Lead Opinion
In this appeal, this Court reaffirms that the doctrine of informed consent, whether involving non-consensual surgery or a lack of informed consent, sounds in battery, not in negligence, despite observations to the contrary in the published Superior Court opinion below. The
In August of 1989, appellee, John Montgomery, "began treating with Dr. Kuldeep
In February of 1990, Montgomery returned to Sehgal and reported that the injections had not improved his condition. Sehgal decided that corrective surgery was necessary. On March 30, 1990, Sehgal performed surgery on Montgomery at Aliquippa Hospital during the course of which he implanted an inflatable pump prosthesis in Montgomery’s penis. The facts to this point are undisputed; it is the nature of the surgery performed, and whether Montgomery consented to the specific procedure, that is disputed.
Since the legal questions involve the propriety of the trial court’s refusal to permit any aspect of appellees’ case to go to the jury, the primary focus here must be upon appellees’ evidence. Appellees claimed that, prior to the surgery, Sehgal merely told them he intended to perform a revascularization, an outpatient procedure. A revascularization is designed to open and repair the blood vessels leading to the penis to increase blood flow. Appellees alleged that the possible insertion of a penile implant was not discussed with them prior to the surgery, nor did John Montgomery ever consent to the implantation of the prosthesis — a procedure which resulted in Montgomery being admitted to the hospital for several days. Appellees claimed that they first learned of the implantation when Montgomery awoke from the surgical anesthesia and a nurse presented him with a warranty card for the prosthesis. Montgomery asked the nurse whether there was some mistake, whereupon the nurse informed him that the prosthesis had been implanted in his penis. Dr. Sehgal denied appellee’s claim that he never informed appellees about the prospect of implanting a penile prosthesis.
Appellees then tried to reach Sehgal by telephone but were unable to speak to him until three days after surgery, when Sehgal appeared in Montgomery’s hospital room to discharge him. Appellees asked Sehgal why he had implanted the prosthesis, and the doctor explained that he was saving Montgomery from a second surgical procedure at some later date. John Montgomery replied that it was not up to the doctor, but up to him to determine whether he wanted such an object placed in his body. Montgomery also told Seghal that he did not want the prosthesis and wanted it removed, but Sehgal informed him that removal was not an option because there was “nothing there now.”
According to Marsha Montgomery, when her husband was discharged, he remained in a “state of shock,” and was also in “plenty of pain” from the surgery. John Montgomery testified that he has
I sure as hell don’t feel like a man, I’ll tell you that. I don’t feel one bit like a man. I mean, I felt like half a man before because I had ejaculated early but I don’t feel like no man, even half a man anymore because I go [sic] to pump this thing up. Like I told my wife, I feel like I am a machine.
N.T. 1/12/98 at 179. Montgomery also testified that he could not achieve an erection without employing the device and that there is no sensation or “fulfillment” upon ejaculation.
Appellees filed suit on May 28, 1993, alleging professional negligence, lack of informed consent and battery. Appellees failed to identify any liability expert witnesses by the date established by the trial court, causing the trial court to issue an order on June 15, 1995, which precluded appellees from calling any liability expert witnesses at trial. On September 15, 1995, Dr. Sehgal and Greater Pittsburgh Impotence Center,
The matter then proceeded to a jury trial on the lack of informed consent and battery claims. At the close of appellees’ case, appellants motioned for compulsory non-suit on the grounds that appellees could not prove a connection between the alleged battery and the requested damages without expert testimony. The trial court denied the motion, finding that Montgomery’s testimony regarding his objection and reaction to the presence of the prosthesis and the fact that it was cumbersome did not require supporting expert testimony because the connection to the tortious conduct was obvious:
Mr. Montgomery’s protestations to the presence of the prosthesis do[ ] not require an expert for him to say that it is cumbersome and he never expected it to be there. I don’t think that would require an expert.... [Ejxpert medical testimony is necessary to establish the causal nexus of the injury to the tortious conduct in those cases where the connection is not obvious. Clearly, as to the things of which [appellees’ counsel] complained, the connection is obvious.
