennedy] was at the time this occurred” and the Social
    Security Administration actuarial table. Transcript Volume III at 7.
    [13]   After Kennedy rested, Dr. Glock moved for judgment on the evidence. He
    argued that Kennedy “by his own testimony and by the evidence that [the
    court] received through those consents” was advised about “the risk that
    manifested itself and came about unintended nerve injury” as a risk prior to
    electing to complete the procedure and that there was “no evidence of medical
    causation between anything that happened in the fourth surgery and any injury
    which he claims he now has or has ever suffered.” Id. at 8. After some
    argument, the court noted that it was a pretty low threshhold to overcome a
    motion for judgment on the evidence and denied Dr. Glock’s motion. Id. at 16.
    [14]   Dr. Glock then presented evidence on his behalf. He testified that, across the
    country in large populations of people who study it, seventy-five percent chance
    of success with a neuroma is what is quoted, and that “[s]uccess in this particular
    situation is improvement in pain” and “it’s never complete elimination.” Id. at
    46. When asked if, by improvement, he meant “reduction in the level and
    intensity of the pain,” he answered affirmatively and stated “To the point that the
    patient says, that was worth it. I’m glad I did it. That’s the only hurdle. It’s no
    more arduous than that. Does the patient think that it was worth it? And in
    these studies, roughly seventy-five percent (75%) did.” Id. When asked if he told
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019         Page 11 of 27
    Kennedy that he thought Kennedy’s chance of success for the surgery as he had
    defined it was seventy-five percent, Dr. Glock answered, “I did.” Id. When
    asked if he thought “it was reasonable for [Kennedy] to elect to have the surgery
    after the disclosures [he] made for it,” he answered “Yes.” Id.
    [15]   Dr. Glock indicated he “absolutely” recalled seeing Kennedy at the first post-
    operative visit for the neuroma procedure and that he had “independent
    recollection” of it. Id. at 51. He stated he was greatly concerned that Kennedy
    “said he had numbness here and here” and that he had “unusual variance,
    abnormal anatomy.” Id. Dr. Glock testified he did exactly what he was trained
    to do with respect to that potential problem and that the test to identify normal
    anatomy did not work. He indicated that, at a meeting in his office, he
    explained to Kennedy what he “thought the cause was,” that he “felt that the
    problem [Kennedy] was experiencing was as a result of my surgery,” and that,
    when he cut a nerve that he “thought was an isolated nerve just going to the
    stump,” he thought he “may have injured the nerve to [Kennedy’s] thumb even
    though [he] checked for it.” Id. at 54-55. During cross-examination, in
    response to being asked if the numbness and tingling to his thumb had not
    “gone away now, can we assume that it’s permanent after this period of time,”
    Dr. Glock stated “[s]adly.” Id. at 61. He presented and played for the jury the
    deposition of Dr. Paul Perry, who indicated:
    So the ideal circumstance, since you know every – as we know
    that every cut nerve is going to make neuroma, every single one,
    we want to put the nerve – or put the neuroma where it will do
    that – cause the least amount of trouble. And so, when we talk
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019    Page 12 of 27
    about moving neuromas, and the medical term for that is
    relocating, that the surgery that we do where we move that
    neuroma into a less conspicuous place, a less troublesome space.
    So that’s what a neuroma relocation is or a removal of the
    neuroma. You’re really not removing it; you’re moving it.
    Id. at 83. Kennedy testified as a rebuttal witness that Dr. Glock had not told
    him that the likelihood of success for the neuroma procedure was seventy-five
    percent and stated “[t]oday was the first time I heard that” when asked if Dr.
    Glock had given “any percentage at all of success.” Id. at 123.
    [16]   At the close of evidence, the court heard argument regarding the final jury
    instructions. After deliberating for only an hour, the jury returned a verdict in
    favor of Kennedy in the amount of $2,300,000. 6 Kennedy’s counsel indicated
    that the cap in this case was $1,250,000 and stipulated that Dr. Glock’s liability
    “does not exceed Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars ($250,000.00)
    under the act.” Id. at 170. The court allowed the record to reflect that Dr.
