Sonia YOUNG-CHIN, as Personal Representative of the Estate of David Young-Chin, Deceased, Appellant,
v.
CITY OF HOMESTEAD, Municipality d/b/a James Archer Smith Hospital, Ronald Blum, M.D. and Ronald Blum, M.D., P.A., Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*880 Kurzban, Kurzban & Weinger, Steven M. Weinger, Helena Tetzeli and Laurie Bolch; Mario Martin Lovo, Miami, for appellant.
Wolpe, Leibowitz, Berger & Brotman, Steven Berger, Bradley H. Trushin, Rice & Reiser, and Ramon Reiser, Miami, for appellees.
Before BARKDULL, BASKIN and GERSTEN, JJ.
BASKIN, Judge.
Sonia Young-Chin, individually, and as personal representative of the estate of her deceased husband, David Young-Chin, appeals an adverse final judgment in her action predicated on negligence and medical malpractice by James Archer Smith Hospital, and David's treating physicians: Dr. Ronald Blum, a pulmonary specialist, and Dr. B. Joseph Zumpano, the attending physician.[1] Finding multiple errors in the trial court's evidentiary rulings, we reverse the final judgment.
David Young-Chin was injured in an automobile accident and hospitalized at James Archer Smith Hospital [Hospital]. At trial, evidence disclosed that during his hospitalization, David suffered aspiration pneumonitis an infection of the lungs resulting from liquid feeding material flowing into, and remaining in, the lungs. The complaint asserted that David was placed in a head-down, or Trendelenberg, position while the feeding pump was operating, aggravating the aspiration pneumonitis. The pneumonitis caused an extremely high fever. David's physicians noted that antibiotic therapy was required; however, David was not started on antibiotics until several days later. David's condition deteriorated. His physicians ordered that he be placed in the Intensive Care Unit, but the hospital allegedly did not have an empty ICU bed. David died shortly thereafter. Defendants maintained that David's cause of death was an untreatable sepsis infection brought on by his injuries arising from the automobile accident, and that David would have died regardless of the care he received.
First, appellant Young-Chin argues that the trial court erred in refusing to allow her to cross-examine Dr. Robert Rogers, defendant Blum's pulmonary medicine expert, concerning the propriety of placing a comatose patient in the Trendelenberg position without discontinuing forced nasogastric feeding.
Dr. Rogers testified extensively during direct examination regarding the use and indications of the Trendelenberg position. *881 He emphatically and repeatedly stated that, contrary to Young-Chin's assertion, it was not possible for a patient to aspirate in that position. During cross-examination, however, when Young-Chin's counsel questioned Dr. Rogers as to the probability of a patient regurgitating and aspirating while in the Trendelenberg position, the trial court sustained defendants' objections to the question and refused to allow Young-Chin to question Dr. Rogers on the effect of the Trendelenberg position on David's aspiration symptoms.
Defendant Hospital argues that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in sustaining the objection and asserts that, in any event, the witness answered the question. We disagree with the Hospital's construction of the record. The transcript clearly reveals that Dr. Rogers did not answer any questions probing his opinion concerning the possibility of a patient aspirating while in the Trendelenberg position.
Although the trial court has discretion in controlling the extent of cross-examination, "cross-examination may go into any phase, and may not be restricted to mere parts ... or to specific facts developed by the direct examination." Dempsey v. Shell Oil Co.,
Whether David experienced aspiration while in the Trendelenberg position was an issue critical to the determination of the cause of his death. Dr. Roger testified forcefully that David could not have aspirated while in that position; however, evidence disclosed that David exhibited symptoms suggesting he may have aspirated, and that his physician suspected as much. In restricting Young-Chin's cross-examination of Dr. Rogers on this critical and highly disputed issue, the trial court deprived her of the opportunity to explore the basis for the doctor's opinion, and to demonstrate to the jury that his opinion may have been incomplete or inaccurate. Cf. Mathis v. O'Reilly,
Next, Young-Chin contends that the trial court erred in its management of Dr. Gerald B. Kirkpatrick's testimony. Young-Chin asserts that the trial court erred: (1) in permitting the testimony of Dr. Kirkpatrick, the defendant's expert neuropathologist, as to the condition of David's brain tissue in the absence of physical evidence from which to formulate his opinion; and (2) in limiting her cross-examination of Dr. Kirkpatrick as to the grounds for his conclusions. First, we address the limitation of cross-examination.
During direct examination, Dr. Kirkpatrick testified that David had little chance of surviving his brain injuries. He based his opinion on his view that a microscopic examination of David's brain tissue would have exhibited tearing; however, no microscopic examination of David's brain was performed. The only test available to Dr. Kirkpatrick was a scan of David's brain. By Dr. Kirkpatrick's own admission the scan revealed no evidence of tears.
On cross-examination, Young-Chin attempted to question Dr. Kirkpatrick's opinion concerning notations contained in David's medical charts and the nonexistence of microscopic brain slides. Defendant objected to the questioning as exceeding the scope of direct examination. The objection was sustained. We again conclude that the trial court abused its discretion *882 in restricting Young-Chin's attempts to elicit testimony directed to the completeness and the accuracy of the witness's opinion. Dempsey.
Furthermore, the court should not have permitted Dr. Kirkpatrick to testify on this issue in the absence of any physical evidence on which to base his opinion. "It has always been the rule that an expert opinion is inadmissible where it is apparent that the opinion is based on insufficient data." Husky Indus., Inc. v. Black,
Although an expert is permitted to rely on data on which other experts in the field rely, but which has not been admitted into evidence, § 90.704, Fla. Stat. (1989), contrary to defendants' assertions, Dr. Kirkpatrick did not rely on test results or studies. The doctor based his opinion on suppositions, not facts, unlike Robinson v. Hunter,
We do not agree that the error was harmless. An opinion derived from facts not in evidence, permitted the expert to express "unstated and perhaps unwarranted factual assumptions concerning the event... ." Nat Harrison Assoc., Inc v. Byrd,
Finally, Young-Chin asserts that the trial court committed reversible error in restricting her ability to question her neurology expert, Dr. David Ross, to rebut the testimony of defendants' experts. The cumulative effect of defense expert testimony was that David's life expectancy was curtailed by his head injuries, rather than by the hospital and the physicians' treatment. Young-Chin sought to introduce the testimony of Dr. Ross to rebut testimony regarding David's expected recovery from his brain injuries, and the effect of defendants' medical care. Young-Chin's efforts to contradict defendants' theory and to show that the brain injury was not the cause of death, were thwarted.
This issue was addressed in Heberling v. Fleisher,
Although a trial court has broad discretion in admitting or excluding evidence, *883 Jent v. State,
In view of the evidentiary errors, which we cannot conclude are harmless or not prejudicial to Young-Chin's case, we reverse the final judgment and remand the cause for a new trial. Our determination makes it unnecessary for us to reach the remaining issues on appeal.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Dr. Zumpano subsequently filed bankruptcy proceedings and is not a party to this appeal.