At the close of all evidence, appellants moved for a directed verdict on the same ground alleged in support of a non-suit. This time, the trial court, after reviewing Montgomery’s testimony that he had a reduced or different physical sensation in his penis, was unable to feel the physical pleasures of intercourse and could not sustain an erection without inflating the prosthesis with a pump, determined that expert testimony was necessary to connect this sort of physical injury to the implantation of the prosthesis and granted a directed verdict as to those damages. As to the mental anguish and loss of consortium components of appellees’ claims, the trial court initially denied the motion for directed
Upon appeal by the Montgomerys, a divided panel of the Superior Court issued a published opinion reversing and remanding to the trial court to permit appellees the opportunity to pursue the battery claim and certain claims for damages without the necessity of producing an expert witness. Montgomery v. Bazaz-Sehgal,
On the battery claim, the court concluded that the evidence that Dr. Seghal had implanted an inflatable prosthesis into John Montgomery’s penis, without his permission, was sufficient to warrant the jury in a finding that a battery was committed. Turning to the question of damages, and whether medical testimony was required to prove damages, the court took issue with the trial court’s inability to draw a “dividing line” between which alleged damages resulting from the battery would require medical expert testimony and which would not. In the Superior Court’s view, the law was clear that compensatory damages were available in a medical battery action, even in the absence of expert testimony, for “direct, obvious and foreseeable results” of the battery. It is only where the connection between the battery and the harm is not obvious that expert testimony is required. Applying this distinction, the court determined that any injury involving Montgomery’s “physical sensation” would require expert testimony since, in light of his preexisting condition, the causal connection between the battery and any diminished physical sensation was not so obvious as to be within the range of ordinary experience of non-experts. On the other hand, the causal connection between the battery and the alleged mental and emotional injuries arising from a non-permitted implantation of the prosthesis was sufficiently clear and direct that that question should have been left to the jury.
This Court granted discretionary review to consider two claims: (1) whether expert medical testimony is necessary to prove that the performance of a surgical procedure — here, the implantation of a penile prosthesis — to which a patient did not consent caused mental/emotional injury to the patient; and (2) whether the Superior Court was correct that non-consensual
We will address the second issue first, given its importance and relevance as background about the very nature of informed consent and medical battery. “It has long been the law in Pennsylvania that a physician must obtain informed consent from a patient before performing a surgical or operative procedure.” Morgan v. MacPhail,
The informed consent doctrine requires physicians to provide patients with “material information necessary to determine whether to proceed with the surgical or operative procedure or to remain in the present condition.” Sinclair by Sinclair v. Block,534 Pa. 563 ,633 A.2d 1137 , 1140 (1993). We have on several occasions defined the nature of this “material information.” We have stated that the information provided by a physician must give the patient “a true understanding of the nature of the operation to be performed, the seriousness of it, the organs of the body involved, the disease or incapacity sought to be cured, and the possible results.” Gray v. Grunnagle,423 Pa. 144 ,223 A.2d 663 , 674 (1966). Thus, a physician must “advise the patient of those material facts, risks, complications and alternatives to surgery that a reasonable person in the patient’s situation would consider significant in deciding whether to have the operation.” Gouse v. Cassel,532 Pa. 197 ,615 A.2d 331 , 334 (1992). A claim that a physician failed to obtain the patient’s informed consent sounds in battery. Id.; see also Morgan v. MacPhail,550 Pa. 202 ,704 A.2d 617 (1997).
Duttry v. Patterson,
The rationale underlying requiring informed consent for a surgical or operative procedure and not requiring informed consent for a non-surgical procedure is that the performance of a surgical procedure upon a patient without his consent constitutes a technical assault or a battery because the patient is typically unconscious and unable to object.
