Hild v. Samaritan Health Partner ( 2024 )


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  • [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it may be cited as Hild
    v. Samaritan Health Partners, Slip Opinion No. 
    2024-Ohio-3338
    .]
    NOTICE
    This slip opinion is subject to formal revision before it is published in an
    advance sheet of the Ohio Official Reports. Readers are requested to
    promptly notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of Ohio, 65
    South Front Street, Columbus, Ohio 43215, of any typographical or other
    formal errors in the opinion, in order that corrections may be made before
    the opinion is published.
    SLIP OPINION NO. 
    2024-OHIO-3338
    HILD, ADMR. OF THE ESTATE OF BOLDMAN, APPELLEE, v. SAMARITAN HEALTH
    PARTNERS ET AL., APPELLANTS; ET AL.
    [Until this opinion appears in the Ohio Official Reports advance sheets, it
    may be cited as Hild v. Samaritan Health Partners, Slip Opinion No.
    
    2024-Ohio-3338
    .]
    Civil law—Negligence—Same-juror rule applies in all negligence cases in which
    jury answers sequential interrogatories that separate the elements of
    negligence to reach a general verdict—The same three-fourths of jurors
    must concur on all elements of negligence for a verdict finding a defendant
    liable for negligence to be valid—Court of appeals’ judgment affirmed in
    part and reversed in part.
    (No. 2023-1076—Submitted April 9, 2024—Decided September 5, 2024.)
    APPEAL from the Court of Appeals for Montgomery County,
    No. 29652, 
    2023-Ohio-2408
    .
    __________________
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    KENNEDY, C.J., authored the opinion of the court, which FISCHER, DEWINE,
    DONNELLY, and DETERS, JJ., joined. BRUNNER, J., dissented, with an opinion
    joined by STEWART, J.
    KENNEDY, C.J.
    {¶ 1} In this discretionary appeal from a judgment of the Second District
    Court of Appeals, we consider whether the “same-juror rule” or the “any-juror rule”
    applies in negligence cases. Specifically, we address whether only the jurors who
    find negligence, i.e., the jurors who find that the defendant had a duty and that the
    defendant breached that duty, may vote on the issue of proximate cause. We hold
    that the same-juror rule applies in all negligence cases in which the jury answers
    sequential interrogatories that separate the elements of negligence to reach a general
    verdict. Consequently, the same three-fourths of the jurors must concur on all
    elements for a verdict finding a defendant liable for negligence to be valid. We
    therefore reverse the judgment of the Second District to the extent that it reversed
    the trial court’s denial of the plaintiff-appellee’s motion for a new trial, and we
    reinstate the jury verdict in favor of defendants-appellants.
    I. Facts and Procedural Background
    {¶ 2} This action arose from medical treatment that was rendered to
    decedent, Scott Boldman. As the administrator of Boldman’s estate, Janet Hild,
    appellee, brought an action for medical negligence, wrongful death, and
    survivorship on behalf of the estate. Hild filed the action against several medical
    professionals and entities, including appellants, Samaritan Health Partners; Good
    Samaritan Hospital; Premier Health Partners; Vincent M. Phillips, M.D.; Certified
    Registered Nurse Anesthetist (“CRNA”) Sandra Ward; and Consolidated
    Anesthesiologists, Inc. (collectively, “the hospital”).
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    January Term, 2024
    {¶ 3} Boldman suffered from several ailments, including morbid obesity,
    Type I diabetes, sleep apnea, hypertension, lymphedema in both lower extremities,
    and cellulitis. He also smoked a pack of cigarettes a day.
    {¶ 4} On Christmas Eve 2017, Boldman went to Good Samaritan North
    Health Center with complaints of stomach pain. Boldman was transferred to Good
    Samaritan Hospital and was scheduled for an emergency appendectomy.
    Boldman’s anesthesia for the operation was administered by Ward under the
    supervision of an anesthesiologist, Dr. Phillips.
