Horn v. St. Peter S Hosp. , 389 Mont. 449 ( 2017 )


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  •                                                                                                 12/05/2017
    DA 16-0730
    Case Number: DA 16-0730
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2017 MT 298
    ERIC HORN,
    Plaintiff and Appellant,
    v.
    ST. PETER’S HOSPITAL,
    Defendant and Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM:            District Court of the First Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Lewis And Clark, Cause No. BDV-2013-695
    Honorable DeeAnn Cooney, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    L. Randall Bishop, Bishop, Heenan & Davies, Billings, Montana
    Eric Rasmusson, Bulman Law Associates, PLLC, Missoula, Montana
    Neel Hammond, Hammond Law, PLLC, Missoula, Montana
    For Appellee:
    David M. McLean, Ryan C. Willmore, McLean & Associates, PLLC,
    Missoula, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: October 18, 2017
    Decided: December 5, 2017
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Chief Justice Mike McGrath delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1        Eric Horn appeals from the District Court’s post-jury-trial orders overturning the
    verdict in Horn’s favor, and granting judgment to St. Peter’s Hospital (Hospital). We
    affirm.
    ¶2        We restate the issue on appeal as follows:
    Whether the District Court erred in granting a judgment as a matter of law in
    favor of St. Peter’s Hospital following a jury verdict in favor of Eric Horn.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶3        Horn was injured in April 2011 when he fell from a roof, fracturing his heels and a
    vertebra. His injuries required several surgeries, a seventeen-day stay in the Hospital,
    and a subsequent period of immobilization. Prior to surgery, Hospital orthopedic surgeon
    Dr. Jeffrey Martin ordered that a retrievable blood clot filter be placed in Horn’s inferior
    vena cava (IVC), a large vein leading to the heart. The purpose of installing the filter was
    to trap blood clots that might arise from the period of physical inactivity during Horn’s
    recuperation after surgery. A radiologist employed by Great Divide Radiology implanted
    an Optease brand filter.
    ¶4        Dr. Martin was the primary physician responsible for Horn’s care from April 28,
    2011, to August 16, 2011. In early August 2011, after the filter had been in place about
    120 days and Horn had regained some mobility, Dr. Martin ordered that it be removed.
    On August 16, 2011, Dr. Jeffrey Georgia attempted to remove the filter, but discovered
    that it was embedded in the wall of Horn’s IVC and could not be retrieved.
    2
    ¶5     After the failed filter retrieval, Horn returned to the Hospital’s emergency room
    several times with severe abdominal, pelvic and groin pains. He was treated for a bladder
    or kidney infection, but in August 2011 returned to the ER with a swollen right leg. Horn
    was transported to St. Patrick Hospital in Missoula on August 29 and remained there
    through September 2, 2011. Doctors there treated Horn for a blood clot and hematoma,
    and inserted a stent in his left iliac vein.
    ¶6     The doctors at St. Patrick Hospital determined that removal of the blood clot filter
    was too complicated for them to attempt and referred Horn to the Oregon Health Sciences
    University in Portland. Doctors there unsuccessfully attempted to remove the embedded
    filter. In the process of doing so, the tip of a catheter broke off in the vein and could not
    be retrieved.
    ¶7     The OHSU referred Horn to Stanford University where doctors used a unique laser
    procedure to remove the blood clot filter. The Stanford doctors were unable to remove
    the fragment of catheter because it was embedded in the wall of Horn’s IVC.
    ¶8     In September 2013 Horn sued St. Peter’s Hospital seeking to recover damages for
    medical negligence. The case went to jury trial on August 29, 2016. Horn presented his
    case, including the testimony of treating doctors as well as two expert medical witnesses.
    When Horn rested, the Hospital moved for judgment as a matter of law under
    M. R. Civ. P. 50(a), contending that Horn had failed to prove that the Hospital departed
    from the applicable standard of care. The District Court denied the motion and the case
    proceeded, lasting a total of four days.
    3
    ¶9     The jury returned a verdict in favor of Horn, awarding damages for medical
    expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and mental and emotional distress.           On
    September 14, 2016, the District Court entered judgment in Horn’s favor for
    $492,268.39.
    ¶10    The Hospital then renewed its motion for judgment as a matter of law and joined it
    with motions under M. R. Civ. P. 59 and 60 for a new trial and for relief from the
    judgment. On November 18, 2016, the District Court reversed its prior order and granted
    the Hospital’s Rule 50(b) motion for judgment as a matter of law, dismissing Horn’s
    complaint.
