This is a medical malpractice case which presents the single issue of whether the asserted affirmative defense of plaintiff’s contributory negligence should have been submitted to the jury. The Court of Appeals majority concluded the trial court committed reversible error by refusing to instruct on and submit this issue to the jury for its determination. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
At trial, the jury answered the single liability issue of defendant’s negligence in plaintiffs’ favor and awarded plaintiff, Dr. Michael Cobo, $850,000 in damages. On 15 June 1994, the trial court entered judgment against the defendant, Dr. Ernest Raba, in that amount. Defendant appealed to the
The record reflects the following evidence was before the trial court. The defendant was and is a practicing psychiatrist in Durham, North Carolina. Dr. Cobo began to see defendant as a patient for his psychiatric problems in 1980 when he moved to Durham to accept a job at Duke University Medical School. Dr. Cobo had a history of psychiatric counseling and had previously been diagnosed and treated for depression with an antidepressant drug which produced adverse side effects. During Dr. Cobo’s first visit with defendant, Dr. Cobo stated that he did not want to be treated with medication because his previous treatment with medication had “affected him badly” and had not been helpful. Since Dr. Cobo refused to give defendant a complete medical history, defendant conducted extensive psychological testing under the guidance of Dr. William Burlingame, a practicing psychologist. Defendant diagnosed Dr. Cobo as suffering from dysthymia, a form of depression less severe than major depression. Together, defendant and Dr. Cobo decided that since Dr. Cobo refused to be treated with medication, Dr. Cobo would be treated with psychoanalysis four times a week. Dr. Barry Ostrow, a board-certified psychiatrist with extensive experience, testified that dysthymia was the correct diagnosis and that psychoanalysis was the proper course of treatment for Dr. Cobo. Dr. Cobo’s previous psychiatrists, Dr. Sam Bojar and Dr. 0. Townsend Dann also treated and diagnosed Dr. Cobo in exactly the same manner. The psychoanalysis continued until December 1988. Throughout the patient-physician relationship, Dr. Cobo refused medication; required 6:00 a.m. appointments to avoid anyone seeing him with a psychiatrist; and demanded that defendant take no notes during the treatment sessions in order to protect Dr. Cobo’s identity and confidentiality in the event his marriage fell apart and his wife filed a lawsuit against him.
The evidence before the jury further reflected that Dr. Cobo had engaged in high-risk behavior, including drug abuse, alcohol abuse and unprotected homosexual sex, for most of his adult life. Before seeking defendant’s medical assistance, Dr. Cobo had multiple unprotected homosexual encounters with paid prostitutes. In 1981, Dr. Cobo’s unprotected homosexual encounters increased, as he testified, to “easily a monthly basis” through 1986. Dr. Cobo acknowledged that “anyone in the early ‘80s who opened up a Newsweek magazine would know of the risk” of unprotected sex and admitted that he may have contracted acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) after unprotected sex with a prostitute in San Francisco in the early 1980s. Defendant advised Dr. Cobo that he “was making some very dangerous choices [regarding sexual partners and homosexual activity] and recommended they stop,” and defendant dis cussed with Dr. Cobo the risk of sexually transmitted diseases. Defendant also warned Dr. Cobo of the effects of drug and alcohol abuse and specifically with regard to their adverse impact on his psychoanalysis treatment. Although Dr. Cobo was an infectious disease expert and knew his behavior was dangerous, he continued these high-risk activities.
In December 1986, Dr. Cobo tested positive for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Defendant prescribed medication to treat Dr. Cobo’s anxiety and depression and continued psychoanalysis treatment sessions. Defendant recommended that Dr. Cobo seek medical treatment for HIV, but his advice went unheeded until November 1989 when Dr. Cobo was diagnosed with full-blown AIDS. In December 1988, the doctor-patient relationship was mutually terminated, and Dr. Cobo was treated by another psychiatrist, who prescribed an antidepressant medication which improved Dr. Cobo’s condition. At the time of trial, Dr. Cobo was in poor condition and testified by video deposition.
