Kenneth Flyte, P.r. v. Summit View Clinic ( 2014 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINq O
    DIVISION IIlY''\
    KENNETH FLYTE, as Personal                                                   No. 43964 -6 -II
    Representative of THE ESTATE OF
    KATHRYN FLYTE, on behalf of their son
    JACOB FLYTE, and as Personal
    Representative of THE ESTATE OF
    ABBIGAIL FLYTE,
    Appellants;                    PUBLISHED OPINION
    v.
    SUMMIT         VIEW         CLINIC,         a   Washington
    corporation,
    Respondents.
    BJORGEN, A. C. J. —           Kenneth Flyte sued Summit View Clinic ( Clinic) following the death
    of his wife Kathryn and their infant daughter Abbigail. 1 Kathryn had visited the Clinic while
    feeling ill during pregnancy and died shortly after from the H1N12 influenza virus. Abbigail,
    delivered by caesarean section while Kathryn lay comatose, died some months later. Kenneth
    based his claim primarily on the fact that the Clinic staff did not inform Kathryn about H1N1 or
    offer her Tamiflu, a drug often effective in treating the illness. A jury found by special verdict
    that the Clinic and its staff were not negligent and did not fail to provide informed consent, and
    the trial court denied Kenneth' s subsequent CR 59 motion for a new trial.
    1 We refer to the Flytes by their first names for clarity. We intend no disrespect.
    2
    Also known     as   the "   swine   flu."
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    Kenneth appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in denying the CR 59 motion because it
    improperly ( 1)    admitted evidence of       Kenneth'   s prior settlement with a    different party, ( 2)
    instructed the jury concerning the prior settlement, (3) considered a juror' s declaration
    concerning deliberations, and ( 4) instructed the jury as to the duty of informed consent. Because
    the trial court erred in admitting evidence of and instructing the jury about the prior settlement,
    and because its instruction on informed consent misstated the law, we reverse.
    FACTS
    Kathryn began feeling ill on the evening of June 23, 2009, and visited the Clinic the
    morning of June 26. She was seven months pregnant. In the preceding months, the Clinic had
    received public    health   alerts   from   various authorities about a global pandemic of "swine         flu,"   a
    potentially fatal illness caused by the H1N1 influenza virus. Although many of Kathryn' s
    symptoms were consistent with influenza, and the public health alerts recommended treating
    pregnant women       prophylactically       with a
    drug known   as "   Tamiflu," the Clinic staff did not
    inform Kathryn about the pandemic or the available treatment. Ex. 5; Verbatim Report of
    Proceedings ( VRP) ( July      30, 2012) at 116 -20, 129.
    Kathryn' s condition progressively deteriorated, and she received treatment from a
    number of different providers, including St. Joseph' s Medical Center, part of the Franciscan
    Health System ( Franciscan).          Abbigail was delivered by caesarean section on June 30, after
    Kathryn had been placed in a medically induced coma. Kathryn died on August 11, 2009, and
    Abbigail died on February 21, 2010.
    Kenneth sued the Clinic personally, as representative of the estates of Kathryn and
    Abbigail, and as guardian of his son, Jacob, alleging ( 1) medical negligence for failing to test for
    2
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    H1N1 or administer Tamiflu prophylactically and ( 2) breach of the duty of informed consent for
    failing to inform Kathryn about the pandemic and the available treatment. During discovery, the
    Clinic learned that Kenneth had already settled with Franciscan for $3. 5 million. The Clinic
    moved in limine for a ruling that evidence of the Franciscan settlement was admissible,
    requesting an instruction that the jury could use the evidence for the purpose of considering only
    whether Kenneth had already been fully compensated for his injuries. The trial court granted the
    motion.
    During voir dire, a venire member disclosed that she worked in management at
    Franciscan. Kenneth sought to question the venire member about the settlement, but the Clinic
    objected and the court did not allow the question. Kenneth did not challenge the individual for
    cause, and she ultimately served on the jury as foreperson.
    At trial, the physician who saw Kathryn the day she visited the Clinic, William Marsh,
    M.D., testified that " influenza wasn' t something I had been concerned about clinically [ because]
    I' d   ruled   that   out."    VRP (July 30, 2012) at 85. Marsh admitted, however, that he had no
    recollection of the events independent of the notes he had made shortly after the exam. The
    notes reflect that Marsh' s " assessment" after the visit was that Kathryn had an upper respiratory
    infection. Ex. 14; VRP ( July 26, 2012)                  at   53. Marsh testified that the " assessment" that appears
    on     the   exam notes, which          he   also called a "   working     diagnosis," represents " what I think the most
    likely       diagnosis is for the   reason       they   carne   in."   VRP ( July 26, 2012) at 47, 52. Marsh' s notes
    also contain          the   following   caveat: "    Chills    and sweats[:]    not sure where com[]   ing from[.   E] xam
    normal[.]        If   gets worse   to   go   to ER."    Ex. 14.
