Holzem v. Presbyterian Healthcare Services ( 2013 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: _______________
    Filing Date: July 17, 2013
    Docket No. 30,294
    PETER J. HOLZEM, as Personal Representative for the
    WRONGFUL DEATH ESTATE OF DOUGLAS R. REID, deceased,
    and CHRISTAL REID, individually and as guardian and next friend
    of Darian Reed, a Minor,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    PRESBYTERIAN HEALTHCARE SERVICES
    and JOSEPH HELAK, D.O.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF RIO ARRIBA COUNTY
    Sheri A. Raphaelson, District Judge
    John R. Polk Law Offices
    John R. Polk
    Albuquerque, NM
    David A. Archuleta
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellants
    Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A.
    Edward Ricco
    Jocelyn Drennan
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellees
    OPINION
    HANISEE, Judge.
    1
    {1}     Peter Holzem, the personal representative of Douglas Reid’s estate, and Christal
    Reid, Douglas Reid’s wife, (collectively, Plaintiffs) brought suit against Presbyterian
    Healthcare Services and Dr. Joseph Helak (Defendants), seeking damages for the wrongful
    death of Reid, under theories of medical negligence, respondeat superior, and corporate
    negligence. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Defendants based on
    its conclusion that Plaintiffs lacked competent, admissible expert testimony to support the
    elements of duty and negligence with regard to Dr. Helak and to prove that Defendants’
    actions or inactions proximately caused or contributed to cause Reid’s death. Plaintiffs
    appeal, asserting that genuine issues of material fact exist to preclude summary judgment,
    and contending that the district court abused its discretion in excluding both expert testimony
    and a medical study supporting Plaintiffs’ theory of the case. Because the district court
    abused its discretion in excluding the testimony of Plaintiffs’ proposed expert, Darwin
    Palmer, M.D., we reverse and remand.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    {2}     Reid, a thirty-four -year-old man, first developed influenza symptoms on either
    January 2 or 3, 2005. On January 4, he sought treatment at an urgent care center and was
    subsequently sent to an emergency room at Plains Regional Medical Center, both of which
    were owned by Defendant Presbyterian Healthcare Services. Dr. Helak treated Reid at the
    emergency room where Reid presented with symptoms consistent with influenza or
    gastroenteritis. Dr. Helak did not test Reid for influenza. Rather, Dr. Helak provided Reid
    with palliative treatment, addressing Reid’s symptoms, but not determining the underlying
    cause of his illness. Reid was subsequently sent home from the hospital.
    {3}    On January 5, Reid’s condition deteriorated, and he was seen by his primary care
    physician, Albert Kwan, M.D., who admitted him as a patient into Plains Regional Medical
    Center. Reid died there in the intensive care unit at 8:15 a.m. the following day. The
    autopsy report, issued on February 7, 2005, concluded that the cause of death was
    myocarditis (inflammation of the heart) due to an Influenza B infection.
    {4}      Plaintiffs subsequently brought this wrongful death action against Defendants.
    During the course of the case, Plaintiffs produced evidence from a medical expert, Dr.
    Palmer, who attested to breaches of the standard of care owed by Dr. Helak and the
    hospital’s nursing staff. The theory of Plaintiffs’ case was that Dr. Helak “failed to perform
    a differential diagnosis” when Reid initially presented in the emergency room and “failed
    to use an available . . . test for influenza.” Plaintiffs asserted that the “differential diagnosis
    is [a] standard practice in emergency rooms in New Mexico[,] medication is available to
    treat influenza along with other courses of action[, and that] Reid died of undiagnosed and
    untreated influenza.” Plaintiffs concluded that “Defendants failed to possess and apply the
    knowledge and use the skill and care owed to [Reid] and, as the proximate result of the
    negligence of Defendants, [Reid] died.”
    {5}     We note that Plaintiffs initiated their case on the primary theory that the negligent
    2
    medical action involved the failure to make a differential diagnosis. Yet the district court
    identified the material issue to be Plaintiffs’ ensuing contention that Dr. Helak should have
    given Reid Tamiflu, a drug used to prevent replication of the influenza virus, despite
    Defendants’ assertion that Reid had been symptomatic for about fifty hours upon arrival at
    the emergency room. The district court explained:
    If it is true that the negligence in this case is only the failure to make a
    differential diagnosis[,] then . . . Plaintiff[]s would fail to be able to show that
    omission caused the death. Clearly, the allegation of . . . Plaintiff[s] is that
    if [Reid] had been given Tamiflu when he was seen in the emergency
    department he would have lived. It is that omission, the failure to give
    Tamiflu, that . . . Plaintiff[s are] necessarily saying caused the death.