    Glock was a qualified provider, Kennedy’s counsel agreed that judgment
    against him could not exceed $250,000, and the court entered judgment on July
    6, 2018.
    [17]   Dr. Glock filed a motion to correct error, and the court issued a sixteen-page
    order denying the motion on October 5, 2018. The order noted in denying the
    “Motion to Correct Error based upon the issue of causation,” that Dr. Glock
    6
    The court’s order on the motion to correct error indicates that the “jury began deliberating at 6:41 pm and
    the verdict was read into the record at 7:42 pm.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 25.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019                             Page 13 of 27
    testified that the fourth surgery he performed caused Kennedy’s problems to his
    thumb area and “the jury appears to have relied on that testimony”; and, in
    denying the “Motion to Correct Error on the issue of informed consent,” that
    whether “Kennedy met his burden of proof on the issue of informed consent
    depends on whether expert testimony is required for certain elements and
    whether the expert testimony can come from the defendant doctor” and that
    recent Indiana Court of Appeals caselaw “at least makes a suggestion that
    expert testimony is not required on the issue of what decision a reasonable
    properly informed patient would make.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at
    13-14. In denying the “Motion to Correct Error on the basis that the jury
    verdict was excessive and outrageous,” the court stated that it had a duty to
    review the entire evidence relevant to the issue of damages. Id. at 26. In
    reviewing that evidence, it made over eight pages of findings based on the
    testimony of Kennedy, Dr. Dellacqua, Dr. Glock, and Dr. Perry.
    Discussion
    I.
    [18]   The first issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying Dr.
    Glock’s motion for judgment on the evidence. We note that Dr. Glock
    presented evidence after the court denied his motion and did not renew his
    motion at the close of the evidence. We therefore address Dr. Glock’s
    argument as a sufficiency challenge. See Bd. of Works of City of Lake Station v.
    I.A.E., Inc., 
    956 N.E.2d 86
    , 92 n.3 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011) (holding that the appeal
    of the denial of defendant’s judgment on the evidence motion was waived by its
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019      Page 14 of 27
    subsequent presentation of evidence and addressing its argument as a
    sufficiency challenge), trans. denied. In reviewing the sufficiency of evidence in
    a civil case, we will decide whether there is substantial evidence of probative
    value supporting the judgment. Jamrosz v. Res. Benefits, Inc., 
    839 N.E.2d 746
    ,
    758 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005), trans. denied. We neither weigh the evidence nor
    judge the credibility of witnesses but consider only the evidence most favorable
    to the judgment along with all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom. See
    Davidson v. Bailey, 
    826 N.E.2d 80
    , 87 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005) (quoting Indian
    Trucking v. Harber, 
    752 N.E.2d 168
    , 172 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001)). The verdict will
    be affirmed unless we conclude that it is against the great weight of the
    evidence. Id.
    [19]   Generally, in a medical malpractice action based on ordinary negligence, a
    plaintiff must establish (1) a duty on the part of the defendant physician in
    relation to the plaintiff, (2) failure of the physician to meet the requisite
    standard of care, and (3) an injury to the plaintiff resulting from that failure. See
    Spar v. Cha, 
    907 N.E.2d 974
    , 979 (Ind. 2009) (citing Bader v. Johnson, 
    732 N.E.2d 1212
    , 1216-1217 (Ind. 2000); Oelling v. Rao, 
    593 N.E.2d 189
    , 190 (Ind.
    1992)). “‘Lack of informed consent’ is a theory of liability that is distinct from a
    medical malpractice claim that a doctor provided treatment that negligently
    failed to meet the requisite standard of care.” Perez v. Hu, 
    87 N.E.3d 1130
    , 1135
    (Ind Ct. App. 2017) (quoting Spar, 907 N.E.2d at 979). Lack of informed
    consent “is viewed as a battery claim if there is an alleged complete lack of
    consent to medical treatment, but otherwise it is ‘regarded as a specific form of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019        Page 15 of 27
    negligence for breach of the required standard of professional conduct.’” Id. In
    light of the medical review panel’s opinion and our review of the record, we
    conclude that Kennedy’s lack of informed consent claim is of the second type.