    3
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    At the close of the trial, over Kenneth' s objection, the trial court instructed the jury that
    a] physician has no duty to disclose treatments for a condition that may indicate a risk to the
    patient' s   health   until   the   physician   diagnoses that      condition."   Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 159. Also
    over Kenneth' s objection, the court gave the Clinic' s proposed limiting instruction concerning
    Kenneth' s settlement with Franciscan. Both parties' counsel discussed the Franciscan settlement
    in opening statements and closing arguments, and the Clinic cross -examined Kenneth concerning
    it. The jury found by special verdict that the Clinic was not negligent and did not fail to provide
    informed consent.
    Kenneth moved for a new trial under CR 59, based largely on the trial court' s admission
    of   the Franciscan     settlement evidence and        the   challenged    jury   instructions.   After considering
    argument from the parties and a declaration submitted by the jury foreperson, the court denied
    the motion. Kenneth appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Kenneth argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a new trial for three
    reasons: (    1) it erroneously admitted evidence of Kenneth' s settlement with Franciscan and
    issued   an   improper    limiting     instruction to the    jury   regarding that   settlement, ( 2)   it erred in
    considering declarations from jurors concerning the deliberations in ruling on the motion for a
    new trial, and ( 3) the jury instruction concerning informed consent misstated the law, effectively
    preventing Kenneth from arguing his theory of the case. Concluding that the trial court erred by
    admitting evidence of and instructing the jury concerning the Franciscan settlement and by
    incorrectly instructing the jury on the law of informed consent, we reverse. Resolving the appeal
    on these grounds, we decline to address Kenneth' s remaining claims of error.
    4
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Under CR 59( a) the court may vacate a verdict and grant a new trial for any one of the
    nine reasons listed in the rule, as long as it materially affects the substantial rights of a party.
    Among the nine reasons listed in CR 59( a) are:
    1)
    Irregularity in the proceedings of the court, jury or adverse party, or any order
    of the court, or abuse of discretion, by which such party was prevented from having a fair
    trial;
    8)    Error in law occurring at the trial and objected to at the time by the party
    making the application; or
    9)    That substantial justice has not been done.
    We generally will not reverse an order denying a motion for new trial absent abuse of
    discretion   by the    trial   court.   See Aluminum Co. of Am.           v.   Aetna Cas. & Sur. Co. ( ALCOA), 
    140 Wn.2d 517
    , 537, 
    998 P. 2d 856
     ( 2000). However, when,, as here, the denial of a new trial is
    challenged based on an error of law, we review the denial de novo. See Ayers v. Johnson, 
    117 Wn. 2d 747
    , 768, 
    818 P. 2d 1337
     ( 1991); CR 59( a).
    We also review jury instructions for errors of law de novo. Anfinson v. FedEx Ground
    Package Sys., Inc., 
    174 Wn. 2d 851
    , 860, 
    281 P. 3d 289
     ( 2012). Instructions                    are sufficient "' when
    they allow counsel to argue their theory of the case, are not misleading, and when read as a
    whole   properly inform the trier         of   fact   of   the   applicable   law.'" Anfinson, 
    174 Wn.2d at
    860
    quoting Bodin        v.   City   of Stanwood, 
    130 Wn.2d 726
    , 732, 
    927 P. 2d 240
     ( 1996)).. The absence of
    any of these elements establishes error in the instruction. Anfinson, 
    174 Wn.2d at 860
    . An
    erroneous instruction requires reversal, however, only if it prejudices a party. Anfinson, 
    174 Wn.2d at 860
    . If the instruction contains a clear misstatement of law, the reviewing court must
    5
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    presume prejudice, while the appellant must demonstrate prejudice if the instruction is merely
    misleading. Anfinson, 
    174 Wn.2d at 860
    .
    II. ADMISSION OF EVIDENCE OF THE SETTLEMENT WITH FRANCISCAN
    The trial court admitted evidence concerning Kenneth' s settlement with Franciscan based
    on an opinion in which Division One of our court interpreted RCW 7. 70. 080 to allow such
    evidence.   Diaz   v.   State, 
    161 Wn. App. 500
    , 
    251 P. 3d 249
     ( 2011),    aff'd on other grounds, 
    175 Wn.2d 457
     ( 2012).       On review, our Supreme Court held such evidence inadmissible in an
    opinion issued in Diaz six days after the trial court denied Kenneth' s motion for a new trial.
    Diaz, 
    175 Wn.2d 457
    . Thus, the parties do not dispute that the trial court erred in admitting the
    evidence and giving the accompanying instruction. The Clinic instead argues that the error did
    not prejudice Kenneth as a matter of law because the jury did not find negligence.