    We agree with the district court’s understanding of the nature of the claim asserted by
    Plaintiffs. In fact, to support their contention that a differential diagnosis would have
    improved Reid’s chances of recovery and survival, Plaintiffs relied on Dr. Palmer’s
    statement that it would have been medically appropriate for Reid to have been given the
    antiviral drug, Tamiflu, had the differential diagnosis been made. In his deposition, Dr.
    Palmer indicated that he was qualified to testify on this topic because he was an infectious
    disease specialist, who taught about and specialized in treating infectious diseases for
    twenty-nine years at the University of New Mexico Medical School. The courses he taught
    included instruction on the diagnosis and treatment of influenza.
    {6}     After extensive discovery in which Defendants deposed Plaintiffs’ experts,
    Defendants contemporaneously sought summary judgment and exclusion of testimony by
    Dr. Palmer. In their motion for summary judgment, which incorporated their separate
    motion to exclude opinion testimony by Dr. Palmer, Defendants argued that Plaintiffs failed
    to provide competent, admissible evidence to establish Dr. Helak’s breach of the standard
    of care or Defendants’ causation of Reid’s injuries and death. Defendants maintained that
    “Plaintiffs rely upon only one expert, Dr. Palmer, to express opinions on the standard of care
    applicable to Dr. Helak [and] . . . whether Dr. Helak breached that standard.” Defendants
    also asserted that Dr. Palmer was unqualified to express opinions as to either breach or
    causation because he “does not possess adequate training or experience in emergency
    medicine,” and because he “has no practical experience with Tamiflu, and has not otherwise
    reviewed or researched . . . this drug[.]”
    {7}      In his January 2009 deposition, Dr. Palmer stated that he had not practiced
    emergency medicine for nearly fifty years and had never specialized in emergency medicine.
    As well, Defendant produced evidence showing that Tamiflu was not available for
    prescription until 1999 at the earliest, approximately four years after Dr. Palmer retired from
    practicing medicine. We note that although Dr. Palmer was licensed to practice medicine
    at the time of his 2009 deposition, he testified that he had not worked or had privileges at any
    hospital since 1995 and that he had never provided medical care as a private practitioner.
    Dr. Palmer testified at his deposition that he could not recall practicing medicine between
    3
    1997 and 2004.
    {8}     Dr. Palmer further stated when deposed he had not reviewed any literature regarding
    Tamiflu in preparation for his deposition and that he did not plan to refer to medical
    research, literature, or studies of any kind when he testified at trial. Dr. Palmer also
    conceded that he was not aware of any studies published before 2005 that addressed the
    effectiveness of Tamiflu administered in excess of forty hours following the onset of
    symptoms. Following Dr. Palmer’s deposition, Plaintiffs attempted to amend the testimony
    he provided by submitting a six-page witness correction sheet signed by Dr. Palmer, but
    upon Defendants’ motion, the district court struck the document from the record.
    {9}      Plaintiffs opposed summary judgment, arguing that Dr. Palmer indeed possessed
    sufficient experience in emergency medicine, influenza diagnosis, and the administration of
    Tamiflu. Attached to their response to Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs
    submitted, among other exhibits, two supplementary affidavits from Dr. Palmer. In the first
    affidavit, Palmer attested to his qualifications and opinion about causation in Reid’s case.
    In the second affidavit, labeled the “Special Affidavit” by Plaintiffs, Dr. Palmer provided
    new information about his post-retirement medical practice in Zimbabwe and in a health
    clinic in Albuquerque. In the Special Affidavit, he stated that “[s]hortly after his retirement
    he spent two years teaching infectious disease, urgent care[,] and emergency medicine at the
    University of Zimbabwe Medical School, . . . which involved a plethora of infectious
    diseases including all forms of influenza.”