    [20]   “To succeed on a lack of informed consent action, the plaintiff must prove ‘(1)
    nondisclosure of required information; (2) actual damage . . . (3) resulting from
    the risks of which the patient was not informed; (4) cause in fact, which is to say
    that the plaintiff would have rejected the medical treatment if she had known
    the risk; and (5) that reasonable persons, if properly informed, would have
    rejected the proposed treatment.’” Spar, 907 N.E.2d at 979-980 (quoting Dan
    B. Dobbs, The Law of Torts, § 250 (2001) (footnotes omitted)).
    [21]   Dr. Glock first contends that the trial court erred regarding the issue of
    causation and argues Kennedy presented no expert medical evidence, that
    “medical causation[] raises the bar and may only be determined by the expert
    testimony of a physician,” and that Dr. Dellacqua did not provide expert
    testimony as to that issue. Appellant’s Brief at 14. Kennedy maintains that
    Plaintiff’s Exhibits 2 and 3 indicated that Dr. Glock admitted to him that
    “during the [neuroma procedure] he had tested to make sure that the nerve
    from the base of the stump did not have a branch to go to the thumb but that
    now he suspected that there was a branch which did so and he had severed that
    nerve” during the neuroma procedure. Appellee’s Brief at 8. He argues that
    there is no reason to differentiate between or require evidence from the
    testimony of another expert medical witness “especially where the defendant
    physician has admitted that his surgery . . . caused the permanent injury” and
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019     Page 16 of 27
    contends that Dr. Glock’s testimony in direct and cross-examination provided
    undisputed evidence of causation from a medical expert. Id. at 20. The record
    reveals that Kennedy’s witness, Dr. Dellacqua, who was a member of the
    medical review panel, testified in his deposition about the risks of the neuroma
    procedure. Based upon the evidence as set forth above and in the record, we
    find that substantial evidence of probative value supports the judgment and we
    cannot say that reversal is warranted on this basis.
    [22]   Dr. Glock further contends that no expert evidence demonstrated it was
    reasonable for Kennedy to refuse the neuroma procedure and Kennedy did not
    provide expert testimony which proved that, more likely than not, a reasonable
    person who was properly informed of the risks and complications of the
    neuroma procedure would have refused it. He argues that no medical evidence
    contradicted Dr. Perry’s testimony, contends that this case is a perfect example
    of why the fifth element of an informed consent claim is required and “is
    particularly important where there is no evidence that actual care rendered fell
    below the standard of care,” and asserts that the trial court should decide, in
    circumstances such as this one, the question as a matter of law. Appellant’s
    Brief at 25. Kennedy responds that the issue was properly left to the jury and
    that the “reasonable patient is an adaptation of the reasonable man standard
    which we have employed as a community ideal of reasonable behavior to be
    determined by the jury’s social judgment and not by expert opinion.”
    Appellee’s Brief at 26. The Indiana Trial Lawyers Association filed an amicus
    brief and argues that requiring expert testimony to show that a reasonable
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019    Page 17 of 27
    person, if properly informed, would have rejected the proposed treatment runs
    afoul of public policy, is counter to the “most important and central goal of the
    informed consent doctrine[,] protect[ing] a patient’s personal autmonomy,” and
    “is essentially to say that people can control their bodies only to the extent that
    they are reasonable in the estimate of physicians.” Amicus Brief at 13-14.
    [23]   Jurors are free to draw inferences from the evidence presented. “[A]n inference
    is not disqualified simply because the subject of the inference is a matter of
    scientific knowledge.” City of Alexandria v. Allen, 
    552 N.E.2d 488
    , 494 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 1990) (citing Magazine v. Shull, 
    60 N.E.2d 611
     (Ind. Ct. App. 1945)), reh’g
    denied. “The evidence of an expert witness is to be received by the Court or jury
    trying the cause under the same rules and in the same manner that evidence of
    other witnesses is received and must be weighed by the trier of facts, the same
    as other evidence is weighed; the trier of facts is not bound by an expert’s
    opinion.” Ferdinand Furniture Co., Inc. v. Anderson, 
    399 N.E.2d 799
    , 807 (Ind.
