Monte S. McLaughlin sought review of an unpublished decision of the Court of Appeals, Division Two, reversing a $160,000 judgment he obtained against Thomas R. Cooke, D.O., for medical malpractice incident to a vasectomy. The Court of Appeals reversed and remanded for new trial, holding that it was prejudicial error to give a jury instruction summarizing plaintiff's four claims, two of which were not supported by substantial evidence.
We reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the jury verdict in favor of Petitioner McLaughlin.
Two issues are presented by this case. They are:
(1) Whether the trial court committed reversible error in giving a jury instruction summarizing plaintiff's claims
(2) Whether there was sufficient expert testimony in this case upon which a jury could determine that the physician had breached the requisite standard of care by removing venous material instead of the vas deferens during a vasectomy and that the physician's actions were the proximate cause of the ensuing injuries to the plaintiff.
Petitioner Monte S. McLaughlin contends the Court of Appeals was in error in overturning the jury verdict in his favor. He cites cases holding that a jury instruction which merely summarizes the plaintiff's claims is not prejudicial where the jury is instructed to consider only those claims supported by the evidence. He also contends that, contrary to the conclusion of the Court of Appeals, there was substantial evidence in the trial record and within the understanding of the jury that Dr. Thomas R. Cooke breached the applicable medical standard of care for vasectomies, and that Dr. Cooke's negligence in performing the vasectomy proximately caused excessive bleeding which led to complications resulting in removal of petitioner's right testicle.
Respondent Dr. Thomas R. Cooke contends that petitioner's lack of expert testimony on the issues of standard of care and proximate cause made instruction 7, summarizing plaintiff's claims, prejudicial to Dr. Cooke. He also contends that the trial court's instruction 11 and the trial court's refusal to give his proposed instruction 12 compel reversal of the trial court judgment.
On March 26, 1982, Thomas R. Cooke, D.O., performed a vasectomy on Monte S. McLaughlin. At the outset of the surgical procedure, Mr. McLaughlin began to bleed abnormally. Dr. Cooke attempted to control the bleeding by cauterizing and suturing the bleeding vessels that he could identify. However, the bleeding did not completely subside.
A subsequent pathology report revealed that Dr. Cooke had excised a portion of the venous plexus, a blood vessel in the scrotum, instead of the vas deferens. Dr. Cooke based his belief that the structure he was cutting was the vas deferens upon touch, rather than visual identification. He testified that the structure was taut, hard, and tubular — characteristics of the vas deferens.
After surgery, the bleeding still could not be stabilized even though all identifiable bleeding vessels had been sealed off. Dr. Cooke transported Mr. McLaughlin to St. Helen's Hospital in Dr. Cooke's own vehicle and immediately obtained a consultation from Robert J. Berecz, M.D., a general and vascular surgeon. Dr. Berecz conducted a blood study that suggested Mr. McLaughlin's coagulation ability was within normal limits. However, Mr. McLaughlin's mother reported to Dr. Cooke shortly after surgery that her son had a history of bleeding difficulty. Based on this information, to avoid the risk of aggravating the bleeding, Dr. Cooke and Dr. Berecz determined it was inadvisable to remove the hematoma that had formed in Mr. McLaughlin's swollen scrotum. Dr. Cooke thus instead prescribed antibiotics, vitamin K, bed rest and ice on the scrotum.
Petitioner McLaughlin remained in the hospital for two additional days and was released. Dr. Cooke prescribed similar treatment to be performed at petitioner's home. He communicated with Mrs. Krisann Katheryn McLaughlin (petitioner's wife) and visited the McLaughlin home on at least two occasions in the following days because of Mr. McLaughlin's lack of satisfactory progress toward recovery.
The next day, Mr. McLaughlin experienced increased pain and fresh bleeding. After further examination, Dr. Cooke referred him to a urologist the same day. The urologist immediately sent him to University Hospital for further examination and treatment.
