The plaintiff sustained two broken bones while she was a patient at Wingate at Brighton, Inc., a nursing home. She brought this malpractice action alleging that her injuries were caused by a nurse’s aide negligently allowing her to fall to the ground while transferring her to a wheelchair. On the day that trial was scheduled to begin, the judge held an extensive pretrial colloquy with counsel regarding their expectations as to what the evidence would show. Based on the understanding she gained from that process, the judge concluded that the plaintiff’s failure to put forward a qualified expert on causation doomed her case as a matter of law. On this basis, the judge granted a directed
Standard of review. A trial judge can in appropriate circumstances direct a verdict in a defendant’s favor after the plaintiff’s opening statement. “It is settled, however, that ‘the practice of ordering a verdict on an opening ... is a power which, for obvious reasons, should be exercised with great caution.’ ” Hubert v. Melrose-Wakefield Hosp. Assn.,
Background. The recitation that follows draws on the plaintiff’s opening statement, supplemented by the documentary record and concessions the parties made at the pretrial hearing or
It is undisputed that at the time of the injury, the plaintiff was fifty-three years old, stood five feet, three inches tall and weighed approximately 200 pounds. She suffered from numerous serious medical conditions, including a brain disorder known as leuko-dystrophy, dementia, seizures, and “profound osteoporosis.” The plaintiff was brought to the nursing home for physical rehabilitation. The goal was that she again be able to ambulate on her own using a walker. According to the nursing home’s own evaluation of the plaintiff, that was done upon her arrival, she presented a “potential for falls.” With regard to the level of assistance required for transfers to the bathroom and the like, the nursing home’s “care plan” for the plaintiff specifically indicated that an “assist of two” should be employed.
At approximately 2:00 p.m. on October 21, 2001, the plaintiff’s daughter went to the nursing home for her second visit of the day. She found her mother sitting on a toilet, where a nursing home employee had brought her some undisclosed time before. The daughter had her mother pull the cord next to the toilet to summon help, and a single nurse’s aide responded. The aide informed the daughter that the person who had brought the plaintiff to the bathroom had gone to lunch. Then, outside the daughter’s view, the aide sought to assist the plaintiff from the toilet into her wheelchair. The plaintiff fell to the ground, because the aide deviated from the applicable standard of care in at least three respects: trying to do the transfer alone when two aides were required, failing to use a device known as a “gait belt,” and failing to lock the wheels of the wheelchair.
With the efforts of a second nursing home employee, the aide was eventually able to get the plaintiff into the wheelchair and back into bed. However, even as she was being wheeled back to her bed, the plaintiff began pointing to her leg and complaining of pain there. She had made no such complaints prior to this time.
In light of the plaintiff’s osteoporosis and Dr. Richmond’s anticipated testimony, the judge concluded that “expert orthopedic testimony” was necessary for the jury to understand when and how the plaintiff broke her bones. Because the plaintiff did not proffer such an expert, the judge granted a directed verdict in the nursing home’s favor.
Discussion. A rational view of the plaintiff’s evidence is that the plaintiff failed to describe any discomfort prior to her fall in the bathroom and she expressed pain as she was wheeled from the bathroom. The evidence permits a reasonable inference that she was uninjured before going into the bathroom, that the aide negligently caused her to fall to the floor, and that she suffered two broken bones by the time she was returned to her bed. The question presented is whether — without the aid of expert testimony — a jury reasonably could have concluded that the plaintiff’s falling to the floor caused her injuries.