    {¶ 5} After surgery, Boldman emerged from anesthesia and became
    combative. The parties dispute the cause of Boldman’s emergence from anesthesia,
    his combativeness, and his death. Hild claims that the anesthesia was improperly
    handled by Ward and that that is why Boldman became aggressive and removed
    his own breathing tube and that the removal of the tube led to his eventual death.
    The hospital claims that Boldman experienced postoperative aggression and that he
    self-extubated and was breathing well on his own. According to the hospital,
    Boldman then suffered a cardiac arrest resulting in an anoxic brain injury.
    {¶ 6} The case proceeded to a jury trial. During the jury-instruction portion
    of the trial, the jury was given several interrogatories to facilitate its decision-
    making. Each interrogatory was followed by instructions. Interrogatory A asked,
    “Do you find, by the greater weight of the evidence, that the Defendant, Sandra
    Ward, CRNA, was negligent in her care and treatment of Scott Boldman? (At least
    six jurors must agree on the answer.)” The instructions following Interrogatory A
    stated: “[I]f the answer of six or more jurors to Interrogatory A is ‘Yes,’ move to
    Interrogatory B. Only those jurors who answered Yes to Interrogatory A are
    qualified to participate in answering Interrogatory B.”1
    1. Interrogatory B is not at issue in this case. It asked the jurors to describe in what way Ward had
    been negligent.
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 7} After Interrogatory B were these instructions: “After answering
    Interrogatory B, please proceed to Interrogatory C.         Only those jurors who
    answered ‘Yes’ to Interrogatory A are qualified to participate in answering
    Interrogatory C.” Interrogatory C asked, “Do you find, by the greater weight of the
    evidence, that the negligence of the Defendant, Sandra Ward, CRNA, directly and
    proximately caused the injury and death of Scott Boldman? (At least six jurors
    must agree on the answer.)”
    {¶ 8} While the trial court was reading the jury instructions and
    interrogatories to the jurors, Hild’s counsel interrupted and requested a sidebar.
    Much of what was said during the sidebar is reported in the transcript as
    “indiscernible,” but the transcript seems to show that Hild’s counsel believed there
    was an issue with the instructions following Interrogatory A. The trial court noted
    the objection and proceeded with reading the interrogatories.
    {¶ 9} After the jury retired to deliberate, Hild’s counsel again raised a
    concern with the trial court about the interrogatory instructions. Hild’s counsel
    asserted that it was incorrect to instruct that only the jurors who vote yes on
    Interrogatory A may decide Interrogatory C. He advocated that all jurors be able
    to answer all interrogatories. He explained, “[A]mazingly enough even though they
    may not have found someone negligent they could still participate in the discussion
    on causation . . . . [S]omeone could not agree with the negligence interrogatory,
    but they might be agreeing to the rest.” Despite his concern, Hild’s counsel said,
    “I don’t know that it’s a big deal . . . .” The trial-court judge was not persuaded to
    change the interrogatory instructions.
    {¶ 10} The jury returned a verdict in favor of the hospital. Regarding
    Interrogatory A, six of the eight jurors found that Ward was negligent in her care
    and treatment of Boldman. In accordance with the jury instructions, only the six
    jurors who found Ward negligent proceeded to vote on the issue of proximate cause
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    January Term, 2024
    (Interrogatory C). On the issue of proximate cause, the jury determined that Ward’s
    negligence did not directly and proximately cause Boldman’s injury and death.
    {¶ 11} Hild filed a motion for a new trial. Hild claimed that she was
    deprived of an absolute right to have a full jury deliberate and vote on the elements
    of her claim. She argued that the interrogatory instructions were erroneous because
    they employed the same-juror rule, which precluded the two jurors who did not find
    negligence from voting on the issue of proximate cause. The trial court denied
    Hild’s motion for a new trial.
    {¶ 12} Hild appealed the entry denying her motion for a new trial to the
    Second District.    On appeal, Hild set forth three assignments of error that
    collectively asserted that the trial court erred in denying her motion for a new trial
    because it was incorrect to include the same-juror rule in the jury instructions.