    Kenneth     makes     two independent      arguments   regarding   prejudice: (   1) the settlement
    evidence was inherently prejudicial, particularly because a management -level employee of
    Franciscan served on the jury as foreperson; and ( 2) the trial court' s limiting instruction
    effectively commented on the evidence by suggesting that Kenneth may have already received
    sufficient compensation for the death of his wife and daughter. The Clinic counters that ( 1)
    Kenneth has waived any claim concerning the Franciscan employee by not challenging the juror
    for cause or making an adequate record of the reasons for a potential challenge; and ( 2) the
    erroneous admission of settlement evidence could not have prejudiced Kenneth because the trial
    court instructed the jury to consider only the evidence as to the amount of compensation, and the
    jury, having found no negligence, did not reach the issue of damages. We hold that the limiting
    instruction did    not cure   the   prejudice we   must   presume   from the   erroneous admission of    the
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    settlement evidence and that this error, consequently, was not harmless. With this holding, it is
    not necessary to reach the claimed improper comment on the evidence or the issue concerning
    the jury foreperson. -
    Both parties base their arguments on our Supreme Court' s decision in Diaz, 
    175 Wn.2d 457
    . Diaz sued Dr. Neal Futran and Futran' s employer, the University of Washington Medical
    Center, as well as Dr. Jayanthi Kini and the Medical Center Laboratory, for medical malpractice.
    Futran and the University settled. The Diaz court, after holding evidence of such a settlement
    inadmissible, affirmed Division One of our court on the ground that " a detailed examination of
    the   record reveals    that there   was no prejudice as a matter of    law." 
    175 Wn.2d at 474
    . The court
    reasoned that
    t]here are only two possible ways the settlement evidence could have affected the
    outcome of this trial, and we can categorically rule out both of them. First, the jury
    could have used settlement evidence to change its assessment of damages.
    However, we can be certain that this did not occur here because the jury returned a
    defense   verdict and      did   not even reach   damages.   Thus, as a matter of law,•there
    was no prejudice        based     on   damages. Second, the evidence could have affected the
    outcome if the jury used it to change its assessment of liability. But as a matter of
    law, this did not occur either. Washington courts have, for years, firmly presumed
    that   jurors follow the     court' s    instructions. [ Bordynoski v. Bergner, 
    97 Wn.2d 335
    ,
    342, 
    644 P. 2d 1173
     ( 1982)];            Gardner v. Spalt, 
    86 Wash. 146
    , 149, 
    149 P. 647
    1915)....   Here, the jury was specifically instructed not to consider settlement
    evidence    determining liability: " This evidence should not be used to either ( a)
    in
    assume the University of Washington or Dr. Futran acted negligently to cause
    damage to the plaintiffs, ( b) excuse any liability you find on the part of Dr. Kini or
    MCL....           As a matter of law, we presume the jurors in this case followed this
    instruction.       Accordingly, we hold that the settlement evidence here did not
    prejudice the jury' s assessment of liability.
    Diaz, 
    175 Wn.2d at
    474 -75. At first glance, this reasoning would appear to apply equally to the
    facts of this case: finding no negligence, the jury did not reach the damages issue, and the trial
    court   instructed the      jury that "[ t] his evidence should not be used to assume that either Summit
    7
    No. 43964 -6 -I1
    View Clinic     or    St. Joseph Medical Center / ranciscan Medical
    F                             Group     acted   negligently."   Clerk' s
    Papers ( CP) at 163.
    The circumstances here, however, differ from those in Diaz in a number of crucial ways.
    The Diaz court based its holding in part on the force of ER 408, which provides that
    evidence of (1) furnishing or offering or promising to furnish, or ( 2) accepting or
    offering or promising to accept a valuable consideration in compromising or
    attempting to compromise a claim which was disputed as to either validity or
    amount, is not admissible to prove liability for or invalidity of the claim or its
    amount.
    
    175 Wn.2d 470
     -71.         This rule aims in part to avoid the " potentially corrosive effect settlement
    evidence    may have      on   a jury."      Northington v. Sivo, 
    102 Wn. App. 545
    , 550, 
    8 P. 3d 1067
     ( 2000).
    After pointing out that the court in Northington had also ultimately found the evidence
    improperly admitted there harmless, the Diaz court rejected Diaz' s claim that the settlement
    evidence had such a corrosive effect:
    T] he "    corrosive"    argument makes even less sense because the evidence was
    mentioned      only   once at   trial ( even then   by the plaintiffs   attorney),   no evidence was
    admitted, and the jury was instructed not to consider the evidence by an instruction
    that the plaintiff specifically requested.
    Diaz, 
    175 Wn.2d at 475
    .
    Under each possible source of "corrosion ".relied on in Diaz, the instruction below
    threatens prejudice much more emphatically than did the instruction in that case. First, the Diaz
    court   found it     significant   that "[   t]he error was an evidentiary ruling and no evidence was ever
    actually   admitted under       the ruling."      
