KATHLEEN T. COLLINS & another vs. JOEL J. BARON.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
July 30, 1984
392 Mass. 565
Plymouth. January 12, 1984. — July 30, 1984. Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., WILKINS, LIACOS, ABRAMS, NOLAN, LYNCH, & O‘CONNOR, JJ.
A new trial of a medical malpractice case was required by the fact that the judge gave instructions to the jury as to the necessity of expert evidence of negligence by the defendant doctor but failed to instruct the jury as to the effect of an admission of fault by the doctor, where the evidence at trial included both expert testimony and testimony regarding the doctor‘s admission, which, if believed, was independently sufficient to justify a finding of negligence. [567-571]
O‘CONNOR, J., dissenting, with whom LYNCH, J., joins, on the grounds that the plaintiff had failed to request a proper instruction and had failed to state the grounds of her objection to the judge‘s failure to charge as requested. [571-573]
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court on October 6, 1977.
The case was tried before Pierce, J.
After review by the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
Daniel H. Kelleher (John J. Mackin with him) for the plaintiffs.
Jacob J. Locke for the defendant.
ABRAMS, J. At issue is whether a new trial is required in this medical malpractice case because a judge gave instructions as to the necessity of expert evidence of negligence by the defendant doctor but failed to instruct the jury as to the effect1
The plaintiff‘s ureter was injured in the course of a hysterectomy performed by the defendant doctor, occasioning pain to the plaintiff and necessitating corrective surgery. During the trial of the plaintiff‘s malpractice action, the plaintiff presented expert testimony that a suturing procedure used by the defendant in attempting to control bleeding on the left side of the plaintiff‘s uterus did not conform to good surgical practice and caused the damage to the ureter. The defendant‘s medical expert opined that the defendant‘s operative procedure complied with accepted standards of care at the time of the surgery. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff appealed, claiming error in the instructions to the jury. The Appeals Court affirmed the judgment, Collins v. Baron, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 926 (1983), and we granted further appellate review. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
In addition to the conflicting expert testimony, there was conflicting evidence concerning an admission allegedly made by the defendant in informing the plaintiff that her ureter had sustained damage during the hysterectomy. According to the plaintiff and her husband, the defendant stated at the time: “I made a mistake during the hysterectomy. I severed your ureter. It‘s all my fault. I‘m very sorry this happened. I‘m going to send you to a fine hospital for corrective surgery.” The defendant contradicted this version of the conversation to the extent it imputed to him an acknowledgment of fault. According to the defendant, he told the plaintiff that a postoperative X-ray examination revealed that her ureter had been injured during the hysterectomy, that “[he] regretted that she sustained this complication of surgery,” and that he was transferring her to another hospital for corrective surgery.
The plaintiff alleges error in the judge‘s refusal to incorporate in his charge a proposed instruction that “[a] statement by the defendant to the plaintiff and her husband that he had cut her ureter, that it was his fault, that he had made a mistake, and that he was sending her to a fine hospital in order that the damage be remedied, if believed by the jury, is more than a
There was no error in the judge‘s refusal to give the specific instruction requested by the plaintiff. The judge was not required to repeat to the jury the plaintiff‘s version of the defendant‘s statement. “It is for the judge to determine how far the facts and the evidence should be discussed with the jury. He cannot be required to argue the case for a party on any issue.” Hayes v. Roslindale Taxi, Inc., 357 Mass. 767 (1970). “If a statement of the testimony is made by the judge, it should be fair and impartial.” Pfeiffer v. Salas, 360 Mass. 93, 99 (1971), quoting Sawyer v. Worcester Consol. St. Ry., 231 Mass. 215, 218 (1918). Although the judge could have recited both versions of the defendant‘s statement in the course of a general instruction on the impact of an admission of fault, see
Apart from highlighting specific testimony favorable to the plaintiff, the proposed instruction hinted at, although it did not articulate, the potential role of an evidentiary admission of fault, if believed, in the jury‘s decision on the question of the defendant‘s negligence. A finding that such an admission was made entitled, but did not require, the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff even if the jury would not have reached that
If the plaintiff was entitled to an instruction regarding the effect of the alleged admission, that right was not defeated by the vagueness of the plaintiff‘s request that the jury be told to “consider” the admission in reaching a verdict.3 “Like other
Although in exceptional malpractice cases “the negligence and harmful results are sufficiently obvious as to lie within common knowledge,” Haggerty v. McCarthy, 344 Mass. 136, 139-140 (1962), quoting Cyr v. Giesen, 150 Me. 248, 252 (1954), and cases cited, in most instances, including the case before us, breach of the special doctor-patient duty, as well as causation of the patient‘s injuries, must be established either through expert testimony or through an admission from which the jury can infer the elements of negligence and causation. Where the evidence at trial includes both expert testimony and testimony regarding an evidentiary admission, which, if believed, is independently sufficient to justify a finding of negligence, the judge, if he or she chooses to instruct the jury as to the importance of expert testimony, must instruct that the admission, if the jurors believe it was made, is sufficient to support a verdict for the plaintiff. A failure to do so places undue emphasis on the expert testimony and may leave the jury with the erroneous impression that, even if they credit the defendant‘s admission of fault, other credible expert testimony of the defendant‘s negligence is indispensable to a verdict for the plaintiff.
However, the judge did highlight a portion of the evidence, and we cannot dismiss as insubstantial the possibility that the instruction on expert testimony, combined with his failure to instruct on the effect of an evidentiary admission of fault, misled the jury into believing that a finding that such an admission was made would not suffice to support the claim of negligence. The likelihood of prejudice to the plaintiff due to the emphasis of the charge on the importance of expert testimony is magnified by the plaintiff‘s principal reliance in closing argument on the defendant‘s statement to establish negligence in the operation,4 and by assertions in the defendant‘s summation suggesting that a verdict for the plaintiff required expert medical testimony of negligence.5 A litigant is entitled to a balanced charge. The instructions in this case fell short of that
So ordered.
O‘CONNOR, J. (dissenting, with whom Lynch, J., joins). I disagree with the court because I believe that the plaintiff failed to request a proper instruction, and also because the plaintiff failed to state the grounds of her objection to the judge‘s failure to charge as requested.
The judge chose to instruct the jury that expert medical opinion evidence was necessary to establish the defendant‘s negligence. Because of that, the plaintiff, on proper request, would have been entitled to a jury instruction, in substance, that if the jury were to find that the defendant had told the plaintiff that he had severed her ureter by mistake, that it was his fault, and that he was sorry, they could infer that the defendant had admitted his negligence, although that inference would not be required. On proper request, the plaintiff would have been entitled to a further instruction that if the defendant had admitted his negligence the jury could find on the basis of that testimony alone and without other credible expert testimony that he had in fact been negligent, although that finding would not be required. However, instructions of that type were not requested.
Before the charge, the plaintiff requested an instruction that “[a] statement by the defendant to the plaintiff and her husband that he had cut her ureter, that it was his fault, that he had made a mistake, and that he was sending her to a fine hospital
Even if the plaintiff was entitled to an instruction that was not given, she failed to preserve her right to assign as error the judge‘s failure to give it. At the conclusion of the charge the plaintiff objected to the judge‘s omission of her requested instruction. However, she failed to state the grounds of her objection as is required by
