Estate of Herbert Ross Shelton v. Greeneville Urgent Care and Occupational Medicine Clinic ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                                                         06/24/2019
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    April 15, 2019 Session
    ESTATE OF HERBERT ROSS SHELTON v. GREENEVILLE
    URGENT CARE AND OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE CLINIC, ET AL.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Greene County
    No. 14CV317TJW      Thomas J. Wright, Judge
    No. E2018-00862-COA-R3-CV
    The Estate of Herbert Ross Shelton (“Plaintiff”)1 appeals the judgment of the Circuit
    Court for Greene County (“the Trial Court”) granting summary judgment to Greeneville
    Urgent Care and Occupational Medicine Clinic and Takoma Regional Hospital in this
    healthcare liability action after finding and holding that Plaintiff’s sole expert witness
    was not qualified to testify in this case. We find and hold that Plaintiff’s expert did not
    practice in a profession or specialty during the relevant time period which would make
    his testimony relevant to the issues in this case, and thus, was not qualified to testify
    pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-115. We, therefore, affirm.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed
    Case Remanded
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CHARLES D.
    SUSANO, JR., and RICHARD H. DINKINS, JJ., joined.
    Jeffrey A. Cobble, Greeneville, Tennessee, for the appellant, the Estate of Herbert Ross
    Shelton, by Executor Jeffrey A. Cobble.
    Heidi A. Barcus and Hillary B. Jones, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellees,
    Greeneville Urgent Care and Occupational Medicine Clinic and Takoma Regional
    Hospital.
    1
    Mr. Shelton died during the pendency of this suit and his estate was substituted as the party plaintiff.
    For ease of reading only, we use the term ‘Plaintiff’ in this Opinion when referring to Mr. Shelton and
    also when referring to his estate.
    OPINION
    Background
    In April of 2013, Plaintiff presented to Greeneville Urgent Care and Occupational
    Medicine Clinic (“the Clinic”) seeking pain medication. Plaintiff previously had been a
    patient at the Clinic. Allegedly, medical assistant Carole Hayes (“Hayes”) was alone in
    an examination room with Plaintiff, and she instructed Plaintiff to get on the examination
    table. Plaintiff told Hayes that he could not, and she insisted that she needed for him to
    get on the examination table in order to take his blood pressure. Plaintiff tried to step up
    on a stool, and allegedly the stool slipped or moved causing Plaintiff to lose his balance
    and fall. Plaintiff alleged that he struck the wall of the examination room and came to
    rest on his buttocks on the concrete floor. Allegedly, Hayes and Judy Seaton (“Seaton”),
    a licensed practical nurse (“LPN”), assisted Plaintiff in rising from the floor and sitting in
    a chair. Hayes disputes that Plaintiff suffered a fall. She testified that as Plaintiff went
    down she held him, and he sort of slid down her leg. Seaton, who was outside of the
    room, testified that she heard a noise, and she found Plaintiff sitting on the examination
    table when she entered the exam room. Seaton stated that Hayes told her what had
    happened, but Seaton could not remember what Hayes told her. No fall was documented
    in the medical records.
    After the alleged fall, Plaintiff was seen by nurse practitioner Marsha
    Montemarano (“Montemarano”) who arranged for Plaintiff to be transported by
    wheelchair to the adjacent Takoma Regional Hospital (“the Hospital”). X-rays were
    taken, and Plaintiff was sent home despite his complaints of pain. The next day, Plaintiff
    received a telephone call from someone at the Hospital advising that they were sending
    an ambulance to pick Plaintiff up to take him to the Hospital because the x-rays showed
    that Plaintiff had broken his back. Plaintiff then underwent surgery and physical therapy.
    Plaintiff filed suit against the Clinic and the Hospital (“collectively Defendants”)
    alleging, in part, that the stool was dangerous, that despite knowing of Plaintiff’s physical
    handicaps the Clinic staff insisted that he mount the examination table without assistance,
    that the Clinic failed to document the fall in his medical records suggesting a cover-up of
    negligence, and that the Hospital failed to promptly diagnose and treat his injuries.
    Defendants filed motions for summary judgment supported, in part, by expert affidavits.