    175 Wn.2d at 474
    . Diaz' s counsel referred to the settlement
    in opening statement, but the defense never sought to admit any evidence of it. Diaz, 
    175 Wn.2d at 461
    .
    8
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    Here, in contrast, Kenneth' s counsel initially mentioned the settlement in opening
    statement, but the Clinic' s counsel also mentioned it in its opening statement, cross -examined
    Kenneth about it, and discussed it at the end of closing argument. Unlike in Diaz, the trial court
    actually admitted the evidence, and that evidence played a significant role in the proceeding.
    Next, the Diaz court expressly recognized that the settlement evidence could have
    affected   the outcome if the      jury used it to   change   its   assessment of   liability. 
    175 Wn.2d at 474
    .
    The court held that this source of prejudice was adequately addressed by the instructions in Diaz,
    though, specifically noting clause ( b) in the following instruction:
    You have heard evidence that the University of Washington and Dr. Neal Futran
    were once parties to this litigation and later entered into a settlement with the
    plaintiffs, paying the plaintiffs $400, 000. This evidence should not be used to either
    a) assume the University of Washington or Dr. Futran acted negligently to cause
    damage to the plaintiffs, ( b) excuse any liability you find on the part of Dr. Kini or
    MCL, or (c) reduce the amount of any damages you find were caused by Dr. Kini
    or MCL. By giving you this instruction, the court does not mean to instruct you for
    which party your verdict should be rendered.
    
    175 Wn.2d 473
    .
    The corresponding instruction given here, however, wholly lacks this curative muscle. It
    reads in full:
    You have heard        evidence     that       St. Joseph Medical     Center /
    Franciscan
    Medical Group entered into a settlement with the plaintiff, agreeing to pay the
    plaintiff $ 3,   500, 000.   This evidence is admissible for the limited purpose of
    demonstrating that the plaintiff may have already been compensated for the injury
    complained of      from   another source.    This evidence should not be used to assume
    that either Summit View Clinic or St. Joseph Medical Center / ranciscan Medical
    F
    Group acted negligently to cause damage to plaintiff.
    CP   at   163.   This instruction differs from the instruction in Diaz in two significant ways. First,
    unlike in Diaz, the instruction states that the settlement could be used to show that Kenneth
    9
    No. 43964 -6 -I1
    already had been compensated. This created a risk that the jury would find no liability because it
    believed that Kenneth needed no additional compensation.
    Second, the instruction admonishes the jury not to use the settlement evidence to assume
    negligence on the part of Franciscan or the Clinic, but does not prevent the jury from using the
    settlement evidence to excuse liability by the Clinic. The instruction in Diaz expressly stated that
    the settlement evidence could not be used to excuse the remaining defendants' liability. The
    failure to include that language here created a risk that the settlement evidence would change the
    jury' s assessment of liability.
    The Clinic contends that certain other instructions cured any potential prejudice caused
    3
    by the     instruction     at   issue.       Specifically, it argues that the standard instruction on multiple
    proximate causes, which informs the jury that " it is not a defense that the act of some other
    person or entity who is not a party to this lawsuit may also have been a proximate cause" of the
    injury, and instructions 18 and 21, which informed the jury that in the event it returned a verdict
    for Kenneth, damages must include certain undisputed amounts, dispelled any threat of
    prejudice. CP at 162. These instructions do not necessarily help the Clinic, however, because
    they also show that, in the event the jurors concluded that Kenneth had established his claim but
    3 The Clinic contends that
    a] s a matter of law, settlement evidence cannot have been prejudicial if a jury,
    instructed to consider settlement evidence only on the issue of damages, returns a
    defense verdict based on a finding of no negligence and does not reach the issue of
    proximate causation much less the issue of damages."
    Br.   of   Resp' t   at   16 ( quoting Diaz, 
    175 Wn.2d at 474
    ).   This mischaracterizes the holding in Diaz.
    As set forth above, the Diaz court relied on the fact that the jury did not reach damages only for
    the   question of whether           the      improper   settlement evidence prejudiced     Diaz   as   to   damages. 
    175 Wn.2d at 474
    . As also noted above, the court also considered whether the evidence prejudiced
    Diaz as to negligence, relying on Diaz' s limiting instruction, a much broader instruction than that
    given here, to hold that it did not. 
    175 Wn.2d at
    474 -75.
    10
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    did not deserve any further compensation, the most straightforward way they could answer the
    verdict questions, according to the court' s instructions, and still award Kenneth nothing would be
    to answer " no" to the questions concerning negligence.