    {10} The Special Affidavit also avowed that from 1998 through 2002, Dr. Palmer
    practiced medicine two days per week in the Healthcare for the Homeless Clinic, where he
    treated patients with various stages of influenza infections. Dr. Palmer attested that “[t]his
    experience started before the modern antiviral treatments for influenza became available and
    continued through the introduction of Tamiflu[,] giving him a close observation of the
    effectiveness of this antiviral drug which he prescribed regularly.” The Special Affidavit
    stated that during his time at the clinic, Dr. Palmer treated hundreds, if not thousands, of
    influenza patients, and “was able to carefully observe Tamiflu’s effectiveness based on the
    time of its administration from the onset of symptoms.” The Special Affidavit asserted that
    “[b]ased on his personal experience in diagnosing, observing, treating[,] and following
    influenza patients in the many hundreds, if not thousands, he is thoroughly familiar with this
    infectious disease, its consequences, and the effectiveness of the various treatments that have
    been administer[ed] for it over the years.”
    {11} Defendants subsequently brought motions to strike both affidavits, arguing that they
    were “sham” affidavits and that “Dr. Palmer should be bound by his deposition testimony,
    not by a self-serving and contradictory affidavit served after the conclusion of discovery.”
    Defendants contended that the Special Affidavit qualified as a “sham” because this
    additional work experience was not identified on Dr. Palmer’s curriculum vitae produced
    during discovery and because it contradicted his deposition testimony that he did not practice
    medicine between 1997 and 2004. Plaintiffs responded that the Special Affidavit was meant
    4
    to supplement Dr. Palmer’s deposition testimony and that Defendants had previously agreed
    to post-deposition supplementation of discovery. The district court did not rule on either
    motion to strike the post-deposition affidavits.
    {12} Nonetheless, the district court excluded the testimony of Dr. Palmer, concluding that
    he was not “qualified to render opinions o[n] the standard of care in the field of emergency
    medicine, including diagnosis and treatment.” It appears from the court’s order that this
    decision was based primarily on the court’s finding that “[e]mergency [m]edicine is a
    specialized field of medicine in which Dr. Palmer has never been certified, never received
    specialized education, nor ever practiced.” Although argued by Defendants as a ground for
    exclusion, the court did not note Dr. Palmer’s experience or inexperience with Tamiflu in
    its decision to exclude his testimony. The district court then granted summary judgment in
    favor of Defendants, stating that based on its Daubert analysis, it agreed with Defendants
    that
    (1) Plaintiffs do not have competent, admissible expert testimony to support
    the elements of duty and negligence against [Defendant], and (2) Plaintiffs
    also do not have competent, admissible expert testimony to support their
    claim that alleged negligence on the part of the Defendants proximately
    caused or contributed to cause the death of Douglas Reid and resulting harm
    to . . . Plaintiffs.
    See Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc., 
    509 U.S. 579
     (1993). Plaintiffs now appeal.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    {13} At the heart of the summary judgment motion was Plaintiffs’ purported lack of
    evidence to support the elements of duty, breach of duty, and causation, that is, whether Reid
    would have had a better chance of survival had the proper standard of care been adhered to
    by Dr. Helak. Specifically, at issue is whether Dr. Helak should have performed a
    differential diagnosis and then administered Tamiflu to Reid. “The testimony of a medical
    expert is generally required when a physician’s standard of care is being challenged in a
    medical negligence case.” Lopez v. Reddy, 2005-NMCA-054, ¶ 9, 
    137 N.M. 554
    , 
    113 P.3d 377
    . Here, a medical expert was required to testify regarding the standard of care applicable
    to the diagnosis and treatment of influenza, an infectious disease. Once the district court
    excluded testimony by Dr. Palmer, Plaintiffs’ only proposed expert witness to prove these
    core elements of a negligence cause of action, the court concluded that summary judgment
    was necessitated. Plaintiffs assert that it was error to exclude Dr. Palmer’s testimony and
    grant summary judgment on the basis identified by the district court.