    As pertinent to this appeal, Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to
    disqualify Plaintiff’s expert, Edward S. Kaplan, M.D.
    After a hearing, the Trial Court entered its order on August 9, 2017, granting
    summary judgment on all of the healthcare liability claims after finding and holding, inter
    alia, that Plaintiff failed to show that any of the alleged acts of Hayes, Seaton, or
    2
    Montemarano caused or contributed to his injuries, that Plaintiff failed to submit
    evidence showing that his expert, Dr. Kaplan, was familiar with the standard of care for
    nurse practitioners, LPNs, or medical assistants in an urgent care setting, that Plaintiff
    failed to demonstrate that Dr. Kaplan practiced in a similar specialty during the year
    preceding April 2013 when the alleged fall occurred, that Plaintiff had failed to show that
    Dr. Kaplan was familiar with the standard of care for emergency room physicians, and
    that Dr. Kaplan while having impressive credentials had retired as a practicing
    neurosurgeon in 2001 and did only occasional neurology consultations and volunteer
    work at a non-profit clinic during the year preceding April of 2013. The Trial Court
    allowed the premises liability claim against the Clinic with regard to the allegedly
    defective stool to continue.
    Plaintiff filed a motion to reconsider judgment with regard to the motion for
    summary judgment to exclude Dr. Kaplan’s testimony. Plaintiff also filed a motion to
    alter or amend. The Trial Court treated both motions as Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59.04 motions
    to alter or amend and denied them reiterating that Dr. Kaplan was incompetent to testify
    about the standard of care for medical assistants and LPNs in an urgent care setting and
    incompetent to testify because he had not practiced during the relevant time period. The
    Trial Court also addressed the argument that Plaintiff did not need a standard of care
    expert pursuant to res ipsa loquitur finding that an expert would be needed to explain
    how a medical assistant should have responded to assisting Plaintiff and that an expert
    would be needed on the issue of what should and should not have been documented in the
    chart.
    The Trial Court then addressed the motion for summary judgment with regard to
    the allegedly defective stool. Defendants filed the affidavit of Montemarano stating that
    the stool was not defective as evidenced by other patients who had used it on the day of
    the alleged fall and that nothing had happened to the stool to render it defective before
    Plaintiff was seen or during the time when Plaintiff was seen. Plaintiff responded and
    pointed to his own deposition testimony stating that the stool was defective.
    After a hearing, the Trial Court entered its order on January 19, 2018 finding and
    holding that Plaintiff had failed to produce any evidence of negligence and failed to
    produce evidence that Defendants had any actual or constructive notice that the stool was
    defective. The Trial Court dismissed the premises liability claim.
    Plaintiff filed another motion to alter or amend or for additional findings of fact
    alleging that when the Trial Court made its finding that Dr. Kaplan had not practiced
    during the relevant time period it had not addressed the fact that Dr. Kaplan was in the
    business of performing independent medical examinations and testifying as an expert
    witness.
    3
    After a hearing on Plaintiff’s motion, the Trial Court denied the motion to alter or
    amend or to make additional findings of fact finding and holding: “Dr. Kaplan testified
    that he was engaged in providing expert testimony and medical advisory services for
    plaintiffs and defendants during the year preceding the incident in this case but the
    undersigned, assuming this to be true, does not find this to be evidence that he practiced
    medicine in any legally relevant capacity in the year preceding April 2013.” Plaintiff
    appeals to this Court.