    By allowing consideration of the settlement, the trial court' s instruction set out above
    contained .a clear misstatement of law under Diaz. With that, Anfinson, 
    174 Wn.2d at 860
    ,
    requires us to presume prejudice. That prejudice is the same as that recognized in Diaz, that the
    settlement evidence could            lead   a   jury to   excuse negligence on   the   part of   the defendant.   
    175 Wn.2d at
    474 -75. None of the reasons for rejecting the claim of prejudice in Diaz appear in
    Kenneth' s case. Here the evidence was admitted and referred to repeatedly, including at the end
    of the Clinic' s closing argument; and, most importantly, the instruction given did not include one
    of the key provisions that the Diaz court found to have cured any prejudice. The limiting
    instruction, unlike the instruction proposed by Diaz, did not cure the prejudice, and the error in
    allowing consideration of the settlement therefore merits reversal.
    III. THE TRIAL COURT' S DUTY TO DISCLOSE INSTRUCTION
    Kenneth also assigns error to the trial court' s jury instruction 11, which informed the jury
    that "[   a] physician has no duty to disclose treatments for a condition that may indicate a risk to
    the   patient' s   health   until   the   physician   diagnoses that   condition."     CP at 159. Kenneth contends
    that this instruction misstated the law and " grafted an extra burden of proof upon the Flyte family
    with respect       to the informed        consent claim."      Br. of Appellant at 29 -30. The Clinic maintains
    that the instruction correctly stated the law and argues that Kenneth bases his argument on
    outdated case law.
    The dispute centers on the following holding of our Supreme Court:
    11
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    The patient' s right to know is not confined to the choice oftreatment once a disease
    is    present   and     has been conclusively diagnosed.                    Important decisions must
    frequently be made in many nontreatment situations in which medical care is given,
    including    procedures     leading   to   a   diagnosis,   as   in this   case.   These decisions must
    all    be taken   with    the   full knowledge        and    participation         of   the   patient.   The
    physician' s duty is to tell the patient what he or she needs to know in order to make
    them. The existence of an abnormal condition in one' s body, the presence of a high
    risk    of   disease,    and the existence of alternative                   diagnostic procedures to
    conclusively determine the presence or absence of that disease are all facts which a
    patient must know in order to make an informed decision on the course which future
    medical care will take.
    Gates    v.   Jensen, 
    92 Wn.2d 246
    , 250 -51, 
    595 P. 2d 919
     ( 1979) (                 emphasis added).        As Kenneth
    points out, this holding directly contradicts the trial court' s instruction and has never been
    overruled.
    The Clinic is also correct, however, that the Gates court based its holding on law that
    predated the legislature' s codification of informed consent law and that a number of subsequent
    opinions appear to have limited its holding. We first address the effect of the informed consent
    statute, then consider the Gates holding in light of subsequent decisions.
    The informed consent statute prescribes four necessary elements of proof for a successful
    claim:
    a) That the health care provider failed to inform the patient of a material fact or
    facts relating to the treatment;
    b) That the patient consented to the treatment without being aware of or fully
    informed of such material fact or facts;
    c) That a reasonably prudent patient under similar circumstances would not have
    consented to the treatment if informed of such material fact or facts;
    d) That the treatment in question proximately caused injury to the patient.
    RCW 7. 70. 050( 1).       The statute defines material facts as those " a reasonably prudent person in
    the position of the patient or his or her representative would attach significance to [ in] deciding
    12
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    4
    whether or not      to   submit   to the   proposed   treatment. "      RCW 7. 70. 050( 2). This statute, on its
    face, does not impose the requirement at the heart of instruction 11, that the duty to disclose
    arises only after the provider has diagnosed a particular condition.
    Also of significance, the requirements of RCW 7. 70. 050( 1) expanded the duty to disclose
    from that fixed by prior law. Under the statute, the provider must have failed to inform the
    patient of a material       fact relating to the treatment. RCW 7. 70. 050( 1)(          a).    Under the law prior to
    its   adoption,   the   duty to   disclose   extended   only to "   grave risks of   injury."    ZeBarth v. Swedish
    Hosp.    Med. Ctr., 
    81 Wn.2d 12
    , 23, 
    499 P. 2d 1
     ( 1972). If the legislature had intended to impose
    the additional requirement that no duty to disclose arises absent a health care provider' s
    diagnosis of a particular condition, it would not likely have done so through a bill that expanded
    the scope of the duty to disclose without mentioning such a requirement.5 Therefore, we reject
    the Clinic' s contention that the adoption of the informed consent statute limited the duty to
    disclose to situations where a health care provider has conclusively diagnosed an illness.
    As for the continuing viability of the Gates holding in light of subsequent precedents,
    Division Three of our court discussed the question extensively in a recent case, Anaya Gomez v.
