Katina Nixon was injured when her economy-sized sedan was struck from behind by a school bus while she was nine months pregnant. After her baby was determined to have cerebral palsy caused by a perinatal stroke, she brought an action for negligence, on her own behalf and as the “next friend” of her daughter, against the Pierce County School District (hereinafter, “the District”). Following discovery, the District filed a motion for partial summary judgment, alleging that Nixon failed to create a genuine issue of material fact as to the cause of the injuries sustained by her daughter. The trial court granted the motion, and Nixon appeals. For the reasons set forth infra, we reverse.
The facts pertinent to this appeal are essentially undisputed. The record shows that on the afternoon of March 10, 2008, Nixon, then 38- to 39-weeks pregnant, was injured when a District school bus rear-ended her vehicle. During the collision, Nixon was thrust forward, causing bruises across her chest and lap from the seat belt. She also suffered injuries to her shoulders and neck, which she described as unbearably painful. Nixon immediately called 911 and reported being injured, and was subsequently taken from the accident to the hospital by an ambulance. At the hospital, the attending physician decided to induce labor the following morning. On March 11, Nixon gave birth to her daughter, Kylee.
Up to the point of the accident, Nixon had experienced a normal and healthy pregnancy with no complications whatsoever. Likewise, at no time were there any signs of complications with her baby. At birth, Kylee appeared healthy and gave no outward indications that she might suffer from any neurological-development issues.
When Kylee was approximately six months old, however, her mother noticed that she favored her left hand and generally did not use her right hand to hold or grab objects. When Kylee was a year old and it became more apparent that she struggled to crawl due to limited usage of her right side, Nixon discussed her observations with Kylee’s pediatrician. At that time, the pediatrician referred them to a pediatric neurologist, who later determined that Kylee was suffering from cerebral palsy as a result of a perinatal
In March 2010, Nixon filed a negligence action against the District on her own behalf and as “next friend” of Kylee, alleging, inter alia, that Kylee’s stroke and resulting cerebral palsy were caused by the traumatic impact of the bus accident. The neurologist was thereafter deposed and, during the course of that deposition, she testified definitively that Kylee suffered cerebral palsy as a result of a perinatal stroke. She also testified that perinatal strokes are commonly caused by trauma suffered in útero, and opined that Kylee’s stroke occurred between 30 weeks gestation and one month of age.
The District filed a motion for partial summary judgment, contending that Nixon failed to create a genuine issue of material fact on the causal connection between Kylee’s injuries and the bus accident. In its motion, the District asserted that whether the accident caused Kylee to suffer a perinatal stroke was a specialized medical question that required expert testimony within a reasonable degree of certainty in order to reach a jury, and that the neurologist’s 50-percent possibility testimony fell below that standard.
The trial court agreed that Nixon failed to create a jury question as to whether Kylee sustained an injury as a result of the bus accident and granted the District’s motion. Nixon appeals, arguing both that the question as to whether the bus accident caused Kylee’s stroke is not a specialized medical question and, further, that the record evidence presents a jury question as to causation. We agree with the District that the causal connection between the stroke and bus accident presents a specialized medical question that requires expert testimony but, for the reasons set forth infra, we hold that the record evidence is sufficient to create a jury question on that issue.
At the outset, we note that our review of the trial court’s grant of summary judgment is de novo, and that summary adjudication is appropriate only if the moving party “demonstrate [s] that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, warrant judgment as a matter of law.”
1. Nixon first alleges that the trial court erred by implicitly requiring expert testimony to show a causal connection between the bus accident at issue and Kylee’s stroke, arguing that because this action is one for simple negligence, expert testimony on causation is not required. We disagree.
The general rule is that there is “no requirement that expert testimony must be produced by a plaintiff to a negligence action in order to prevail at trial.”
And here, we have little trouble concluding that the case sub judice presents a medical question that requires expert testimony. The causal link between a motor-vehicle accident causing injuries to a pregnant mother and a later-discovered perinatal stroke suffered by her baby cannot be “determined from common knowledge and experience.”
2. Nixon further argues that, regardless of whether the issue of causation presents a medical question, she has presented a sufficient combination of expert and nonexpert evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact and, therefore, summary judgment was inappropriate. Giving, as we must, Nixon the benefit of all reasonable doubt and construing the evidence and all inferences and conclusions therefrom in her favor,
When expert testimony on causation is required, the testimony generally “must show as an evidentiary threshold that the expert’s opinion regarding causation is based ... on the determination that there was a reasonable probability that the negligence caused the injury.”
Given the foregoing, we conclude that summary judgment in this case was inappropriate. As set forth supra, Nixon’s expert testified that Kylee’s cerebral palsy resulted from a stroke; the stroke was perinatal, most likely occurring between 30 weeks gestation and one month post-delivery; perinatal strokes commonly result from trauma suffered in útero; and the accident in question was sufficiently traumatic to cause the stroke. The expert concluded that it was entirely possible that the trauma inflicted on Nixon and the baby during the bus accident proximately caused Kylee’s stroke. Though this testimony, standing alone, is not sufficient to overcome summary judgment, it creates a jury issue when considered in conjunction with evidence that (1) Nixon experienced a normal and healthy pregnancy with no complications prior to being involved in a serious accident (i.e., one in which her economy-sized sedan was struck from behind with considerable force by a school bus);
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The neurologist defined “perinatal” as sometime before birth and up to one month after delivery.
The neurologist testified that due to the nature of the neurological disorder, it is common and expected that the symptoms of cerebral palsy are not recognized in a child until that child begins attempting movements, such as crawling or walking, and observations are made that the child is delayed in reaching certain developmental milestones.
Kylee was born with a small hole between the chambers of her heart and was diagnosed with either a ventricular septal defect or a patent foramen ovale; this condition, however, was deemed “insignificant” and seemingly closed without any medical intervention.
Knight v. Roberts,
Knight,
Knight,
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Sutton,
Self v. Exec. Comm. of the Ga. Baptist Convention, Inc.,
Cowart v. Widener,
Cowart,
Cowart,
See Knight,
Zwiren v. Thompson,
Natl Dairy Prods. Corp. v. Durham,
Id.; see Hodson v. Mawson,
Rodrigues v. Ga. Pacific Corp.,
Photographs taken shortly after the accident show substantial damage to the rear of Nixon’s vehicle, and the collision was serious enough to cause Nixon pain and significant bruising across her abdomen and midsection.
See Rodrigues,
Allstate,