    {¶ 13} The Second District agreed and held that Hild suffered prejudice
    when the trial court allowed the same-juror rule to apply to the interrogatories.
    
    2023-Ohio-2408
    , ¶ 87 (2d Dist.). According to the Second District, “[t]he fault was
    in prohibiting the full jury from considering both negligence and proximate cause,
    and that deprivation was not harmless because it involved the right to have a full
    jury deliberate the case.” 
    Id.
     The Second District affirmed in part and reversed in
    part the trial court’s ruling on Hild’s motion for a new trial. It affirmed the denial
    as to the jury’s finding Ward negligent, and it reversed the ruling in all other
    respects and remanded the case for a new trial on the following issues: “(1) whether
    Ward’s negligence directly and proximately caused Boldman’s injury and death;
    (2) whether Ward was under the direction and control of Dr. Phillips; (3) whether
    Good Samaritan was responsible under the doctrine of agency by estoppel; and (4)
    the total amount of compensatory damages, if any, that were caused due to Ward’s
    negligence.” Id. at ¶ 94.
    {¶ 14} The hospital appealed to this court. We accepted three propositions
    of law for review from Good Samaritan Hospital, Samaritan Health Partners, and
    5
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Premier Health Partners and a fourth proposition of law for review from
    Consolidated Anesthesiologists, Dr. Phillips, and Ward:
    (1) The same juror rule, as established in O’Connell v.
    Chesapeake [& Ohio RR. Co., 
    58 Ohio St.3d 226
     (1991),] logically
    applies to the issues of negligence and proximate causation in cases
    of alleged medical negligence.
    (2) Courts must instruct the jury to follow the same juror rule
    when deliberating on the elements of negligence to avoid offending
    the Ohio Constitution.
    (3) A party must establish prejudice to warrant reversal.
    [(4)] Logic requires that the ‘same juror’ rule applies to
    negligence and proximate cause in actions based on negligence,
    including medical malpractice cases.
    See 
    2023-Ohio-3952
    .
    {¶ 15} We consider the first and fourth propositions contemporaneously.
    We need not address the second or third proposition to resolve this case. We hold
    that the same-juror rule applies in all negligence cases in which the jury answers
    sequential interrogatories that separate the elements of negligence to reach a general
    verdict. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Second District to the extent that
    it reversed the trial court’s ruling, and we reinstate the jury verdict.
    II. Law and Analysis
    A. Standard of Review
    {¶ 16} “De novo review is appropriate ‘where a trial court’s order is based
    on an erroneous standard or a misconstruction of the law . . . . In determining a
    pure question of law, an appellate court may properly substitute its judgment for
    that of the trial court . . . .’ ” (Ellipses in original.) State v. Morris, 2012-Ohio-
    6
    January Term, 2024
    2407, ¶ 16, quoting Castlebrook, Ltd. v. Dayton Properties Ltd. Partnership, 
    78 Ohio App.3d 340
    , 346 (2d Dist. 1992). Because the issue before us is purely a
    question of law, we apply de novo review. Having established the standard of
    review, we turn to the Ohio Constitution, from which the right to trial by jury
    emanates.
    B. The Ohio Constitution Requires Concurrence of
    at Least Three-Fourths of the Jurors
    {¶ 17} Under the Ohio Constitution, “[t]he right of trial by jury shall be
    inviolate, except that, in civil cases, laws may be passed to authorize the rendering
    of a verdict by the concurrence of not less than three-fourths of the jury.”
    (Emphasis added.) Ohio Const., art. I, § 5. The right to a trial by jury is “one of
    the most fundamental and long-standing rights in our legal system, having derived
    originally from the Magna Carta.” Arbino v. Johnson & Johnson, 
    2007-Ohio-6948
    ,
    ¶ 31, citing Cleveland Ry. Co. v. Halliday, 
    127 Ohio St. 278
    , 284 (1933). “As
    Thomas Jefferson stated, the right to trial by jury is ‘the only anchor, ever yet
    imagined by man, by which a government can be held to the principles of it’s [sic]
    constitution.’ ” (Bracketed text in original.) 