    Ct. App 1980).
    [24]   This Court recently held:
    Twenty-five years ago, our supreme court decided Culbertson v.
    Mernitz, 
    602 N.E.2d 98
     (Ind. 1992). In a 3-2 decision, the court
    addressed whether a “reasonably prudent physician” or
    “reasonably prudent patient” standard is controlling in informed
    consent cases and whether expert testimony is required to prove
    an informed consent claim. The majority stated:
    Resolution of the issue of the necessity of expert medical
    testimony in informed consent cases depends on whether
    the issue is viewed through the eyes of the physician or the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019       Page 18 of 27
    patient. When viewed through the eyes of the physician, it
    is easy to see that a physician should not be required to
    guess or speculate as to what a hypothetical “reasonably
    prudent patient” would “need to know” in order to make a
    determination. A physician should only be required to do
    that which he is trained to do, namely, conduct himself as
    a reasonably prudent physician in taking a history,
    performing a physical examination, ordering appropriate
    tests, reaching a diagnosis, prescribing a course of
    treatment, and in discussing with the patient the medical
    facts of the proposed procedure, including the risks
    inherent in either accepting or rejecting the proposed
    course of treatment. From a physician’s viewpoint, he
    should not be called upon to be a “mind reader” with the
    ability to peer into the brain of a prudent patient to
    determine what such patient “needs to know,” but should
    simply be called upon to discuss medical facts and
    recommendations with the patient as a reasonably prudent
    physician would.
    Culbertson, 602 N.E.2d at 103. Ultimately, the majority
    concluded, “except in those cases where deviation from the
    standard of care is a matter commonly known by lay persons,
    expert medical testimony is necessary to establish whether a
    physician has or has not complied with the standard of a
    reasonably prudent physician.” Id. at 104. The majority did not
    explicitly adopt a set of elements needed to prove an informed
    consent claim.
    The lengthy dissent began by citing a decision by that court in the
    previous year in Matter of Lawrance, 
    579 N.E.2d 32
    , 39 (Ind.
    1991). The dissent stated:
    Emphasizing respect for patient autonomy, we
    acknowledged that liberty interests protected in the
    Indiana Constitution and public policy values preserved in
    Indiana statutory and common law reflect “a commitment
    to patient self-determination.” In seeming disregard of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019     Page 19 of 27
    these fundamental principles, however, today’s decision
    rejects the prudent patient standard in informed consent
    cases. It ignores “the basic human need of self-
    determination and individual autonomy” in deference to
    decision-making by physicians.
    The central concern of the majority appears to be whether
    a plaintiff should be permitted to establish an informed
    consent claim without presenting expert medical
    testimony. This issue should not blind the Court to the
    basic values articulated in Lawrance. Nor does the prudent
    patient standard eliminate the need for a plaintiff to
    present medical expertise.
    Culbertson, 602 N.E.2d at 104 (Dickson & DeBruler, JJ,
    dissenting). The dissent also observed:
    Although there is widespread acceptance of the doctrine of
    informed consent as a theory of liability, there is
    disagreement concerning the role of expert medical
    witnesses in determining whether the informed consent of
    the patient has been obtained. Those invoking the
    “prudent patient” standard assess the adequacy of the
    disclosure by requiring mention of all inherent risks which
    a reasonably prudent patient would consider material in
    deciding to undergo or forego a particular procedure.
    While medical expertise would be required to identify the
    risks of proposed treatment and non-treatment, the fact
    finder needs no expert guidance to determine the
    materiality of a particular risk to a patient. The “prudent
    physician” standard, on the other hand, evaluates the
    adequacy of the risk disclosure only from the physician’s
    viewpoint.