At University Hospital, Michael E. Mayo, M.D., another urologist, obtained hematological consultation and concluded that Mr. McLaughlin had no bleeding disorder. Mr. McLaughlin's hematoma was then surgically removed. A significant amount of necrotic tissue was observed and removed, indicating deterioration due to lack of blood circulation in the scrotum. Mr. McLaughlin's right testicle had become infected and eventually required removal.
Petitioner McLaughlin continued to bleed excessively at University Hospital, following surgical removal of the hematoma. Additional tests ultimately revealed he had a rare blood disorder known as factor VIII deficiency, a mild form of hemophilia. He was subsequently treated for this.
Petitioner McLaughlin brought suit against Dr. Cooke for professional negligence on July 8, 1982. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff (Petitioner McLaughlin) in the amount of $160,000.
The Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the case for a new trial, holding that "jury instructions can encompass only those theories of liability which are supported by substantial evidence." Specifically, the Court of Appeals determined that contentions (1) and (2) of instruction 7 constituted reversible error. The instruction, in its entirety, reads:
The plaintiff claims that the defendant was negligent in one or more of the following respects:
(1) In failing to see and identify the vas deferens adequately to allow a proper vasectomy surgery.
(2) In cutting out a portion of vein rather than the vas deferens while attempting a vasectomy procedure upon the plaintiff.
(3) In failing to adequately and timely treat the swelling in plaintiff's scrotal sac.
(4) In failing to make a timely referral to another physician for treatment of plaintiff's swollen scrotal sac.
The plaintiff claims that one or more of these failures on the part of the defendant was a proximate cause of plaintiff's loss of his testicle. The defendant denies these claims.
Instruction 8 (WPI 20.05) provided:
The foregoing is merely a summary of the claims of the parties. You are not to take the same as proof of the matters claimed; and you are to consider only those matters which are established by the evidence. These claims have been outlined solely to aid you in understanding the issues.
Jury Instructions Summarizing Claims of the Parties
This court has held that an instruction summarizing contentions of the parties is not reversible error when it is followed by cautionary language which explains to the jury proper use of the instruction for clarification of plaintiff's contentions, despite the possibility that there may be no evidence to support particular contentions.
Ketchum v. Wood,
The Court of Appeals in this case cited neither
Ketchum
nor
Mulkey,
but relied instead on
Young v. Group Health Coop.,
This court in
Young
discussed a proximate cause instruction, an evidentiary question, and the wording of the verdict form.
Young,
In
Chase,
the plaintiff sued the defendant restaurant for assault and race discrimination. The jury returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The issue on appeal was whether there was sufficient evidence to submit the race discrimination claim to the jury. This court found insufficient evidence on that issue, and reversed the jury's verdict because it was not possible to determine whether the jurors had relied on the improper theory.
Chase,
Similarly, in this case the trial court did not give separate instructions on each of the "claims" described in instruction 7. The court simply defined for the jury, in general terms, the legal elements of a medical malpractice claim. Moreover, instruction 8 (WPI 20.05) unequivocally pointed out that the "foregoing" (instruction 7) was merely a summary of the claims of the parties, was not evidence, and was not to be considered unless established by the evidence. Instruction 7 clearly stated that "plaintiff claims that the defendant was negligent" and that "defendant denies these claims."
The cases cited by Respondent Cooke do not support the Court of Appeals decision. Those cases involved error in a trial court's failure to instruct where particular claims were supported by the evidence. The cases hold that a plaintiff is entitled to have the jury instructed only on claims or theories supported by substantial evidence.
See Dabroe v.
The issue here is not whether petitioner was "entitled" to any particular instruction, but whether respondent was prejudiced by the summary of contentions instruction. Mulkey and Ketchum hold that no prejudice occurs with such a clearly identified summary instruction with the addition of cautionary language such as that in instruction 8.
The issues in this case are substantially similar to those in Mulkey and Ketchum. The Court of Appeals decision in this case is in error to the extent that it held instruction 7 to be prejudicial because some of the claims listed were not supported by the evidence.
The Necessity for Expert Testimony
Expert testimony is necessary to prove whether a particular practice is reasonably prudent under the applicable standard of care.