    Discussion
    Although not stated exactly as such, Plaintiff raises eight issues on appeal: 1)
    whether the Trial Court erred in hearing Defendants’ motions for summary judgment
    when the statement of material facts was filed less than thirty days prior to the hearing; 2)
    whether a licensed neurosurgeon who examines patients, assists patients on to
    examination tables, and keeps his own records is competent to testify as to the standard of
    care of a LPN; 3) whether a licensed neurosurgeon who examines patients, assists
    patients on to examination tables, and keeps his own records is competent to testify as to
    the standard of care of a medical assistant; 4) whether being available for hire to perform
    independent medical examinations qualifies as practicing pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. §
    29-26-115 regardless of the fact that no independent medical examinations were
    performed during the relevant one year period; 5) whether performing any portion of an
    independent medical examination qualifies as practicing pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. §
    29-26-115; 6) whether volunteer work at a community clinic qualifies as practicing
    pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-115; 7) whether any combination of the actions
    described in issues 4 through 6 qualify as practicing pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-
    26-115; and, 8) whether the issues in this case require expert opinion or are governed by
    res ipsa loquitur. Defendants raise a separate issue, which we restate as: whether this
    Court lacks jurisdiction over the appeal because Plaintiff allegedly failed to file a timely
    notice of appeal due to his filing of serial post-judgment motions in violation of Tenn. R.
    Civ. P. 59.01.
    We first will address Defendants’ issue regarding whether this Court lacks
    jurisdiction over the appeal because Plaintiff allegedly failed to file a timely notice of
    appeal due to his filing of serial post-judgment motions in violation of Tenn. R. Civ. P.
    59.01. As pertinent, Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59.01 provides:
    59.01. Motions Included. – Motions to which this rule is applicable are:
    (1) under Rule 50.02 for judgment in accordance with a motion for a
    directed verdict; (2) under Rule 52.02 to amend or make additional findings
    of fact, whether or not an alteration of the judgment would be required if
    the motion is granted; (3) under Rule 59.07 for a new trial; or (4) under
    4
    Rule 59.04 to alter or amend the judgment. These motions are the only
    motions contemplated in these rules for extending the time for taking steps
    in the regular appellate process. Motions to reconsider any of these
    motions are not authorized and will not operate to extend the time for
    appellate proceedings.
    Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59.01.
    The Trial Court treated the two motions filed by Plaintiff after entry of the order
    granting summary judgment to Defendants on the healthcare liability claims as Tenn. R.
    Civ. P. 59.04 motions to alter or amend and denied the motions. Defendants argue that
    because of this, the motion to alter or amend or for additional findings of fact filed by
    Plaintiff after entry of the January 19, 2018 order granting summary judgment on the
    premises liability claim was actually a motion to reconsider the earlier motions, which is
    disallowed pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59.01.
    A careful and thorough review of the record on appeal reveals that Plaintiff did
    indeed file more than one motion pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59. Only one of these
    motions, however, was filed after entry of the final order, i.e., the January 19, 2018 order
    granting summary judgment on the premises liability claim with regard to the allegedly
    defective stool. Rule 54.02 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure provides, in
    pertinent part:
    54.02. Multiple Claims for Relief – Motion to Intervene. – (1) When
    more than one claim for relief is present in an action, whether as a claim,
    counterclaim, cross-claim, or third party claim, or when multiple parties are
    involved, the court, whether at law or in equity, may direct the entry of a
    final judgment as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties
    only upon an express determination that there is no just reason for delay
    and upon an express direction for the entry of judgment. In the absence of
    such determination and direction, any order or other form of decision,
    however designated, that adjudicates fewer than all the claims or the rights
    and liabilities of fewer than all the parties shall not terminate the action as
    to any of the claims or parties, and the order or other form of decision is
    subject to revision at any time before the entry of the judgment adjudicating
    all the claims and the rights and liabilities of all the parties.
    The Trial Court did not direct entry of a final judgment pursuant to Rule 54.02
    when it granted summary judgment on the healthcare liability claims. As such, the
    August 9, 2017 order was not a final order. The final order in this case was the Trial
    Court’s January 19, 2018 order granting summary judgment on the premises liability
    5
    claim, which fully and finally disposed of all remaining issues in the case. Plaintiff filed
    only one motion pursuant to Tenn. R. Civ. P. 59.01 after entry of this order. As such, we
    do not find that Plaintiff filed serial post-judgment motions, nor do we find that Plaintiff
    failed to timely file a notice of appeal. This issue is without merit.
    We turn now to the issues raised by Plaintiff. Of these issues, we first consider
    whether the Trial Court erred in hearing Defendants’ motions for summary judgment
    when the statement of material facts was filed less than thirty days prior to the hearing.
