Case Information
*1 FIRST DIVISION MAY 10, 2010 LINDA TANNEHILL, ) Appeal from the
) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County.
) v. ) No. 07 L 12319
) AUDREY COSTELLO, ) The Honorable
) Elizabeth Budzinski, Defendant-Appellee. ) Judge Presiding.
JUSTICE PATTI delivered the opinion of the court: Plaintiff, Linda Tannehill, appeals an order of the circuit court of Cook County granting summary judgment to defendant, Audrey Costello, in plaintiff’s personal injury cause of action against her. Plaintiff sought damages from defendant for injuries she allegedly sustained to her right shoulder in helping defendant walk to her car after defendant experienced a medical emergency and insisted that plaintiff drive her to the hospital, rather than call an ambulance.
The following facts are relevant and taken from the record. On November 1, 2005, defendant was 67 years old and recuperating at home from recent open heart surgery, which included skin grafts on her legs, when she began experiencing pain and thought that she felt something snap in her leg. She called plaintiff, who had been her next-door neighbor for approximately 20 years, and asked for assistance. Plaintiff immediately went next door and defendant told her that she needed to go to the hospital to see her surgeon and asked plaintiff to *2 drive her there. Plaintiff testified at her discovery deposition that defendant’s demeanor was “frantic” and that she “refused for me to call an ambulance.” Plaintiff further testified that she “was not comfortable helping [defendant] because I knew that she had *** heart surgery. And I did not know what was wrong with her.”
Defendant subsequently asked for her slippers and when plaintiff placed them on her feet, she noticed that defendant’s right leg was swollen. Plaintiff testified to the following:
“Q. Was there any conversation at the time you were putting the slippers on her feet?
A. Yes.
Q. What was the conversation?
A. I wanted to call for an ambulance.
Q. Okay.
A. And she was adamant that she did not want to go in an ambulance because she did not want to have to wait at the hospital.
Q. Well, did she say where she wanted you to take her?
A. St. Francis in Blue Island.
Q. To some other department?
A. It was -- She had talked to her surgeon, I guess, and the surgeon had told her to come through the cardiac *3 department.
Q. Okay. Did you eventually agree to try to drive her to the hospital?
A. Yes.” Plaintiff then got her car, parked it in defendant’s driveway, and returned to help defendant, who was sitting in the front room in a recliner. Plaintiff offered defendant her right arm because of a prior work-related injury to her left arm. Defendant stood up and held onto plaintiff’s right arm, took approximately three to four steps toward the front door, before plaintiff told her that she would not be able to get her into the car. Plaintiff testified that while defendant was taking these steps, the two were arguing because plaintiff still wanted to call an ambulance while defendant insisted that she drive her to the hospital. Defendant testified at her discovery deposition that after she walked these few steps, she felt something burst like a balloon in her leg. After defendant got back into her recliner, plaintiff called 911 and an ambulance transported defendant to the hospital.
Defendant testified that in November 2005, she weighed approximately 167 to 170 pounds and was 4 feet l1 inches tall. She further testified to the following:
“Q. Why didn’t you call an ambulance?
A. Because at the time the doctor they had in the emergency room was on drugs or something. They’ve since got rid of him. I had dealings with him in the past once, and -- for a nose bleed, and I sat there and I’m not kidding you, *4 ten hours.
Q. Had it been your experience when you had gone to the emergency room in the past, that you would deal with that same doctor?
A. No.
Q. And which emergency room are we referencing? A. St. Francis, Blue Island.
Q. Correct me if I’m wrong. If I’m putting words in your mouth, just tell me.
Would it be fair to say that based on a particular occasion you had in the past with one doctor at St. Francis, you didn’t want to chance it going back there and having to wait a real long time?
A. Exactly. I wanted to go to my surgeon’s office.” Plaintiff alleged that her right shoulder was injured as a result of physically assisting defendant on November 1, 2005, which necessitated surgery and other treatment. Defendant ultimately moved for summary judgment on the basis that the undisputed facts showed that defendant owed no duty of care to plaintiff.
On January 9, 2009, the trial court granted plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. The trial court found that the injury to plaintiff was not foreseeable under the circumstances and that placing the burden of guarding against such injury on defendant was not practicable. *5 Consequently, the trial court found that defendant owed no duty to plaintiff. Plaintiff filed a motion for reconsideration on February 5, 2009, which the trial court denied on February 26, 2009, and this timely appeal ensued.
ANALYSIS
Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment because defendant owed her a duty of care under the rescue doctrine because she was attempting to rescue defendant at the time that she was injured.
We apply a
de novo
standard of review in appeals from summary judgment rulings.
Williams v. Covenant Medical Center,
When ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the evidence must be viewed in the
light most favorable to the nonmovant. Williams,
The essential elements of a cause of action based on common law negligence may be
stated briefly as follows: the existence of a duty owed by the defendant to the plaintiff, a breach
of that duty, and an injury proximately caused by that breach. Kirk v. Michael Reese Hospital &
Medical Center,
The rescue doctrine, as relied upon by plaintiff in this case, arises when a plaintiff brings
a negligence action against a defendant whose negligence has placed a third party in a position of
peril. Williams v. Foster,
Recently, in Strickland the Third District considered as a matter of first impression in
Illinois whether the rescue doctrine permits a rescuer to recover from a rescued party if the
rescuer is injured in the course of the rescue. Strickland
The Strickland court agreed with the overwhelming authority in other states that allows a
rescuer to recover from a defendant who places himself in danger and the rescuer is injured in the
course of the rescue. Strickland,
Accordingly, the judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed. Affirmed.
HALL, P.J., and LAMPKIN, J., concur.