    ¶11    The District Court’s order reviewed the testimony from the trial, noting that the
    only express reference to standard of care from Horn’s expert, Dr. Alzheimer, came
    during cross-examination when he was asked whether the standard of care would vary
    depending upon where the medical professional practiced. The District Court concluded
    that Dr. Alzheimer “provided no opinion” regarding the applicable standard of care, or
    whether it was breached.
    ¶12    The District Court noted that Horn’s other expert, Chris Bilyeu, testified about the
    practices and procedures followed by the hospital where he works in Sheridan, Wyoming.
    The District Court determined that Bilyeu did not establish that these practices and
    procedures constituted the standard of care “for all hospitals,” and did not establish that
    they should have been followed by the Hospital in this case.          The District Court
    determined that upon review, Bilyeu provided no opinion on the standard of care, and no
    opinion that the Hospital departed from the standard of care to Horn’s injury.
    4
    ¶13     The District Court also noted Horn’s reliance upon the testimony of treating
    physician Dr. Martin, but again determined that Martin did not testify as to any standard
    of care or that there was a breach of the standard of care. The District Court further
    determined that the only expert to testify about a standard of care was the Hospital’s
    expert, Dr. Moriarty. He testified that the decision to use the IVC filter was within
    “acceptable medical practice” and met the applicable standard of care. The District Court
    noted that Moriarty’s testimony was “unrefuted.”
    ¶14     The District Court rejected Horn’s argument that the record showed negligence by
    the Hospital and that “multiple experts either inferred or admitted that the evidence
    indicated a deviation from what was safe and prudent aftercare.” The District Court
    concluded that these arguments were unavailing because “inference, implication, and jury
    purview is not what Montana law requires. Expert testimony as to the standard of care
    must be presented at trial.”
    ¶15     Horn appeals, seeking reversal of the District Court’s order and reinstatement of
    the verdict and judgment in his favor.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶16     A district court may only grant judgment as a matter of law under M. R. Civ. P. 50
    when “there is a complete absence of any evidence which would justify submitting an
    issue to a jury.” Schumacher v. Stephens, 
    1998 MT 58
    , ¶ 14, 
    288 Mont. 115
    , 
    956 P.2d 76
    . All evidence and all legitimate inferences that might be drawn from it “must be
    considered in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.” Schumacher,
    ¶ 14.   This Court reviews the district court decision using those same principles to
    5
    determine whether the district court’s decision was correct.            Schumacher, ¶ 14.
    Determination of a Rule 50 motion is an issue of law, and this Court provides “full
    review . . . without special deference to the views of the trial court.” Johnson v. Costco
    Wholesale, 
    2007 MT 43
    , ¶ 18, 
    336 Mont. 105
    , 
    152 P.3d 727
    .
    ¶17    Courts should “exercise the greatest self-restraint in interfering with the
    constitutionally mandated process of a jury decision.” Johnson, ¶ 13.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶18    Issue: Whether the District Court erred in granting a judgment as a matter of law
    in favor of St. Peter’s Hospital following a jury verdict in favor of Eric Horn.
    ¶19    Horn’s claim was that the Hospital was negligent in providing care to him. Horn
    claimed that the Hospital failed to implement procedures to assess the risks of inserting
    various types of blood clot filters; failed to implement procedures for tracking filters after
    insertion into a patient; and waited too long to attempt retrieval of his filter. Horn
    contended that these failures resulted in the filter staying inside his body until retrieval
    was extremely difficult, requiring successive referrals to high-level medical facilities
    before the filter could be removed.
    ¶20    The District Court considered the Hospital’s motion under M. R. Civ. P. 50, which
    provides in part:
    (1) If a party has been fully heard on an issue during a jury trial and
    the court finds that a reasonable jury would not have a legally sufficient
    evidentiary basis to find for the party on that issue, the court may:
    (A) resolve the issue against the party; and
    6
    (B) grant a motion for judgment as a matter of law against the party
    on a claim or defense that, under the controlling law, can be maintained or
    defeated only with a favorable ruling on that issue.
    M. R. Civ. P. 50(a)(1). The District Court applied the well-settled governing principle
    that judgment as a matter of law is
    properly granted only when there is a complete absence of any evidence
    which would justify submitting an issue to a jury and all such evidence and
    any legitimate inferences that might be drawn from the evidence must be
    considered in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion.