Morgan v. MacPhail,
Thus, this Court has made clear on repeated occasions over a period of several decades that a claim based upon a lack of informed consent involves a battery
In light of this discussion, it is apparent that the Superior Court erred in stating that, “[t]he differences between a medical malpractice informed consent case grounded in negligence (commonly referred to as an “informed consent” case) and one based on battery are at the heart of this case and must be kept clearly in mind.” Montgomery v. Bazaz-Sekgal,
The fact that the Superior Court misconceived the battery contours' of the informed consent doctrine, however, did not affect its approach to the specific question of damages that led to its reversal in this case, since the claim at issue here in fact does not involve the informed consent doctrine, but a claimed lack of consent at all for this particular procedure.
We turn now to the issue of whether appellees were required to present expert testimony to prove that the implantation of the penile prosthesis without Montgomery’s consent caused appellees’ alleged mental and emotional injuries. The Superior Court correctly set forth the governing law with respect to the need for expert testimony in a case of alleged battery. It has long been the law that damages for emotional injuries are compensable, even in cases not involving negligence, where there is some evidence of physical contact or injury, even if the physical contact or injury is trivial in nature. In Hess v. Philadelphia Transp. Co.,
Whether expert testimony is required to prove a causal connection between emotional injury and the physical injury suffered, of course, is a separate issue. In Smith v. German,
The law of this Commonwealth is well settled as to when medical testimony will be required to establish a causal connection between the event demonstrated and the result sought to be proved. Though most of the cases deal with plaintiffs who wish to show that a certain event caused a given injury, the rules are equally applicable when a defendant seeks to disprove the causal connection (the automobile accident) presented by the plaintiff by proving one (the marital difficulties) of his own. Thus in Florig v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,388 Pa. 419 ,130 A.2d 445 (1957), this Court held “Where there is no obvious causal relationship, unequivocal medical testimony is necessary to establish the causal connection.” See Auerbach v. Philadelphia Transp. Co.,421 Pa. 594 ,221 A.2d 163 (1966); Dornon v. Johnston,421 Pa. 58 ,218 A.2d 808 (1966). This test has resulted in medical testimony being required to prove the causal connection between a heart attack and heavy exertion thirty minutes earlier, Washko v. George L. Ruckno, Inc.180 Pa.Super. 606 ,121 A.2d 456 (1956), between a paralytic stroke and being struck by a swinging door, Fink v. Sheldon Axle Co.,270 Pa. 476 ,113 A. 666 (1921), between a refracture and failureon the part of the attending physician to be as attentive as his patient requested, Dornon v. Johnston, supra.
But where “the disability complained of is the natural and probable result of the injuries, the fact-finding body may be permitted to so find, even in the entire absence of expert opinion.” Florig v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., supra,388 Pa. at 424 ,130 A.2d at 447 . The two must be “so closely connected and so readily apparent that a layman could diagnose (except by guessing) the causal connection.” Id. See Tabuteau v. London G. & A. Co.,351 Pa. 183 ,40 A.2d 396 (1945); Mohr v. Desimone & Sayers,110 Pa.Super. 44 ,167 A. 504 (1933).
Id. at 108-09. The German Court held that, while the fact that the plaintiff was emotionally upset by the accident was within the purview of the jury without the necessity of expert testimony, whether he suffered serious personality disorders arising therefrom required expert testimony.
Applying these time-tested principles respecting whether and when expert testimony is required, the; Superior Court drew a careful distinction in this case between damages relating to a reduced or different physical sensation in John Montgomery’s penis and damages arising from the mental anguish and emotional impact of the very fact that the prosthesis was inserted without his knowledge and consent. That distinction, we believe, was entirely proper.
There is no question that appellees’ testimony concerned both physical and emotional damages and was often overlapping. Thus, John Montgomery spoke of diminished sensation in his penis during intercourse, the fact that he could not achieve an erection without pumping up the device and that he experienced pain and discomfort “like sitting on a pin cushion” emanating from the device itself. Likewise, Marsha Montgomery testified that John was in a great deal of pain subsequent to the procedure. But there was also ample evidence of anguish and harm arising from the very fact of the presence of the unwanted device. John Montgomery testified that the prosthesis was cumbersome and embarrassing, and made him feel like a machine because he had to pump the prosthesis in order to achieve an erection. Both appellees testified that the device had a negative emotional impact on their marital relations.