    In his brief on appeal, Plaintiff states that Defendants filed their statement of material
    facts less than thirty days prior to the hearing on the motions for summary judgment and
    argues that because of this alleged violation of Tenn. R. Civ. P. 56 the hearing should
    have been continued. In support of this argument, Plaintiff points to the transcript of the
    hearing on the motions for summary judgment wherein he alleges that he attempted to
    bring this alleged error to the Trial Court’s attention.
    A review of the page cited by Plaintiff shows that at the very end of the
    arguments, Plaintiff attempted to point out something to the Trial Court and was correctly
    told that Defendants were entitled to the last word as it was their motion and that
    argument was concluded. It is not clear from this exchange what point Plaintiff was
    attempting to raise, but it is clear that he waited until the very last minute to attempt to
    raise it. Nowhere within the record on appeal does it show that Plaintiff ever timely
    requested a continuance of the hearing because the statement of material facts was filed
    less than thirty days prior to the hearing. Plaintiff claims that he should have been
    allowed additional time to respond to the motions for summary judgment, but he makes
    no showing that he requested additional time at an appropriate point during the
    proceedings. As Plaintiff failed to properly request a continuance of the hearing on the
    motions for summary judgment, this issue is without merit.
    We next address Plaintiff’s second and third issues regarding whether a licensed
    neurosurgeon who examines patients, assists patients on to examination tables, and keeps
    his own records is competent to testify as to the standard of care of either a LPN or a
    medical assistant. The issue Plaintiff is attempting to raise is whether the Trial Court
    erred in finding that Plaintiff’s expert Dr. Kaplan was not qualified to testify pursuant to
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-115, which provides, in pertinent part:
    (b) No person in a health care profession requiring licensure under the laws
    of this state shall be competent to testify in any court of law to establish the
    facts required to be established by subsection (a), unless the person was
    licensed to practice in the state or a contiguous bordering state a profession
    or specialty which would make the person’s expert testimony relevant to
    the issues in the case and had practiced this profession or specialty in one
    6
    (1) of these states during the year preceding the date that the alleged injury
    or wrongful act occurred. This rule shall apply to expert witnesses
    testifying for the defendant as rebuttal witnesses. The court may waive this
    subsection (b) when it determines that the appropriate witnesses otherwise
    would not be available.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-115(b) (2012). Specifically, Plaintiff is contesting the Trial
    Court’s finding that Plaintiff had “failed to demonstrate that, in the year preceding April
    2013; Dr. Kaplan practiced in a similar specialty to render an opinion about the standard
    of acceptable professional practice governing Nurse Practitioner Montemarano, Nurse
    Seaton, or Medical Assistant Hayes.”
    Plaintiff points to Dr. Kaplan’s testimony wherein Dr. Kaplan testified he is not
    trained as a LPN or certified as a LPN but stated: “But I have dealt with LPN and the ser
    - - LPNs and the services they provide. I’ve dealt with nurse practitioners and the
    services they provide. And I know better than most people what to expect of the quality
    of care and the service provided.” Plaintiff then correctly focuses on the fact that our
    Supreme Court has noted that an expert witness need not practice the same specialty as
    the defendant as long as the expert witness is sufficiently familiar with the standard of
    care at issue and otherwise is qualified. Cox v. M.A. Primary and Urgent Care Clinic,
    
    313 S.W.3d 240
    , 260 n.24 (Tenn. 2010). Plaintiff, however, overlooks the fact that Dr.
    Kaplan then testified that he had not worked with LPNs or nurse practitioners in an
    urgent care setting during the relevant time period. Dr. Kaplan testified that he did
    “interact” with LPNs and nursing assistants during his work at the Church Health Center.
    When questioned further about his work at the Church Health Center, Dr. Kaplan
    testified: “I was rendering - - rendering neurological and neurosurgical opinions for
    patients who came to that center because they were sort of caught in a financial gap or
    insurance gap where they really didn’t have coverage.”
    Dr. Kaplan testified that he is a “neurosurgeon consultant.” When asked what a
    neurosurgeon was, he stated:
    A neurosurgeon is a physician who takes care of patients with
    diseases of the central nervous system, peripheral nervous system, pituitary
    glands, narrowing of the arteries in the neck, fractures when accompanied
    by neurological problems, soft tissue injuries in the region of peripheral
    nerves, head injuries. Those are the major topics that we deal with.