    Johnson, ¶ 13. The District Court also applied the principle that in cases of alleged
    medical negligence, the plaintiff (Horn) has the burden to establish the standard of care;
    that the standard was breached; and that he suffered damage. Labair v. Carey, 
    2012 MT 312
    , ¶ 29, 
    367 Mont. 453
    , 
    291 P.3d 1160
    . Expert testimony is required to establish these
    issues when they are beyond the common experience of the jury and the testimony will
    assist the jury in understanding the facts. Labair, ¶ 29. These same principles apply
    when the case involves alleged medical negligence by a hospital. Dalton v. Kalispell
    Regional Hosp., 
    256 Mont. 243
    , 246-47, 
    846 P.2d 960
    , 962 (1993).
    ¶21    Horn does not dispute that these principles govern his claim against the Hospital.
    Horn contends that he proved that the Hospital “did not use reasonable care” in treating
    him, and that “multiple experts either inferred or admitted” that there was a “deviation
    from what was safe and prudent aftercare.” He contended that the treatment he received
    was “slipshod and negligently coordinated.” However, after review of the evidence that
    7
    Horn presented at trial, the District Court determined that neither of his two medical
    experts “established the requisite standard of care.”
    ¶22    Horn’s expert, Dr. Alzheimer, did not identify any medical standard of care that
    would have been applicable to Horn’s situation, either as to the Hospital as an
    organization or as to individual doctors. During Dr. Alzheimer’s testimony, Horn’s
    attorney read passages from medical articles and from the manufacturer’s package insert
    for the IVC filter itself, asking him whether he “agreed” with the text. In particular, Dr.
    Alzheimer “agree[d]” with the “advice and assessment” in the literature that “[t]he
    success of retrieval attempts has been shown to decrease with prolonged dwell times, . . .
    highlight[ing] the importance of frequent follow-up for reassessment of risk and
    consideration of filter retrieval.” The fact that Dr. Alzheimer “agreed” with what was
    read to him by the attorney is essentially irrelevant without further testimony that it was
    part of the established standard of medical care applicable to Horn’s situation. On
    cross-examination, Dr. Alzheimer also “agreed” that he was not aware of any filter that
    had been retrieved at the manufacturer’s recommended twenty-three days, that the
    literature also had reported successful retrieval after a dwell time as long as 3,006 days,
    and that “these filters vary from patient to patient.”
    ¶23    Similarly, Horn’s other medical expert Chris Bilyeu failed to provide any
    testimony as to the standard of care for the defendant hospital. Bilyeu, the medical
    imaging manager at Sheridan, Wyoming’s eighty-eight-bed hospital, testified that “in
    [his] department” the company representative is brought in “for the first couple filter
    placements to make sure we know—understand how to use them.” In terms of filter
    8
    retrieval, Bilyeu stated, “Ultimately, . . . it’s the collaboration between the ordering
    physician and the radiologist to determine that the filter can come out. We simply just
    provide an avenue to make sure they understand when the retrieval time is coming up.”
    As the District Court noted, Bilyeu “provided testimony of what occurs at the hospital he
    works at.” However, he “did not testify this was the standard of care for all hospitals, or
    opine this is the standard SPH should have utilized.” On cross-examination, Bilyeu
    acknowledged that he was aware of only one case in which his hospital attempted
    retrieval of an Optease filter within the manufacturer’s recommended twenty-three days,
    and his hospital “had to send it out” after an unsuccessful removal attempt. Again,
    Horn’s second expert failed to provide any description of the standard of care applicable
    to this case. We have recognized that a medical provider’s “individual practice, when not
    based on national standards, lacks relevance to a medical malpractice case.” Norris v.
    Fritz, 
    2012 MT 27
    , ¶ 44, 
    364 Mont. 63
    , 
    270 P.3d 79
    . See also Montana Deaconess
    Hospital v. Gratton, 
    169 Mont. 185
    , 190, 
    545 P.2d 670
    , 673 (1976).
    ¶24    Horn also relies upon two documents from the manufacturer of the Optease filter.
    One appears to be information for patients as to the purpose, design and placement of the
    filter. It states, in part, that the filter “may be placed permanently as an implantable
    device or temporarily as a retrievable device” depending upon the doctor’s
    recommendation. The other was an insert into the packaging for the filter itself. It states,
    in part, that a “21 patient study and a 40 patient retrospective chart review suggest” that
    the filter “can be safely retrieved (mean of 11.1 days, range 5-14 days and mean of 16.4
    9
    days, range 3-48 days).” The same section of the document then states that the “Optease
    filter can be safely retrieved up to 23 days.”