    Id.,
     quoting Letter from Thomas
    Jefferson to Thomas Paine (July 11, 1789), reprinted in 15 The Papers of Thomas
    Jefferson 269 (Boyd Ed. 1958).
    {¶ 18} The three-fourths-concurrence requirement was introduced at the
    Constitutional Convention of 1912.       See 1 Proceedings and Debates of the
    Constitutional Convention of the State of Ohio 91 (1912).            The proposed
    amendment was submitted to and approved by Ohio voters. See Barbara Terzian,
    Ohio’s Constitutions: An Historical Perspective, 51 Clev.St.L.Rev. 357, 381, 392,
    393, fn. 205 (2004). Prior to the 1912 amendment and subsequent law augmenting
    the amendment, jurors were required to be unanimous to render a verdict. R.A.
    Elder & Co. v. Shoffstal, 
    90 Ohio St. 265
    , 270 (1914), disapproved of on other
    grounds by Heuck v. State ex rel. Mack, 
    127 Ohio St. 247
     (1933).
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    {¶ 19} In crafting the amendment, the delegates to the Constitutional
    Convention of 1912 sought to ease challenges in the jury system that were created
    by the unanimity requirement. 1 Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional
    Convention of the State of Ohio at 141. Specifically, the purpose of the amendment
    was to preserve judicial resources by reducing the number of mistrials and avoiding
    undue delay and to help ensure that justice is achieved. Id. at 170. Some delegates
    to the convention noted that the unanimity requirement often resulted in modified
    jury verdicts or mistrials due to the obstinance of a few jurors. Id. at 169-170. One
    delegate said, “One or two obstinate men, by withholding their assent to agree with
    the majority of the jury, compel the jury either to disagree or agree to a verdict
    which is of such a nature that it does not do fair and equal justice in the case.” Id.
    at 141. Another said, “[S]ometimes there is an obstinate person on the jury . . .
    [who] thinks he is right and he hangs out, and thus he hangs the jury and there is a
    mistrial and another case.” Id. at 170.
    By the addition of the amendment providing for a three-
    fourths verdict the Constitutional Convention of 1912 clearly did not
    intend to take away any of the rights or powers theretofore had by
    the jury. The amendment appears to point in the other direction—
    that the administration of justice shall be kept as close to the people
    as possible and to prevent undue delay wherever possible.
    Isaac v. Intercoast Sales Corp., 
    132 Ohio St. 289
    , 295 (1937).                 With this
    understanding, we turn to the issue whether the same-juror rule or the any-juror rule
    applies to the constitutional requirement that at least three-fourths of a jury in a
    civil action concur to render a valid verdict. See Ohio Const., art. I, § 5.
    8
    January Term, 2024
    C. Same-Juror Rule Versus Any-Juror Rule
    {¶ 20} The same-juror rule and the any-juror rule are competing rules of
    law about which jurors must agree on the elements of a claim to support a verdict.
    The same-juror rule “requires that the same jurors agree on all of the questions
    comprising the verdict slip.” Fritz v. Wright, 
    589 Pa. 219
    , 229-230 (2006). If the
    same three-fourths of the jurors do not agree on all the issues, then the verdict is
    invalid. See O’Connell, 58 Ohio St.3d at 236-237. A major principle behind the
    same-juror rule is that certain issues are so inseparable or interdependent that it
    would be illogical to allow jurors who do not agree with the majority on one issue
    to “vote on subsequent [related] issues as if they agreed with the majority.” David
    A. Lombardero, Do Special Verdicts Improve the Structure of Jury Decision-
    Making?, 
    36 Jurimetrics J. 275
    , 301 (1996). The same-juror rule has been adopted
    by courts to prevent inconsistent answers that render a juror’s vote unreliable and
    invalid. O’Connell at 233.