Harris v. Groth,
As a general rule, expert medical testimony on the issue of proximate cause is also required in medical malpractice cases.
O'Donoghue v. Riggs,
It is not always necessary to prove every element of causation by medical testimony. If, from the facts and circumstances and the medical testimony given, a reasonable person can infer that the causal connection exists, the evidence is sufficient.
Bennett v. Department of Labor &
In this case, the Court of Appeals held that "a review of the record indicates there is neither expert testimony nor facts obvious to a layman that the vasectomy procedure itself caused the excessive bleeding or led to the later consequences and medical difficulties of McLaughlin." The Court of Appeals properly concluded that no expert testified that Dr. Cooke violated the standard of care in performance of the vasectomy.
The Court of Appeals, however, erred in overturning the trial verdict for prejudicial error on contentions (1) and (2) of instruction 7. That instruction was correct under this court's decisions allowing claim summary instructions followed by cautionary language such as that contained in instruction 8 (WPI 20.05). 1 The trial record contains sufficient evidence, including requisite expert testimony, to support the jury verdict of $160,000 based on contentions (3) and (4) of instruction 7, involving claims of post-surgical negligence. The jury heard testimony of petitioner's medical expert, Michael E. Mayo, M.D., concluding that, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, Respondent Cooke's failure to intervene sooner and remove the hematoma was a proximate cause of Petitioner McLaughlin's injury from complications resulting in necrosis and the removal of his right testicle.
Respondent Cooke's remaining contentions challenge the trial court's instructions 9C
2
and 11, and the trial court's failure to give his proposed instruction 12,
3
which merely added one sentence to instruction 9C. He contends that the court's refusal to give his proposed instruction 12 was prejudicial error under
Watson v. Hockett,
Instruction 11 (WPI 30.18) relates only to the surgical procedure and plaintiff's compensation for injuries suffered
Conclusions
We conclude that instruction 7, which summarized the plaintiff's claims, was not prejudicial when read in conjunction with instruction 8, which directed the jury to consider "only those matters which are established by the evidence."
We also conclude that the jury verdict was supported by sufficient expert testimony that, within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, respondent violated the standard of care for a reasonably prudent physician in the post-operative care of petitioner.
We further conclude that there was sufficient expert testimony that, within a reasonable degree of medical certainty, respondent's failure to intervene sooner and remove a hematoma following petitioner's vasectomy was a proximate cause of complications suffered by petitioner, resulting in necrosis and the removal of his right testicle.
Reconsideration denied October 11, 1989.
Notes
Instruction 8 (WPI 20.05) provided:
"The foregoing is merely a summary of the claims of the parties. You are not to take the same as proof of the matters claimed; and you are to consider only those matters which are established by the evidence. These claims have been outlined solely to aid you in understanding the issues."
Instruction 9C stated:
"A physician employed to treat or administer to a patient does not and cannot ensure or in any sense guarantee a satisfactory result, nor is the physician responsible for unsatisfactory results of his treatment or care unless his own lack of professional knowledge and skill or his negligent failure to exercise it is the proximate cause of such result."
Instruction 12 restated instruction 9C and added:
"The fact that in a particular case the complications result is not in itself any evidence that the treatment was improper or that the physician failed to exercise the professional knowledge and skill necessary to proper professional practice, nor is it any evidence that the physician failed to exercise his skill with reasonable care."
Jury instruction 11 (WPI 30.18) stated:
"If you find that before this occurrence the plaintiff had a pre-existing bodily condition which was not causing pain or disability and further find that because of this occurrence that condition was lighted up and made active or that the condition made the plaintiff more subject to injury than a person in normal health, then, if your verdict is in favor of the plaintiff, you should consider the lighting up of the condition and all injuries and damages which were proximately caused by the occurrence, even though those injuries, due to that condition, may have been greater than those which would have been suffered by a normal person under the same circumstances. There may be no recovery, however, for any results which would have normally followed from the pre-existing condition had there been no incident."