    Id. at 105. The majority did not respond directly to the dissent’s
    arguments. Thus, it appeared after Culbertson that an informed
    consent claim rested entirely upon what a “reasonably prudent
    physician” would believe necessary to disclose, as proven by
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019        Page 20 of 27
    expert testimony, without reference to what a “reasonably
    prudent patient” would want to know.
    In later years, our supreme court has seemingly drifted away
    from the majority holding in Culbertson and toward the dissent’s
    view, although it has never been overruled. In Weinberg v. Bess,
    
    717 N.E.2d 584
    , 588 n.5 (Ind. 1999), the court stated, “Under the
    doctrine of informed consent, a physician must disclose the facts
    and risks of a treatment which a reasonably prudent physician
    would be expected to disclose under like circumstances, and
    which a reasonable person would want to know.” (Emphasis added).
    For this proposition, the court cited a part of
    the Culbertson opinion that was discussing cases from other
    jurisdictions that had adopted the view that “a jury is in the best
    position to determine whether the physician gave the patient the
    information needed by the patient to weigh the alternatives and
    make the ultimate decision of whether to proceed with the
    proposed treatment.” Culbertson, 602 N.E.2d at 100 (citing Cobbs
    v. Grant, 
    8 Cal. 3d 229
    , 
    104 Cal. Rptr. 505
    , 
    502 P.2d 1
     (1972)).
    However, this was precisely the position the Culbertson majority
    seemed to end up rejecting and the dissent wanted to adopt.
    There is nothing in the Culbertson majority opinion indicating that
    “and which a reasonable person would want to know” is an
    element of an informed consent case in Indiana.
    Nevertheless, our supreme court subsequently cited
    the Weinberg footnote as a correct statement of the law of
    informed consent, in Spar, 907 N.E.2d at 984.
    Perez, 87 N.E.3d at 1135-36. In applying the Spar elements of an informed
    consent claim, we noted:
    [I]t seems clear that no expert testimony would be required with
    respect to whether a particular disclosure did or did not occur,
    nor as to whether the plaintiff herself would have chosen
    different treatment if she had known of the risk involved with the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019     Page 21 of 27
    performed treatment. On the other hand, expert testimony
    generally is required to determine what a reasonably prudent
    physician should tell a patient before performing a medical
    procedure, unless the matter is within a layperson’s
    understanding. Bowman v. Beghin, 
    713 N.E.2d 913
    , 916-17 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 1999). Additionally, whether actual damage was
    caused as a result of an inadequate disclosure generally is a
    matter requiring expert opinion. Bunch v. Tiwari, 
    711 N.E.2d 844
    , 850 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999).
    *****
    Here, the primary focus of the parties’ dispute is whether [the
    plaintiff] had to present expert testimony in support of the
    element that a properly-informed reasonable person would have
    rejected [the defendant physician’s] proposed treatment – i.e.,
    whether an objectively reasonable person would have chosen to
    have a c-section rather than a vaginal delivery. There is currently
    no clear answer to that question. To require expert testimony in
    support of that element would seem consistent with the Culbertson
    majority’s rejection of a “reasonable patient standard” for
    informed consent claims and its requirement that an informed
    consent claim be proven by expert testimony. On the other hand,
    the very fact that our supreme court now has adopted the
    “reasonable patient” test as an element of an informed consent
    claim arguably indicates an implicit overruling of Culbertson and
    agreement with the dissent. In accordance with that view, expert
    testimony would be required as to some informed consent
    elements but not others. Namely, “[w]hile medical expertise
    would be required to identify the risks of proposed treatment and
    non-treatment, the fact finder needs no expert guidance to
    determine the materiality of a particular risk to a patient.”
    Culbertson, 602 N.E.2d at 105 (Dickson & DeBruler, JJ,
    dissenting) (citing Canterbury v. Spence, 
    464 F.2d 772
    , 787 (D.C.