    {¶ 21} The most common reason that courts give for applying the any-juror
    rule is “judicial economy.” O’Connell at 234. Under the any-juror rule, “all jurors
    vote on every issue, regardless of their votes on other issues. Any juror’s votes
    need not be logically consistent from issue to issue.”         Lombardero at 298.
    Jurisdictions that have adopted the any-juror rule reason that it reduces mistrials
    and delays in the trial process and that the rule is supported by the presumption that
    “‘each juror will be conscientious and fair in deliberating.’ ” O’Connell at 234,
    quoting Williams v. James, 
    113 N.J. 619
    , 632 (1989); see also Lombardero at 301,
    citing Ward v. Weekes, 
    107 N.J.Super. 351
     (1969).
    {¶ 22} In O’Connell, this court considered whether the same-juror rule or
    the any-juror rule should be applied in comparative-negligence cases. In examining
    the decisional law from other jurisdictions, we noted that two distinct lines of cases
    were revealed. O’Connell at 232. The line of cases analyzing the same-juror rule
    found that “the determination as to whether a party is causally negligent is not
    9
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    independent from, but is indeed inseparable from, the apportionment of
    negligence.” Id. at 233. Conversely, the line of cases that adopted the any-juror
    rule articulated that “jurors who dissent from attributing negligence to a party may
    still be able to apportion fault to that party.” Id. at 234. This court adopted the
    same-juror rule for comparative-negligence cases and held that “three-fourths of
    the jury must agree as to both negligence and proximate cause, and only those jurors
    who so find may participate in the apportionment of comparative negligence.” Id.
    at syllabus.
    D. Logic Requires Application of the Same-Juror Rule
    {¶ 23} Although duty, breach, and proximate cause are separate elements,
    they are interdependent because they are “integrally related in determining ultimate
    liability” for negligence. Ferguson v. N. States Power Co., 
    307 Minn. 26
    , 37
    (1976); see also Menifee v. Ohio Welding Prods., Inc., 
    15 Ohio St.3d 75
    , 77 (1984)
    (“to establish actionable negligence, one must show the existence of a duty, a
    breach of the duty, and an injury resulting proximately therefrom”). It would be
    illogical to allow a juror who does not find a duty or a breach of that duty to vote
    on the issue of proximate cause. We hold that the same-juror rule extends beyond
    comparative-negligence cases and applies in all negligence cases in which the
    elements of negligence are put separately to the jurors through interrogatories. For
    example, if a jury is composed of eight members, see Civ.R. 38(B), then the same
    six jurors must agree on the issues of duty, breach, and proximate cause to render a
    logical, valid verdict in favor of the plaintiff.
    {¶ 24} Our holding does not limit a juror’s ability to participate in the
    discussion on each element.         “[C]ases following the [same-juror] rule have
    consistently allowed dissenters to participate in the deliberation of other essential
    issues.”   H. William Walker Jr., Vote Distribution in Non-Unanimous Jury
    Verdicts, 27 Wash. & Lee L.Rev. 360, 367 (1970); see, e.g., Guth v. Fisher, 
    213 Wis. 323
    , 331 (1933) (In a case in which the law permitted a verdict upon a five-
    10
    January Term, 2024
    sixths vote of a 12-member jury, the court said: “While the jury may properly be
    instructed that it is their duty to endeavor to arrive at an agreement, and that the
    same ten should concur in the answers made, they should not be instructed that no
    other course is permissible.”). Therefore, jurors who do not find one element of a
    negligence action are not barred from participating in deliberation discussions
    about the other elements—they are prohibited only from voting on them.
    {¶ 25} Here, the trial court was correct to deny Hild’s motion for a new trial,
    because Hild was not deprived of her right to have a full jury deliberate on the
    elements of her claim. The interrogatories in this case were proper and were
    structured in accordance with the same-juror rule. Because the six jurors who found
    Ward negligent in her care of Boldman were the only jurors who voted on whether
    Ward’s negligence was the proximate cause of Boldman’s injury and death, the
    verdict was valid. Consequently, the Second District erred when it reversed in part
    the trial court’s ruling denying Hild’s motion for a new trial and remanded the cause
    for a new trial on several issues.