    4 The absence of treatment qualifies as " treatment" within the meaning of the statute. RCW
    7. 70. 050( 3)( d); see also Keogan v. Holy Family Hosp., 
    95 Wn.2d 306
    , 318 -19, 
    622 P. 2d 1246
    1980) ( noting that "`` treatment'
    encompasses all aspects of patient care, including the doctor' s
    resolve to do nothing about medical abnormalities in the patient' s condition ").
    5 For a scholarly discussion of Washington' s informed consent law shortly after the enactment of
    RCW 7. 70. 050, including the apparent inconsistency between Gates and subsequent cases, see
    Edwin Rauzi, Informed Consent in Washington: Expanded Scope ofMaterial Facts That the
    Physician Must Disclose to His Patient, 55 WASH. L. REV. 655 ( 1980).
    13
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    Sauerwein, 
    172 Wn. App. 370
    ,   381 - 85, 
    289 P. 3d 755
     ( 2012), aff'd, 
    180 Wn.2d 610
    , - -- P. 3d --
    2014), 
    2014 WL 2815779
     ( Wash. June 19, 2014),                 ultimately concluding that
    Gates has either been abrogated or limited to its facts by Keogan [ v. Holy Family
    Hospital, 
    95 Wn.2d 306
    , 
    622 P. 2d 1246
     ( 1980)], or has been overruled sub silentio
    in light of the Supreme Court' s decision in Backlund [v. University of Washington,
    
    137 Wn.2d 651
    , 
    975 P. 2d 950
     ( 1999)] and its denial of review of [Thomas v. Wilfac,
    Inc., 
    65 Wn. App. 255
    , 
    828 P. 2d 597
     ( 1992)], Burnet [ v. Spokane Ambulance, 
    54 Wn. App. 162
    , 
    772 P. 2d 1027
     ( 1989)], and Bays [ v. St. Luke' s Hospital, 
    63 Wn. App. 876
    , 
    825 P. 2d 319
     ( 1992)].
    In affirming that decision, however, our Supreme Court expressly rejected the view that
    subsequent decisions had overruled Gates: 6
    W] e affirm the Court of Appeals but point out that Gates has not been overruled.
    See Anaya Gomez, 172 Wn.          App.   at   385.     Backlund and Keogan state the general
    rule   of when a plaintiff can make an           informed   consent claim.      The Gates court
    allowed the informed consent claim based on a unique set of facts that are
    distinguishable from this case. Under Gates, there may be instances where the duty
    to inform arises during the diagnostic process, but this case does not present such.
    facts. The determining factor is whether the process of diagnosis presents an •
    informed decision for the patient to make about his or her care.
    Anaya Gomez, 180 Wn.2d at If 37. Thus, even a health care provider who has not conclusively
    diagnosed a particular illness may have a duty to disclose information related to the treatment of
    that illness if the information is reasonably needed by the patient to make an informed decision
    about   treatment. The   categorical statement         in instruction 11 that "[   a] physician has no duty to
    disclose treatments for a condition that may indicate a risk to the patient' s health until the
    physician   diagnoses that   condition,"   not only flatly contradicts the holding in Gates, it misstates
    the law as clarified by our Supreme Court in Anaya Gomez. CP at 159
    6 The Supreme Court decided Anaya Gomez after the parties had filed their briefs in this appeal.
    We ordered the parties to submit supplemental briefing addressing the effect of the Anaya Gomez
    decision.
    14
    No. 43964- 6- 11
    Backlund, a precedent on which our Supreme Court relied in Anaya Gomez, provides
    perhaps the strongest support for the Clinic' s position:
    A physician who misdiagnoses the patient' s condition, and is therefore
    unaware of an appropriate category of treatments or treatment alternatives, may
    properly be subject to a negligence action where such misdiagnosis breaches the
    standard of care, but may not be subject to an action based on failure to secure
    informed consent.
    Backlund, 
    137 Wn.2d at 661
     ( footnote   omitted).    In a footnote, the Backlund court added that
    i]n the traditional informed consent case, a physician diagnoses the patient' s
    condition and recommends a course of                    treatment.    The physician is liable under
    RCW 7. 70. 050, however, if the physician fails to disclose the attendant risks of
    such   treatment. Similarly, the physician is liable if the physician fails to disclose
    other courses of treatment, including no treatment at all, as options upon which the
    patient makes the ultimate choice.
    Where a physician arguably misdiagnoses the patient' s condition and
    recommends a course of treatment for the patient based on that misdiagnosis, the
    physician is properly liable in negligence for the misdiagnosis if such diagnosis
    breaches the standard of care. But the physician should not be additionally liable
    under    RCW 7. 70. 050 for          a condition unknown          to the   physician.   For example, a
    physician who misdiagnosed a headache as a transitory problem and failed to detect
    a brain tumor may be guilty of negligence for the misdiagnosis, but it seems
    anomalous to hold the physician culpable under RCW 7. 70. 050 for failing to secure
    the patient' s informed consent for treatment for the undetected tumor.