At trial, Dr. John Monroe, plaintiff’s expert witness in the field of psychiatry, testified
On 20 December 1991, Dr. Cobo and his wife, Virginia Cobo, filed a complaint against defendant seeking damages for physical injury, psychological injury, emotional distress, loss of standing in the medical community and damage to his relationship with his family. Plaintiffs alleged that defendant was negligent in that he “failed to prescribe appropriate medications”; “continued to treat Michael Cobo with psychotherapy when he knew, or ought to have known, that it was either an ineffective or less effective method of treating Michael Cobo’s psychiatric condition”; and “failed to keep notes on his sessions with Dr. Cobo in order to follow the course and effect, or lack thereof, of his therapy.”
Defendant filed his answer and asserted as an affirmative defense that Dr. Cobo was contributorily negligent. Specifically, in this regard, defendant alleged that Dr. Cobo “voluntarily sought and continued with psychoanalytic treatment for his condition over a period of several years when he knew or should have known that there were a variety of other treatments available which were not psychoanalytically based”; “deliberately, intentionally, recklessly, carelessly and knowingly engage [d] in homosexual activities and alcohol and substance abuse which exposed him to physical, psychological, social and professional injury”; and “failed and refused to seek specialized medical treatment for his HIV.”
At the charge conference, defendant requested that the trial court instruct the jury on contributory negligence, but this was denied. The trial court submitted the following single issue of negligence to the jury: “Was the plaintiff . . . injured by the negligence of the defendant?” The trial court instructed the jury to answer this issue “yes” if it determined that Dr. Cobo had met his burden of proving either negligent diagnosis or negligent treatment. The jury thus rendered a general verdict answering “yes” as to this one liability issue. The trial court also instructed on the statute of limitations for personal injury and on damages, but these issues are not before this Court.
We hold that in light of the evidence before the jury, the trial court should have instructed on the issue of contributory negligence. In this state, a plaintiffs right to recover in a personal injury action is barred upon a finding of contributory negligence.
Brewer v. Harris,
This Court has held that “[i]n order for a contributory negligence issue to be presented to the jury, the defendant must show that plaintiffs injuries were proximately caused by his own negligence.”
McGill v. French,
We hold that the record in the case
sub judice
provides substantial evidence from
Expert testimony, although useful, is not needed in all medical malpractice cases to establish proximate causation on the issue of contributory negligence when the jury, based on its own common knowledge and experience, is able to understand and judge the patient’s actions.
McGill,
Plaintiff contends that Dr. Cobo’s actions in this regard do not constitute a proper factual basis for the submission of the issue of contributory negligence to the jury. She contends that Dr. Cobo’s alcohol abuse, drug abuse and unprotected homosexual conduct occurred subsequent to the alleged misdiagnosis and implementation of treatment and were part and parcel of the condition for which he sought treatment. Therefore, plaintiff contends, Dr. Cobo’s injury could have been avoided if he had been correctly diagnosed and appropriate treatment had been initiated by defendant. Contributory negligence as a defense is inapplicable “where a patient’s conduct provides the occasion for care or treatment that, later, is the subject of a malpractice claim, or where the patient’s conduct contributes to an illness or condition for which the patient seeks the care or treatment on which a subsequent medical malpractice [claim] is based.” David M. Harney, Medical Malpractice § 24.1, at 564 (3d ed. 1993). However, in the case sub judice, the evidence clearly indicates that the activities of Dr. Cobo asserted as contributory negligence took place prior to and contemporaneously with defendant’s treatment and that Dr. Cobb directly contravened defendant’s specific ádvice during the course of treatment. Further, we find no evidence that Dr. Cobo’s malady, AIDS, was in any way caused by depression, the condition for which Dr. Cobo sought treatment from defendant.
The evidence shows Dr. Cobo had a history of depression; sought treatment from defendant for this condition; and consistent with prior diagnosis and treatment, was treated for dysthymia, a form of depression. The treatment rendered by defendant for dysthymia had absolutely no connection to Dr. Cobo’s AIDS, which ultimately caused his death. Plaintiff’s own expert, Dr. Monroe, admitted that homosexual conduct is unrelated
Based upon the foregoing, there was sufficient evidence from which the jury could have inferred that Dr. Cobo’s injuries were proximately caused by his own negligence. The trial court thus erred in refusing to instruct the jury on the issue of contributory negligence. Accordingly, the decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