    III. Conclusion
    {¶ 26} Under Article I, Section 5 of the Ohio Constitution, laws may be
    passed in civil cases that render a jury verdict valid when at least three-fourths of
    the jurors concur. We hold that when jurors are presented with interrogatories that
    require them to separately decide the elements of a negligence claim, the same-
    juror rule applies.
    {¶ 27} In this case, the trial court properly followed the same-juror rule by
    limiting the jurors who could answer Interrogatory C—the question of proximate
    cause—to only those jurors who had answered Interrogatory A—the question of
    negligence—in the affirmative. Therefore, the trial court’s denial of Hild’s motion
    for a new trial was correct, and to the extent that the Second District Court of
    Appeals reversed that denial, we reverse its judgment. We affirm the portion of the
    11
    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    court of appeals’ judgment that affirmed the trial court’s judgment. The jury verdict
    in favor of the hospital is reinstated.
    Judgment affirmed in part
    and reversed in part.
    __________________
    BRUNNER, J., joined by STEWART, J., dissenting.
    {¶ 28} In delimiting which jurors may decide which elements of a
    negligence claim—that is, in applying the “same-juror rule” to determine which
    jurors may decide questions of negligence and causation—the majority upends
    more than 30 years of precedent and erodes the fundamental right to a trial by a full
    jury. According to the majority, “logic” requires this type of judicial interference.
    Majority opinion, ¶ 23. Logic is a primary type of analysis to reach conclusions in
    geometry, but it is not the north star for reaching conclusions of law, especially
    when prior precedent points the way. And even if “logic” is applied in resolving
    the legal questions presented in this appeal, it does not lead us where the majority
    has traveled today. Simply stated, neither logic nor precedent requires application
    of the same-juror rule in this case, and here, precedent exists and requires otherwise.
    {¶ 29} This case involves the questions whether there was negligence and
    whether negligence was the proximate cause of the injuries. These are separate
    questions of fact to be determined by a jury. Dillon v. OhioHealth Corp., 2015-
    Ohio-1389, ¶ 24 (10th Dist.) (“Proximate cause is a separate question not dependent
    on a finding of negligence.”), citing, Palsgraf v. Long Island RR. Co., 
    248 N.Y. 339
    (1928). The right to a jury trial under Article I, Section 5 of the Ohio Constitution
    entitles a party to have a full jury deliberate on each of these questions. I therefore
    dissent.
    O’Connell requires application of the any-majority rule
    {¶ 30} In O’Connell v. Chesapeake & Ohio RR. Co., 
    58 Ohio St.3d 226
    (1991), this court adopted the same-juror rule in comparative-negligence cases to
    12
    January Term, 2024
    prevent the inconsistency that could otherwise arise when juries record separate
    answers to interrogatories on the initial question of the existence of causal
    negligence by the plaintiff and the defendant (i.e., the question whether the plaintiff
    and/or the defendant was at fault in causing the injury) and the subsequent
    determination of the degree of fault as between the plaintiff and the defendant when
    both are found to have been negligent. O’Connell at 230, 235. The same-juror rule
    was judicially created in the context of comparative-negligence cases to avoid
    obtaining potentially inconsistent answers to interrogatories from individual jurors.
    Id. at 233. The rule is applied in comparative-negligence cases because “if a juror
    did not find that a defendant was negligent, that juror could not cogently find that,
    for instance, the defendant was 70 percent negligent.” Dillon at ¶ 21. Thus, the
    same-juror rule applies when the jury has determined that both a plaintiff and a
    defendant were at fault in causing the injury at issue, and it permits only the jurors
    who found fault to determine the comparative degree of that fault.