    Dr. Kaplan testified that he sees patients and he “advise[s] them what they need to do
    with regard to their neurosurgical and sometimes neurological problems.”
    7
    Dr. Kaplan was asked if he had been retired from the clinical practice of medicine
    for over fifteen years, and he stated:
    From the performance of neurosurgery for 15 years.             I have
    consulted at the Church Health Center.
    I get and have received innumerable calls over the years from
    doctors concerned about their condition which would be neurosurgical, and
    I have advised them. The same holds true for friends, relatives, old
    patients, et cetera.
    Dr. Kaplan then was asked if that was the extent of his practice of medicine, and he
    stated: “That - - I think you’ve covered it.”
    Dr. Kaplan stated that he was familiar with urgent care facilities because he had
    taken his wife to one several times. He was asked how he was familiar with the standard
    of care for urgent care physicians in Greene County, and Dr. Kaplan stated that urgent
    care facilities in Greene County would be similar to urgent care facilities that he has seen
    in Memphis. He then stated:
    Well, I’ve been to urgent care facilities. I’ve taken my wife there
    several times. And some of the facilities that I’ve been involved with over
    the years were like an urgent care center in a either home for the disabled or
    assisted living type situation. Those are very similar I’ve seen to urgent
    care centers.
    But I have seen urgent care centers in Collierville, in Memphis and
    probably - - probably others. I would think maybe during some of my
    visits to areas where people would refer in to us, we would pass through
    their facilities which were basically urgent care centers.
    But I was not involved there. I was not employed there. I may have
    received referrals from those places.
    Dr. Kaplan then was asked how the nursing homes and homes for the disabled were
    similar to the urgent care center involved in this case, and he stated: “Well, they have
    examining rooms. Many times, the examining rooms are staffed by nurses, nurses’
    assistants, nurse practitioners.” When asked if that was the extent of the similarities, Dr.
    Kaplan stated: “Yes. I think those are - - I think those are similar.” He also stated that
    when he visited his family practitioner as a patient that he “would see the way that they
    managed the situation. And it seemed very similar to urgent care; although, they were
    8
    not as prepared for emergencies as at an urgent care center.” Dr. Kaplan reiterated that
    he was familiar with urgent care by virtue of taking his wife, a friend, or a neighbor there
    and further stated: “So I am familiar with urgent care facilities to some degree.” Dr.
    Kaplan admitted, however: “I have not worked in an urgent care center. The closest that
    I’ve come to that would be the Church Health Center. It’s similar in ways, but it’s not
    urgent care. Those persons who come to the Church Health Center don’t frequently have
    emergencies. They are not urgent patients.”
    In essence, Plaintiff asserts in his brief on appeal that because Dr. Kaplan himself
    examines patients his opinions about patient safety in an examination room and charting
    entries in a medical record are relevant. We, as did the Trial Court, disagree. If this were
    the case then any provider who examined patients in any examination room would be
    competent to testify in this case, an outcome which clearly does not comport with Tenn.
    Code Ann. § 29-26-115(b). Dr. Kaplan’s experience is in the area of neurological and
    neurosurgical work. He admittedly has no experience in the urgent care setting either in
    practicing urgent care medicine or in supervising LPNs, medical assistants, or nurse
    practitioners who practice urgent care medicine.
    Furthermore, Dr. Kaplan lacks familiarity with the standard of care of
    professionals working in an urgent care facility. He testified that his understanding of
    this standard comes from being a patient at an urgent care facility and from taking his
    wife and friends to urgent care facilities. Dr. Kaplan attempted to show that urgent care
    facilities were similar to nursing homes or homes for the disabled, with which he claimed
    to have some familiarity. The only similarities he was able to articulate, however, were
    that all of these facilities have examining rooms that often are staffed by nurses, nursing
    assistants, or nurse practitioners. Many other types of medical facilities also share these
    similarities. These similarities are wholly insufficient to establish Dr. Kaplan’s
    familiarity with the standard of care of professionals working in an urgent care facility.