    Cir. 1972), cert. denied). Furthermore, as a matter of the meaning
    of a “reasonable person” standard in legal parlance, normally it is
    an objective standard measured by the collective judgment of a
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019     Page 22 of 27
    lay jury, not experts. See Pierce v. Horvath, 
    142 Ind. App. 278
    ,
    285, 
    233 N.E.2d 811
    , 815 (1968) (stating that the “reasonable
    man” standard “‘is a personification of a community ideal of
    reasonable behavior, determined by the jury’s social judgment.’”)
    (quoting Prosser’s Treatise on Torts, § 32 p. 154 (3rd ed. 1964)).
    Under this standard, it would be up to the jury to decide, based
    on its collective judgment and experience and not expert
    testimony, whether a reasonable person would have chosen a
    different course of medical treatment if he or she had been
    adequately informed.
    Id. at 1137-1138 (footnotes omitted).
    [25]   The record reveals that Kennedy submitted medical records from Terre Haute
    Regional Hospital describing the five procedures that occurred in 2010 and
    2011, as well as reports on the follow-up exams conducted by Dr. Glock after
    the neuroma procedure and subsequent procedure in which Dr. Glock
    discovered a common digital branch to the index finger and the ulnar side of the
    thumb. Kennedy testified that he did not have pain in his thumb before the
    neuroma procedure and indicated that he had pain in his thumb at trial. The
    form dated prior to the neuroma procedure and signed by both Dr. Glock and
    Kennedy included Kennedy’s statement “get pain out of hand by removing
    nerve from nub,” which he testified correctly described his understanding of the
    operation at the time. Exhibits Volume I at 72. He further presented the
    deposition of Dr. Dellacqua, a member of the medical review panel, who stated
    that the standard risk of a neuroma resection was “nerve injury, infection, blood
    vessel injury, wound healing, and then obviously loss of life and limb” and “in
    a very general term, the gravity of surgery needs to be relayed to the patient.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019    Page 23 of 27
    Transcript Volume II at 244. He further testified that reoccurrence of the pain
    or lack of eliminating the pain is “number one” in a discussion on the risks of a
    neuroma procedure. Id. Dr. Perry stated that a removal of the neuroma is
    “really not removing it” but “moving it.” Transcript Volume III at 83. Dr.
    Glock indicated that roughly seventy-five percent of people experienced a
    reduction in the level and intensity of pain to the point that the patient says
    “that was worth it,” and he stated that success was “never complete
    elimination.” Id.
    [26]   The reasonable inferences to be drawn from the expert testimony provided are
    that roughly twenty-five percent of people who undertake a neuroma procedure
    do not experience a reduction in the level and intensity of pain to the point that
    the patient says “that was worth it”; that the roughly seventy-five percent of
    people who do experience success do not have complete elimination of pain;
    and that a primary component of a discussion on the risks of a neuroma
    procedure includes discussing the reoccurrence of pain or the lack of
    eliminating the pain. We find under these circumstances that a finding that
    reasonable persons, if properly informed, would have rejected the proposed
    treatment is not against the great weight of the evidence and conclude that the
    evidence most favorable to the judgment along with all reasonable inferences to
    be drawn from the evidence supports the judgment with regard to this issue.
    II.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019      Page 24 of 27
    [27]   The next issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion in denying Dr.
    Glock’s motion to correct error on the basis that the jury verdict was excessive.
    He argues that the amount of damages awarded by the jury cannot be explained
    on any reasonable ground, contends that Kennedy did not have a substantial
    change in his quality of life or the amount of pain due to his alleged injuries
    arising from the neuroma procedure, and asserts that Kennedy provided neither
    evidence that his pre-existing pain was caused or enhanced after the neuroma
    procedure nor reasons for the jury to award him for the rest of his life more
    money daily than he makes in a day’s work.