The Superior Court correctly recognized the validity of the distinction initially drawn by the trial court between injuries arising from physical sensations — i.e., John Montgomery’s lack of sensation or sense of fulfillment from intercourse and the fact that he could not achieve an erection without utilizing the prosthesis — and those involving the emotional impact of the unwanted implantation of the prosthesis — i.e., John Montgomery’s embarrassment, his feelings of being machine-like, and the concomitant effect of the prosthesis on appellees’ marital relations. Expert testimony obviously was required to prove that Montgomery’s physical injuries resulted from the implantation of the device. This is true particularly in light of Montgomery’s prior medical history, which included difficulties with premature ejaculation and soft erections. Absent expert testimony, the ordinary layperson would be unqualified to determine whether these diminished physical sensations were a result of the prosthesis or a result of the natural progression of Montgomery’s pre-existing condition.
The alleged emotional injuries, however, are obvious and clearly connected to the prosthesis. It is within the range of comprehension of jurors whether emotional injuries might reasonably be attributable to the implantation of a penile prosthesis to which a patient did not consent
The law is well established that expert testimony is not necessary where the cause of an injury is clear and where the subject matter is within the experience and comprehension of lay jurors. As the Superior Court so aptly noted, laypersons are certainly capable of comprehending, without the assistance of an expert, appellees’ mental and emotional damages and determining whether those difficulties were occasioned by the unwanted and unexpected implantation of a penile prosthesis. For this reason, the Superior Court decision vacating the trial court’s grant of a directed verdict and remanding to the trial court on this issue is affirmed.
Notes
. Dr. Sehgal died while the Superior Court appeal was pending. On October 12, 1999, that court granted the application of his widow, Vitasta Bazaz-Sehgal, M.D., for substitution of personal representation.
. Peyronie's disease is an accumulation of plaque in the corpora cavernosa, which are two cylinder-like structures inside the penis through which blood must flow to create an erection.
. Aliquippa Hospital was dismissed from the case during trial with no opposition from any other party. Therefore, Sehgal and Greater Philadelphia Impotence Center were the sole remaining defendants.
. Judge Popovich dissented on grounds that he was "not convinced that the evidence of causation of [appellees’] psychological injuries is sufficiently simple, obvious, clear and direct to allow recovery in the absence of expert testimony.” Thus, it appears that Judge Popovich agreed with the majority's legal standard, but disagreed with its application of that standard.
. The issues in this appeal are purely questions of law which, of course, are subject to plenary review by this Court. E.g. Navickas v. Unemployment Compensation Review Board,
. Beyond accurately pointing out the error in the Superior Court's description of informed consent as negligence-based, appellants do not articulate in any persuasive fashion how that error prejudiced them. Appellants note that the Superior Court's error led it to disregard their argument premised upon relevant authority in the form of the Superior Court's informed consent decision in Maliszewski v. Rendon,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the majority in affirming the order of the Superior Court on the basis that expert testimony was not essential to support the causation component, of plaintiffs’ medical battery claim seeking damages for mental and emotional injuries. I also agree that the majority has aptly summarized the Court’s existing approach to informed consent claims, which, like those entailing lack of consent, are presently categorized as involving battery rather than negligence. Nevertheless, since the issue under review here involves simple lack of consent to the procedure performed, I would not utilize the appeal as a vehicle to reinforce the battery approach to lack of informed consent. Indeed, there would appear to be good reasons for the Court to select an appropriate case to undertake a reevaluation of the battery paradigm for informed consent, particularly in light of: the weight of authority in other jurisdictions;
. Most jurisdictions treat lack of informed consent as sounding in negligence. See, e.g., Canterbury v. Spence,
. See, e.g., Morgan v. MacPhail,
. See Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) Act, Act No. 2002-13, H.B. No. 1802, approved March 20, 2002 (codified as amended at 40 P.S. §§ 1303.101-1303.748 (Supp.2002)); Act of Nov. 26, 1996, P.L. 776, No. 135, § 10 (as amended, 40 P.S. § 1301.811-A) (repealed and recodified as amended at 40 P.S. § 1303.504).