    Plaintiff failed to show that Dr. Kaplan’s profession of rendering neurological and
    neurosurgical opinions is sufficiently similar to the profession of either a LPN, a medical
    assistant, or a nurse practitioner working in an urgent care setting to make Dr. Kaplan’s
    testimony relevant to the issues in this case.
    Although Plaintiff does not raise a specific issue regarding whether Dr. Kaplan
    was qualified to testify as to the standard of care of an emergency room physician2, we
    note that the Trial Court correctly held:
    At oral argument, the Court held that Dr. Kaplan was incompetent to
    testify about the actions of Dr. Boggs because Dr. Kaplan could not opine
    2
    The Hospital’s liability in this case, if any, would arise out of the actions or omissions of its emergency
    room physician, Dr. Boggs.
    9
    about the standard of acceptable professional practice governing
    emergency-room physicians in Greene County, Tennessee since he neither
    specialized in emergency-room care nor did he practice emergency-room
    care or similar specialty in the year preceding April 2013; although Dr.
    Kaplan listed numerous medical facilities that he has been affiliated with in
    his affidavit and CV, he failed to demonstrate any evidence that he
    practiced in the same or similar specialty as Dr. Boggs in the year
    preceding April 2013. Dr. Kaplan, though possessing exemplary and
    impressive credentials, retire[d] as a practicing nuerosurgeon [sic] in 2001
    and did only occasional nuerology [sic] consultations as a volunteer at a
    non-profit clinic in the year preceding this incident. So too, Dr. Kaplan
    failed to come forward with evidence demonstrating how he was familiar
    with the standard of acceptable professional practice governing emergency-
    room physicians in Greene County, Tennessee.
    We agree with the Trial Court that Plaintiff failed to show that Dr. Kaplan
    practiced in the same or a similar specialty as the emergency-room physician in the year
    preceding April 2013. We also agree that Plaintiff failed to show evidence that Dr.
    Kaplan was familiar with the standard of acceptable professional practice governing
    emergency-room physicians in Greene County, Tennessee. As such, Dr. Kaplan was not
    qualified to testify about the actions or omissions of the emergency-room physician in
    this case.
    Plaintiff’s fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh issues all concern whether the Trial
    Court erred in finding that Dr. Kaplan did not practice during the relevant one year period
    prior to the incident alleged in this case. Specifically, in its April 19, 2018 order the Trial
    Court amended its prior order to add the following finding:
    Dr. Kaplan testified that he was engaged in providing expert
    testimony and medical advisory services for plaintiffs and defendants
    during the year preceding the incident in this case but the undersigned,
    assuming this to be true, does not find this to be evidence that he practiced
    medicine in any legally relevant capacity in the year preceding April 2013.
    Although providing expert testimony does not qualify as practicing medicine, we
    find that Dr. Kaplan did practice medicine during the relevant time period. Specifically,
    Dr. Kaplan’s work at the Church Health Center, although unpaid, qualifies as practicing
    medicine. This practice, however, as discussed more fully above, was not in a profession
    or specialty that would make Dr. Kaplan’s testimony relevant to the issues in the instant
    case. We need not consider whether the other alleged actions on the part of Dr. Kaplan
    constituted practicing during the relevant time period as we already have determined that
    10
    Dr. Kaplan did practice during the relevant time period. The fact that Dr. Kaplan may
    have practiced as a “neurosurgeon consultant” during the relevant time period, however,
    is immaterial to the case now before us on appeal.
    Finally, we consider whether the issues in this case require expert opinion or are
    governed by res ipsa loquitur. As this Court explained in Gilreath v. Chattanooga-
    Hamilton Cty. Hosp. Auth.:
    Historically, res ipsa loquitur, defined, in pertinent part, by Black’s Law
    Dictionary, 10th ed., as “the thing speaks for itself,” was reserved for cases
    where the act was so obviously negligent that a layperson’s common
    knowledge allowed an inference of negligence. German v. Nichopoulos,
    
    577 S.W.2d 197
    , 202 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1978), overruled by Seavers v.