    {¶ 31} Conversely, the “any-majority rule” has been utilized in some
    jurisdictions to preserve the parties’ right to a trial by a full jury and assumes that
    even jurors who do not believe a party was at fault can “‘conscientiously and fairly
    apportion a percentage of fault . . . [—a] mental task [that is] no greater than or
    different from that expected of jurors in many other settings.’ ” O’Connell at 234,
    quoting Williams v. James, 
    113 N.J. 619
    , 632 (1989).
    {¶ 32} In O’Connell, however, this court decided that between these
    competing rules, the same-juror rule proved to be the more rational approach in the
    context of comparative negligence, reasoning that a juror who does not find a party
    at fault would be unlikely to assign any degree of fault to that party in the
    apportionment phase when more than one party has been found to have acted
    negligently. O’Connell at 235. We limited application of the same-juror rule to
    only this apportionment-of-negligence question and noted that the full jury was still
    required to deliberate on both negligence and proximate cause. Id. at 235-236.
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    SUPREME COURT OF OHIO
    Thus, under O’Connell, the any-majority rule applies to nonapportionment
    questions such as negligence and proximate cause, which are the questions at issue
    in this case.
    {¶ 33} The Second District Court of Appeals thoroughly explained that in
    the 30-plus years since O’Connell was decided, Ohio’s courts of appeals have
    applied the same-juror rule to the apportioning-fault issue in comparative-
    negligence cases and have outright rejected application of the rule to other issues.
    See 
    2023-Ohio-2408
    , ¶ 60-86 (2d Dist.). Ohio courts have been correct in these
    applications, thereby upholding a party’s right to have a full jury deliberate on every
    issue except apportioning fault in comparative-negligence cases. And until now,
    this court has not suggested that the courts of appeals were incorrect in applying
    the rules in this way. But without any explanation other than its stated reliance on
    “logic,” the majority now holds that the same-juror rule must be applied to the
    questions of negligence and proximate cause in a pure negligence claim.
    {¶ 34} It is neither inconsistent nor illogical for a juror to find that a
    defendant caused an injury without having been negligent. Accidents happen. It is
    also reasonable for a juror to find that a defendant was negligent but that the
    negligence was not the proximate cause of the injury. While O’Connell explains
    that the Ohio Constitution requires a concurrence of at least three-fourths of the
    jury for a valid verdict, O’Connell, 58 Ohio St.3d at 236, a trial court cannot allow
    less than full-jury participation on the questions of negligence and proximate cause,
    see Wildenthaler v. Galion Community Hosp., 
    2019-Ohio-4951
    , ¶ 29.
    {¶ 35} Relying on O’Connell to require application of the same-juror rule
    in this case makes bad law. The scenario that exists in comparative-negligence
    cases is simply not present in the questions that were posed to the jury in this case.
    The majority offers no legal or logical rationale for judicially delimiting which
    jurors may decide the elements of a pure negligence claim.
    14
    January Term, 2024
    Conclusion
    {¶ 36} For the reasons stated above, I dissent. I would affirm the Second
    District Court of Appeals’ judgment and remand the matter to the Montgomery
    County Common Pleas Court for a new trial. I would also recommend to the Ohio
    Jury Instructions Committee that the model instructions provided in Ohio Jury
    Instruction 1 OJI CV § 417.19 be corrected to better explain that full juries must
    deliberate on questions of proximate cause and negligence.
    __________________
    Brannon & Associates and Douglas D. Brannon; and Adkinson Law and
    Patrick K. Adkinson, for appellee.
    Bieser, Greer & Landis, L.L.P., John F. Haviland, and Jaren A. Hardesty,
    for appellants Good Samaritan Hospital, Samaritan Health Partners, and Premier
    Health Partners.
    Arnold Todaro Welch & Foliano Co., L.P.A., John B. Welch, and Gerald J.
    Todaro, for appellants Consolidated Anesthesiologists, Inc., Vincent M. Phillips,
    M.D., and Sandra Ward.
    __________________
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2023-1076

Judges: Kennedy, C.J.

Filed Date: 9/5/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/5/2024