    [28]   The record reveals that the jury’s verdict in favor of Kennedy awarded him
    damages of $2,300,000, Kennedy’s counsel indicated that the cap in this case
    was $1,250,000 and agreed that Dr. Glock’s liability could not exceed $250,000,
    and the court took notice that Dr. Glock was a qualified provider. This Court
    has recently explained that:
    the remedy offered by Indiana Trial Rule 59(J)(5) is “available
    only where the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict as a
    matter of law.” Solnosky v. Goodwell, 
    892 N.E.2d 174
    , 184 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2008) (quoting City of Carmel v. Leeper Elec. Servs., Inc.,
    
    805 N.E.2d 389
    , 392 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004), trans. denied). Once
    the trial court has entered final judgment on the evidence for the
    amount of proper damages, we will reverse the decision only for
    an abuse of discretion. Id.
    We afford a jury’s damage award great deference on
    appeal. Sims v. Pappas, 
    73 N.E.3d 700
    , 709 (Ind. 2017). In
    considering whether a jury verdict is excessive, we do not
    reweigh the evidence and look only to the evidence and
    reasonable inferences that may be drawn therefrom that support
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019       Page 25 of 27
    the verdict. West v. J. Greg Allen Builder, Inc., 
    92 N.E.3d 634
    , 643
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2017), trans. denied (2018). If there is any evidence
    in the record which supports the amount of the award, even if it
    is variable or conflicting, the award will not be
    disturbed. Sandberg Trucking, Inc. v. Johnson, 
    76 N.E.3d 178
    , 189
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2017). “To warrant reversal, the award must
    appear to be so outrageous as to impress the Court at first blush
    with its enormity.” Id. (citation and quotation marks omitted).
    An award is not excessive unless the amount cannot be explained
    upon any basis other than prejudice, passion, partiality,
    corruption, or some other element of improper
    consideration. Sims, 73 N.E.3d at 709.
    *****
    “Awards for pain, suffering, fright, humiliation, and mental
    anguish are particularly within the province of the jury because
    they involve the weighing of evidence and credibility of
    witnesses.” Landis v. Landis, 
    664 N.E.2d 754
    , 757 (Ind. Ct. App.
    1996). Indeed, “[p]hysical and mental pain are, by their very
    nature, not readily susceptible to quantification, and therefore,
    the jury is given very wide latitude in determining these kinds of
    damages.” Groves v. First Nat’l Bank of Valparaiso, 
    518 N.E.2d 819
    , 831 (Ind. Ct. App. 1988). “Our inability to actually look
    into the minds of jurors and determine how they computed an
    award is, to a large extent, the reason behind the rule that a
    verdict will be upheld if the award falls within the bounds of the
    evidence.” Griffin v. Acker, 
    659 N.E.2d 659
    , 664 (Ind. Ct. App.
    1995).
    Carney v. Patino, 
    114 N.E.3d 20
    , 31 (Ind. Ct. App. 2018), trans. denied.
    [29]   We observe that the trial court reviewed the testimony of Kennedy, Dr.
    Dellacqua, Dr. Glock, and Dr. Perry and that the findings in its order on this
    issue exceeded eight pages. The evidence reveals that Kennedy’s remaining life
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019       Page 26 of 27
    expectancy is 37.6 years based upon the age that he was at the time of the
    accident, that the location of the pain before the neuroma procedure “had
    nothing to do” with his thumb but rather two other fingers, that the pain after
    the neuroma procedure was located in his thumb mostly and is permanent, and
    that the problem with his thumb interferes with his work depending on the task.
    We further note Coleman’s testimony that Kennedy has shared that the pain
    mainly in his thumb and hand “is so bad that he can’t stand it somedays.”
    Transcript Volume II at 142. Dr. Glock’s arguments to the contrary are
    essentially a request for us to reweigh the evidence and reassess witness
    credibility, which we cannot do. See West, 92 N.E.3d at 643 (when party seeks
    to reverse adverse judgment on basis of insufficient evidence, appellate court
    will not weigh evidence or assess witness credibility). We cannot say that the
    court abused its discretion in denying the motion to correct error.
    [30]   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the motion for
    judgment on the evidence and motion to correct error.
    [31]   Affirmed.
    Baker, J., and Mathias, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CT-2486 | October 10, 2019    Page 27 of 27