    Methodist Med. Ctr. of Oak Ridge, 
    9 S.W.3d 86
    (Tenn. 1999). Our
    Supreme Court later expanded the reach of the doctrine to include cases
    that concern complex medical issues that are beyond the layperson’s
    general understanding and that require expert testimony to prove causation,
    the standard of care, and/or that the injury does not ordinarily occur in the
    absence of negligence. 
    Seavers, 9 S.W.3d at 97
    . Application of the
    doctrine is precluded in cases where evidence of a specific act of
    negligence is introduced at trial. Hughes v. Hastings, 
    469 S.W.2d 378
    , 397
    (Tenn.1971).
    Gilreath v. Chattanooga-Hamilton Cty. Hosp. Auth., No. E2015–02058–COA–R3–CV,
    
    2016 WL 3435788
    , at *8 (Tenn. Ct. App. June 15, 2016), no appl. perm. appeal filed. As
    pertinent, Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-115 provides:
    (c) In a health care liability action as described in subsection (a), there shall
    be no presumption of negligence on the part of the defendant; provided,
    that there shall be a rebuttable presumption that the defendant was
    negligent where it is shown by the proof that the instrumentality causing
    injury was in the defendant’s (or defendants’) exclusive control and that the
    accident or injury was one which ordinarily doesn’t occur in the absence of
    negligence.
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-115(c) (2012).
    In his brief on appeal Plaintiff asserts that there were only two people in the
    examination room at the time of the incident, Plaintiff and Hayes, and that Hayes
    “controlled both the conduct of [Plaintiff] and the use of the examination table.” Plaintiff
    also asserts that the issues in this case fall within acts of negligence so obvious that they
    11
    are within the common knowledge of laymen. In his reply brief on appeal, Plaintiff
    asserts that because no entry of Plaintiff’s fall was made in the medical record,
    “[Plaintiff’s] fall must rely upon circumstantial evidence.
    Defendants assert in their brief on appeal that res ipsa loquitur has traditionally
    been used in cases “where direct evidence of a defendant’s negligence is either
    inaccessible to or unknown by the plaintiff,” such as when an unconscious plaintiff is
    injured during medical treatment. Defendants argue that Plaintiff was conscious and alert
    when the alleged injury occurred and that he specifically described the incident in detail,
    and therefore, res ipsa loquitur should not apply to this case.
    Defendants further assert that the ‘instrumentality’ that caused Plaintiff’s alleged
    injury was not the examination table or a footstool, but instead was Plaintiff’s “own
    slipping and falling, under his own power,” and because of this, Defendants “cannot be
    construed as having exclusive control of [Plaintiff’s] walking, of his own volition, toward
    the examination table.” Defendants point to the evidence that Plaintiff walked down the
    hallway to the examination room “fine,” that he did not need assistance walking, and that
    he had no trouble stepping up on to a scale. Defendants also argue that even if the
    footstool were considered to be the ‘instrumentality’ causing injury, according to
    Plaintiff’s complaint when he used the footstool to mount the examination table the stool
    slipped from under his foot, causing him to fall. Defendants argue that his shows that
    Plaintiff “alone controlled the alleged footstool . . . .”
    We do not find the case now before us on appeal to be the type of case where res
    ipsa loquitur applies. Plaintiff failed to show that the ‘instrumentality’ that caused his
    alleged fall was in Defendants’ exclusive control. He further failed to show that his
    alleged injury was one which ordinarily doesn’t occur in the absence of negligence.
    Furthermore, it is beyond the common knowledge of laypersons what actions on the part
    of Hayes were required to meet the standard of care required of a medical assistant in a
    situation such as the one at issue in this case.
    Having found no error, we affirm the Trial Court’s grant of summary judgment to
    Defendants.
    12
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the Trial Court is affirmed, and this cause is remanded to the
    Trial Court for collection of the costs below. The costs on appeal are assessed against the
    appellant, the Estate of Herbert Ross Shelton.
    ____________________________________
    D. MICHAEL SWINEY, CHIEF JUDGE
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E2018-00862-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Judge D. Michael Swiney

Filed Date: 6/24/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/24/2019