    
    137 Wn.2d at
      661   n. 2   ( citations   omitted).   The Backlund court, however, expressly declined to
    rest its decision on this reasoning because in that case the defendant physician had correctly
    diagnosed the    problem and          knew   about   the   alternative   treatment   not   disclosed. 
    137 Wn.2d at 662
    .
    The Backlund dictum supplies little guidance in the resolution of this appeal. To begin
    with, Kenneth never argued that the Clinic breached the standard of care by failing to diagnose
    H1N1.    Kenneth contended that the Clinic failed to provide informed consent by not telling
    Kathryn about the H1N1 epidemic and Tamiflu and that it breached the standard of care by not
    15
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    considering the possibility of H1N1 and offering Tamiflu as a prophylactic measure. Indeed,
    undisputed expert testimony at trial indicated that no test could detect H1N1 within the time that
    Tamiflu could most effectively treat the disease.
    Backlund, furthermore, involved facts that differed in important respects from those
    presented here. As noted, the doctor in Backlund correctly diagnosed the condition and was
    aware of the treatment not disclosed, but thought that the alternative treatment posed too great a
    risk   to the   patient.    The Supreme Court'             s   decision turned   on whether "[   a] reasonably prudent
    patient would not          have   opted     for the [    alternative   treatment],    even if the reasonably prudent
    patient   had been informed              of all   the   pertinent risks of no    treatment."   Backlund, 
    137 Wn.2d at 668
    .
    Here, in contrast, Kathryn showed symptoms arguably consistent with H1N1, and she
    was pregnant. The Clinic had received public health alerts warning of H1N1 and recommending
    that pregnant women with symptoms of it be immediately treated with Tamiflu as a prophylactic
    measure. The Clinic' s failure to inform Kathryn about the pandemic or the available treatment
    has little in common with the actions of the doctor in Backlund.
    The Anaya Gomez court also relied on its prior decision in Keogan, 
    95 Wn.2d 306
    .
    Justice Hicks' s separate opinion in Keogan, signed by five justices and controlling on the
    informed        consent    issue,   see   Anaya Gomez, 180 Wn. 2d            at ¶    25 n.4, addressed the relevant holding
    from Gates as follows:
    By thereafter focusing on the diseased heart to the exclusion of everything
    else, the majority seizes upon a suspicion by Dr. Snyder of a possibility that Keogan
    may have had angina pectoris to decree that the informed consent doctrine as
    applied    in Gates       v.   Jensen, 
    92 Wn.2d 246
    , 
    595 P. 2d 919
     ( 1979), controls here. In
    Gates, the court held that a physician has a duty ofdisclosure whenever he becomes
    16
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    aware of a bodily abnormality which may indicate risk or danger, whether or not
    the diagnosis has been completed.
    The Court of Appeals held that no duty to inform had yet arisen in this case
    because when " there is no diagnosis nor diagnostic procedure involving risk to the
    patient, there is nothing the doctor can put to the patient in the way of an intelligent
    and informed choice."     Keogan v. Holy Family Hosp., 
    22 Wn. App. 366
    , 370, 
    589 P. 2d 310
     ( 1979). Under the circumstances of this case, I agree with the Court of
    Appeals.
    Keogan, 
    95 Wn.2d at
    329 -30 ( emphasis   added).    The opinion of the Court of Appeals, with
    which Justice Hicks' s opinion expressly agreed, treated the question as follows:
    The crucial factor involved in the doctrine of informed consent is the
    reasonably foreseeable risk to the patient of a proposed course of treatment.
    Respondent contends that since Dr. Snyder had not yet made a diagnosis, there was
    no
    duty to inform. We disagree. Even ifa doctor has not specifically diagnosed a
    medical problem, if the doctor embarks on a diagnostic procedure which entails a
    reasonably foreseeable risk to the patient, the patient must be informed ofthe risk
    and possible alternatives.      See Mason     v.   Ellsworth, [ 
    3 Wn. App. 298
    , 
    474 P. 2d 909
    1970)].   Conversely, if there is no diagnosis nor diagnostic procedure involving
    risk to the patient, there is nothing the doctor can put to the patient in the way of an
    intelligent and informed choice. Meeks v. Marx, 
    15 Wn. App. 571
    , 
    550 P. 2d 1158
    1976).
    Keogan, 22 Wn. App. at 369 -70 ( emphasis added).
    Thus, the controlling opinion in Keogan acknowledged the Gates holding and rejected
    the proposition that no duty to disclose arises until a diagnosis has been made. Justice Hicks' s
    opinion establishes that, where the situation presents an " intelligent and informed choice" to put
    to the patient, such as " a diagnostic    procedure    involving    risk    to the   patient,"   health care
    providers have a duty to disclose material facts. Keogan, 22 Wn. App. at 369 -70. Keogan thus
    confirms the error in instruction 11.