Expert testimony is necessary where proof of medical causation lies outside the ken of lay jurors. See Held v. Bail,
However, where a determination of causation lies within “general human knowledge and experience,” expert testimony is not required. Bailey v. Cataldo Ambulance Serv., Inc.,
In sum, we agree with the plaintiff that the judge erred in dismissing her case, at least at the stage she did. The nursing home could have renewed its motion at the close of the plaintiff’s case, at which point the evidentiary issues related to the plaintiff’s proof of the timing of her injuries would have been resolved. See note 5, supra. At that time, it would have been significantly clearer whether the plaintiff could prove causation without an expert. See Douglas v. Whittaker,
The looming presence of Dr. Richmond’s anticipated testimony
Moreover, it would have been up to the jury to decide how much to credit Dr. Richmond’s anticipated testimony. See Commonwealth v. Cullen,
Finally, as we have often cautioned, “[c]oses should be decided upon sworn evidence rather than upon an anticipatory statement of counsel which might bear little resemblance to the available evidence.” Hubert v. Melrose-Wakefield Hosp. Assn.,
We reverse the judgment and remand this matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
The pretrial hearing was prompted by the nursing home’s motion in limine. That motion sought to preclude the plaintiff from using a registered nurse (the plaintiff’s expert on the standard of care) as an expert on medical causation. The judge granted the motion, and the plaintiff does not contest that ruling on appeal. The judge then focused on whether the plaintiff could proceed without an expert on causation. Concluding that an expert was necessary, the judge informed the parties that she intended to dismiss the case after the plaintiff’s opening statement. The plaintiff agreed to the judge’s proposed procedure of waiving her right to a jury trial for the limited purpose of creating a record for the judge to grant a directed verdict in the nursing home’s favor. The plaintiff reserved her right to a jury trial if she prevailed on appeal.
See Serení v. Star Sportswear Mfg. Corp.,
The plaintiff’s claims as to the standard of care were supported by the anticipated testimony of a registered nurse. The nursing home acknowledged that the nurse was competent to testify on such issues.
At the pretrial hearing, the nursing home asserted that its recording that the plaintiff “fell” is of little import, because any time a patient ends up on the ground, the nursing home has a regulatory duty to report this as a “fall.” Even leaving aside the fact that no documentation of such a regulatory duty appears in the record, such an assertion could not properly be used to discount the evidence in the context of a motion for a directed verdict.
The plaintiff’s proof as to the timing of her injuries relied in part on statements she herself made (or did not make) before and after the incident, either to her daughter or to medical personnel. According to the opening statement, the plaintiff “could still communicate” at that time, something that is not contradicted by her counsel’s acknowledgment that by the time of trial (eight years later), her dementia had progressed to the point that she was incompetent to testify. The plaintiff’s ability to communicate some aspects of her condition at the time of the incident finds some support in medical records that indicate that she herself told hospital personnel both that she had pain in her right ankle and that “she fell injuring her [right] ankle,” even while her leukodystrophy rendered her unable to “give further meaningful history.” Although the judge raised concerns about whether the plaintiff’s diminished mental capacity at the time of the incident called into question the reliability of any statements she had made, the judge did not say whether such doubts would go to weight or admissibility. Nor did the judge otherwise resolve whether any statements the plaintiff had made could come into evidence. We consider such statements for the purposes of the current appeal. Certain other medical records included statements suggesting that the plaintiff’s having fallen was the cause of her injuries, without identifying who it was that made that causal link. Although the judge did not formally rule on the admissibility of those statements either, she did plainly state her intent to exclude them unless the source could be identified. Our ruling does not rely on those unattributed statements being admitted, and we do not reach the plaintiff’s argument that these records were fully admissible pursuant to G. L. c. 233, § 79G.
See Bennett v. Winthrop Community Hosp.,
Earlier in this case, a medical malpractice tribunal had determined that the plaintiff’s case was “sufficient to raise a legitimate question of liability appropriate for judicial inquiry.” G. L. c. 231, § 60B. Although a tribunal ruling in a plaintiff’s favor certainly does not preclude a judge from subsequently granting a directed verdict to a defendant, it provides some reason for added caution in doing so before the plaintiff has had the opportunity to put on her case.
That the judge relied in part on Dr. Richmond’s anticipated testimony seems inescapable. In statements akin to factual findings, the judge specifically concluded that the plaintiff’s injury “could have occurred hours before .... It could have occurred the day before for all we know [or i]t could have occurred simply in the mechanism of standing up and putting 200 pounds of weight on bones that are susceptible to fracture.” She also went so far as to find that “it is equally as likely that [the plaintiff’s injuries] could have happened before the bathroom incident.”
Had the nursing home renewed its motion for a directed verdict after it had put on its defense, the judge would have had to consider the extent to which Dr. Richmond’s actual testimony might have aided the plaintiff’s case. See Valade v. Springfield,
