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Whitmer v. Zochowski
2016 Ohio 4764
Ohio Ct. App. 9th
2016
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Background

  • On May 8, 2010 Carl A. Whitmer suffered traumatic brain injury including a left subdural hematoma (initial CT midline shift 8 mm); he remained comatose and then improved before developing severe headaches and increased analgesic use on May 19–21. A facial surgery was scheduled for May 22.
  • Neurosurgeon Dr. Fleming initially evaluated Whitmer and cleared him for surgery on May 19; Fleming did not see Whitmer again before May 22 and was not informed the surgery was rescheduled.
  • Plastic surgeon Dr. Donaldson performed the May 22 facial surgery; Whitmer failed to regain consciousness postoperatively. A CT after surgery showed a large subdural with a 15 mm midline shift; emergency burr hole evacuation was performed but Whitmer later died.
  • Plaintiff (Whitmer’s father and estate) sued the treating physicians, COSA, and Mount Carmel Health Systems for wrongful death; claims included negligence against Dr. Zochowski (trauma surgeon) and vicarious liability of Mount Carmel under agency by estoppel. Cases were consolidated and tried to a jury.
  • Jury found the Zochowski defendants negligent and awarded $1.8 million; Donaldson and Mount Carmel’s nurses were found not negligent. Trial court later applied the verdict to Mount Carmel via agency-by-estoppel and awarded prejudgment interest against the Zochowski defendants. Defendants appealed.

Issues

Issue Plaintiff's Argument Defendant's Argument Held
Whether trial court could amend pleadings under Civ.R.15(B) to conform to evidence and impose agency-by-estoppel liability on Mount Carmel Whitmer argued the agency-by-estoppel theory was tried by implied consent (testimony showed patient looked to hospital and doctors presented as Mount Carmel), so amendment to conform was proper Mount Carmel argued the amendment was untimely/statute-barred, and that it did not consent and suffered prejudice from the late claim Court: Granting Civ.R.15(B) amendment was within discretion; Mount Carmel waived unraised statutory arguments and failed to show substantial prejudice, so agency-by-estoppel properly submitted and applied
Admissibility of Dr. Fleming’s deposition against Zochowski (Civ.R.32(A) vs Evid.R.804(B)(1)) Whitmer sought to read Fleming’s deposition, arguing Fleming unavailable and prior deponents (Donaldson, Mount Carmel) had opportunity and similar motive to examine him so Evid.R.804(B)(1) applies Defendants argued Civ.R.32(A) did not apply as Zochowski was not present at deposition; under Evid.R.804(B)(1) no privity/predecessor-in-interest existed between Zochowski and those present, so deposition was inadmissible against Zochowski Court: Admission against Zochowski under Evid.R.804(B)(1) was erroneous (no predecessor-in-interest/privity), but error was harmless because plaintiff’s neurosurgical expert provided the necessary proof and Fleming’s testimony was cumulative
Form and scope of jury interrogatories under Civ.R.49 (narrative vs yes/no; determinative issues) Whitmer proposed specific yes/no interrogatories tied to discrete acts (clearance, communication, evaluations) to test determinative issues Defendants argued narrative interrogatory required to identify which alleged acts were negligent and yes/no form risked shifting burden or biasing jury Court: Trial court acted within discretion; it submitted both parties’ interrogatories (so no exclusion), yes/no form is permissible, interrogatories were not unduly duplicative or biased
Qualification of plaintiff’s expert (Evid.R.702) and sufficiency of evidence for directed verdict on Zochowski claim Whitmer relied on Drs. Gelman (trauma standard of care) and Bloomfield (neurosurgery causation) to show breach and causation Zochowski argued Gelman (a plastic surgeon by practice) was unqualified to opine on trauma surgery standard and without him plaintiff lacked evidence so directed verdict was required Court: Gelman’s prior general surgery/trauma residency and experience qualified him under Evid.R.702; his testimony plus Bloomfield’s provided sufficient evidence so denial of directed verdict proper
Award of prejudgment interest under R.C. 1343.03(C) Whitmer argued defendants failed to engage in good-faith settlement negotiations and therefore prejudgment interest was warranted Zochowski argued they reasonably believed they had no liability and thus engaged in good-faith evaluation Court: Trial court did not abuse discretion—insurer/defense assessed meaningful exposure, no settlement offers or responses were made, and discovery revealed credible medical evidence of breach; prejudgment interest awarded was proper

Key Cases Cited

  • Comer v. Risko, 106 Ohio St.3d 185 (Ohio 2005) (agency by estoppel vicarious-liability framework for hospitals)
  • Clark v. Southview Hosp. & Family Health Ctr., 68 Ohio St.3d 435 (Ohio 1994) (elements for hospital liability under agency by estoppel)
  • Burkhart v. H.J. Heinz Co., 140 Ohio St.3d 429 (Ohio 2014) (Evid.R.804(B)(1) requires predecessor-in-interest/privity in civil cases)
  • Moretz v. Muakkassa, 137 Ohio St.3d 171 (Ohio 2013) (when multiple alleged negligent acts, jury should specify which were negligent)
  • Ramage v. Cent. Ohio Emergency Servs., Inc., 64 Ohio St.3d 97 (Ohio 1992) (trial court discretion to control form/content of jury interrogatories)
  • Freeman v. Norfolk & W. Ry. Co., 69 Ohio St.3d 611 (Ohio 1994) (purpose of interrogatories is to test correctness of general verdict on determinative issues)
  • Moskovitz v. Mt. Sinai Med. Ctr., 69 Ohio St.3d 638 (Ohio 1994) (standards for awarding prejudgment interest under R.C.1343.03(C))
  • Kalain v. Smith, 25 Ohio St.3d 157 (Ohio 1986) (good-faith settlement criteria relevant to prejudgment interest)
  • Galayda v. Lake Hosp. Sys., Inc., 71 Ohio St.3d 421 (Ohio 1994) (defendant’s refusal to negotiate despite credible evidence of liability supports prejudgment interest)
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Case Details

Case Name: Whitmer v. Zochowski
Court Name: Ohio Court of Appeals, 9th District
Date Published: Jun 30, 2016
Citation: 2016 Ohio 4764
Docket Number: 15AP-52 15AP-65 15AP-60
Court Abbreviation: Ohio Ct. App. 9th