    The question remains whether the error merits reversal. As discussed, because the
    challenged instruction contains a clear misstatement of the law, we must presume prejudice.
    17
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    Anfinson, 
    174 Wn.2d at 860
    . If Kenneth had no valid informed consent claim, however, then the
    erroneous instruction could not have prejudiced him.
    Kathryn' s medical situation arguably presented an informed choice for her to make
    within the meaning of Anaya Gomez, 180 Wn.2d at if 29. That is, she had to decide whether to
    submit to the proposed course of treatment, specifically, to wait for further developments and go
    to the emergency room if the symptoms worsened. The jury could reasonably have concluded
    that, in light of her symptoms, a reasonable person in Kathryn' s position would, in making that
    decision, have attached significance to information regarding the extreme danger H1N1 posed to
    pregnant women and the availability of suitable prophylactic measures. Indeed, without the
    information contained in the public health alerts, Kathryn had no way of knowing that she had
    any option other than to wait and see or that she faced potentially serious consequences by so
    doing. Thus, on their face these facts would appear to give rise to a legitimate informed consent
    claim under RCW 7. 70. 050.
    In Anaya Gomez, however, our Supreme Court specified that " when a health care
    provider rules out a particular diagnosis based on the circumstances surrounding a patient' s
    condition, including the patient' s own reports, there is no duty to inform the patient on treatment
    options   pertaining to   a ruled out   diagnosis."   180 Wn.2d   at ¶   30. The Clinic contends that this
    holding forecloses Kenneth' s informed consent claim because Marsh, the doctor who saw
    Kathryn, testified that he had ruled out any type of influenza, let alone H1N1, as a diagnosis. We
    disagree.
    Although Marsh did say he had ruled out influenza, he also testified that he had no
    independent memory of seeing Kathryn the day she went to the Clinic and admitted that he based
    18
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    his testimony entirely on the progress notes he had made following her visit. Those notes do not
    establish that Marsh had definitively ruled out influenza as a possible diagnosis. On the
    contrary, the terms "     assessment" or "         working diagnosis," together     with     the    notation "[   c] hills and
    sweats[:]   not sure where com[]          ing [ from[.   E] xam    normal[.]   If gets   worse     to   go   to ER,"   give
    rise to a reasonable inference that Marsh had only tentatively settled on an upper respiratory
    infection as the cause of Kathryn' s complaints and that he remained open to the possibility that
    she in fact suffered from a more serious illness. VRP (July 26, 2012) at 47, 52; Ex. 14. Kenneth,
    furthermore, presented testimony from Kathryn' s father, John Brehan, who had accompanied
    Kathryn into the    exam room and who recalled               Marsh saying that     she   had " influenza."        VRP (July
    16, 2012) at 22.
    Whether Marsh had ruled out influenza thus presented a disputed question of fact. If the
    jury believed that Marsh had not ruled out influenza, it could properly have considered
    Kenneth' s informed consent claim under the rule articulated in Anaya Gomez. Under the trial
    court' s erroneous instruction 11, however, the jury could only have considered the informed
    consent claim if it found that Marsh had conclusively diagnosed influenza as the cause of
    Kathryn' s distress, something that Kenneth had never alleged.
    Under the informed consent statute, a key question for the finder of fact was whether the
    Clinic failed to disclose " material         ...    facts relating to the treatment,"     namely, facts to which a
    reasonably prudent person in Kathryn' s position would have attached significance in deciding
    whether or not     to   submit   to the   proposed     treatment.    RCW 7. 70. 050( 1), (    2).       Under Gates and
    Anaya Gomez, this duty to disclose is not confined to the period after a conclusive diagnosis has
    19
    No. 43964 -6 -II
    been   made.    Gates, 
    92 Wn.2d at
    250 -51; Anaya Gomez, 180 Wn.2d            at ¶   29. Case law after Gates
    does not question the application of its rule to the circumstances presented here.
    A trial court errs by giving an instruction that removes a disputed issue of fact from the
    jury' s   consideration.   Sewell   v.   MacRae, 
    52 Wn.2d 103
    , 106, 
    323 P. 2d 236
     ( 1958).             Instruction
    11 did precisely that in a manner contradicting both RCW 7.70. 050 and Gates. As noted, when
    an instruction contains a clear misstatement of law, we must presume prejudice. Anfinson, 
    174 Wn.2d at 860
    . We hardly need to apply this presumption in this case because the instruction
    given plainly prejudiced Kenneth by foreclosing his primary theory of the case. Thus, this
    instructional error also merits reversal.
    Because the trial court erred in admitting evidence of and instructing the jury about the
    prior settlement, and because its instruction on informed consent misstated the law, we reverse.
    lT       tJ,
    N,   A.. C..J .
    We concur:
    HUNT, J.
    Maw J
    20