    ¶25    While Horn argues that such manufacturer information may contain the standard
    of medical care, standing alone it does not do so. The issue is that there was no medical
    expert testimony stating that the manufacturer’s information was the standard of care.
    There was no description of a standard of care that a jury could comprehend. A doctor
    witness’s statement that he agreed with this information in no way helps the jury to
    understand it, and does not in any way establish the medical standard of care that should
    be followed by all hospitals for blood clot filter cases.
    ¶26    A manufacturer’s recommendation or package insert can be relevant evidence to
    be considered by the jury, but it is not a substitute for the required expert evidence that
    describes the standard of care. See Hyman & Armstrong, P.S.C. v. Gunderson, 
    279 S.W.3d 93
    , 114 (Ky. 2008) (concluding that, although information about a drug in the
    package insert and the Physicians’ Desk Reference “is relevant and useful information
    regarding the prescribing physician’s standard of care, it is not the sole determinant of the
    standard of care”); Richardson v. Miller, 
    44 S.W.3d 1
    , 16-17 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000)
    (observing that such materials are “intended to comply with the FDA’s regulations, to
    provide advertising and promotional material, and to limit the manufacturer’s liability”
    and cannot, by themselves, be considered prima facie evidence of the prescribing
    physician’s standard of care); Morlino v. Medical Center of Ocean County, 
    684 A.2d 944
    , 949 (N.J. Super. App. Div. 1996) (holding that package inserts and parallel
    Physicians’ Desk Reference information “may be considered by the jury along with
    10
    expert testimony to determine the appropriate standard of care”); Craft v. Peebles, 
    893 P.2d 138
    , 151 (Haw. 1995) (holding that a manufacturer’s insert, in and of itself, may not
    establish the relevant standard of care in a medical negligence action, but may be
    considered by the fact finder “along with expert testimony” to define the standard of
    care).
    ¶27      Horn attempts to downplay this fundamental failure at trial by dismissing it as
    only a quibbling over the absence of “magic words.” As noted above, Montana law has
    long required the presentation of expert testimony to establish the standard of care in a
    medical negligence case. Labair, ¶ 29. The issue here is the total failure to establish for
    the jury the medical standard of care applicable to this case. Without proof of this
    fundamental element of the medical negligence case, the jury was essentially left on its
    own to determine what the standard of care might be. The issue is not the absence of
    magic words, but rather trial counsel’s failure to meet the clear and established
    requirements for maintaining a medical negligence case.        Without presentation of a
    standard of care against which the jury can evaluate the medical care Horn received, this
    case becomes a simple negligence action governed by a “reasonable person” standard.
    This is contrary to Montana law.
    ¶28      The necessity of proving the first and essential leg of a medical negligence claim
    was at the forefront throughout this case. The District Court specifically referred to its
    prior order, which had stated that the “parties agree Horn bears the burden of establishing
    the standard of care” and that expert testimony is ordinarily required to establish the
    11
    standard of care. For whatever reason, that was not done when the case went to trial.
    Unfortunately, Horn must bear the burden of that failure.
    ¶29    The District Court determined that because of the failure to present evidence of the
    first and essential part of a medical negligence claim, the jury did not have a “legally
    sufficient evidentiary basis” to return a verdict against the Hospital for medical
    negligence. As discussed above, this is the threshold for granting a judgment as a matter
    of law under M. R. Civ. P. 50. The District Court applied the well-settled governing
    principle that judgment as a matter of law is warranted when there is a complete absence
    of evidence that would justify submitting an issue to a jury. Johnson, ¶ 13. With Horn’s
    complete failure to prove the applicable standard of care, as the District Court eventually
    recognized, the case should not have been presented to the jury.
    ¶30    We agree with the District Court’s evaluation of the evidence in this case. Even
    under the very high standard for granting a Rule 50(b) motion, it is clear that Horn’s
    representatives at trial utterly failed to present evidence on the fundamental requirements
    of a medical negligence case—the applicable medical standard of care; a breach of the
    standard of care; and damage resulting from that breach. Unfortunately for Horn, this
    departure from the requirements for a prima facie claim of medical negligence make it
    impossible to uphold the jury verdict in this case.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶31    We affirm the District Court’s order granting judgment to the Hospital.
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    12
    We Concur:
    /S/ LAURIE McKINNON
    /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
    /S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    /S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
    /S/ JIM RICE
    13