    A.     Dr. Palmer’s Absence of Expertise in Emergency Medicine Was Not A Proper
    Basis To Disqualify Him As An Expert
    {14}   “With respect to the admission or exclusion of evidence, we generally apply an abuse
    5
    of discretion standard where the application of an evidentiary rule involves an exercise of
    discretion or judgment, but we apply a de novo standard to review any interpretations of law
    underlying the evidentiary ruling.” Dewitt v. Rent-A-Center, Inc., 2009-NMSC-032, ¶ 13,
    
    146 N.M. 453
    , 
    212 P.3d 341
    . “In determining whether an expert witness is competent or
    qualified to testify, [t]he [district] court has wide discretion . . ., and the court’s
    determination of this question will not be disturbed on appeal, unless there has been an abuse
    of this discretion.” Lopez, 2005-NMCA-054, ¶ 14 (alterations in the original) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Nonetheless, with regard to the admission of
    scientific evidence,
    [a]n abuse of discretion . . . can be found when the trial judge’s action was
    obviously erroneous, arbitrary, or unwarranted. . . . An abuse of discretion
    standard of review . . . is not tantamount to rubber-stamping the trial judge’s
    decision. It should not prevent an appellate court from conducting a
    meaningful analysis of the admission [of] scientific testimony to ensure that
    the trial judge’s decision was in accordance with the Rules of Evidence and
    the evidence in the case.
    State v. Alberico, 
    116 N.M. 156
    , 170, 
    861 P.2d 192
    , 206 (1993).
    {15} Rule 11-702 NMRA states that “if the expert’s scientific, technical, or other
    specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact to understand the evidence or to determine
    a fact in issue[, a] witness who is qualified as an expert by knowledge, skill, experience,
    training, or education may testify [thereto] in the form of an opinion or otherwise.” Under
    Rule 11-702, the trial court must determine whether an expert witness is or is not qualified
    to testify and give an opinion about the particular issue. Lopez, 2005-NMCA-054, ¶ 14. The
    medical expert has the task of testifying “as to how and why he arrives at an opinion that a
    defendant physician’s conduct has been substandard.” Sewell v. Wilson, 
    97 N.M. 523
    , 528,
    
    641 P.2d 1070
    , 1075 (Ct. App. 1982). Thus, “[t]he qualifications of an expert are dependent
    on the type of negligence claimed and the medical complexity involved.” Lopez, 2005-
    NMCA-054, ¶ 16. We note that “a non-specialist can testify as to the standards of care owed
    by a defendant specialist, but only if the non-specialist is qualified and competent to do so.”
    Wilson, 97 N.M. at 528, 641 P.2d at 1075. “[T]he mere fact that a medical witness is not a
    specialist goes to the weight, not to admissibility, of the witness’[s] expert testimony.” Id.
    {16} At issue in this case is whether Dr. Palmer possessed the knowledge, skill, training,
    or education to be qualified and competent to testify about whether Reid would have had a
    better chance at survival had Dr. Helak adhered to the applicable standard of care. More
    specifically, based upon Plaintiffs’ theory of the case, Dr. Palmer must have been qualified
    to testify about the standard practice for administering Tamiflu, as well as the likelihood that
    Tamiflu would have saved Reid’s life. Here, the district court determined that Dr. Palmer
    was unqualified to testify because he lacked experience and expertise in emergency
    medicine, yet it neglected to incorporate into its ruling consideration of Dr. Palmer’s many
    years of experience in infectious disease treatment or to consider the information separately
    6
    asserted by way of post-deposition affidavits or even to rule upon Defendants’ motions that
    the affidavits be stricken.
    {17} Initially, we conclude that the district court erred in basing its exclusion on the
    exclusive rationale the district court identified, as we reason that Dr. Palmer’s lack of
    expertise in emergency medicine does not alone establish a permissible ground for
    disqualification as an expert under the circumstance of this case. At issue, generally, is the
    standard of care for treating influenza. Evidence indicates that Dr. Palmer was an infectious
    disease specialist who taught about and specialized in treating infectious diseases for twenty-
    nine years at the University of New Mexico Medical School. The courses he taught to
    medical students included instruction on the diagnosis and treatment of influenza. Not as
    a specialist in emergency medicine but as a specialist in infectious disease, Dr. Palmer’s
    background afforded him experience and expertise in diagnosing and treating influenza. The
    standard for diagnosing and treating influenza is not particular to emergency medicine, and
    cannot be construed on such a narrow basis. Plaintiffs’ influenza-related claim should be
    addressed by an expert who has sufficient experience in both influenza diagnosis and
    treatment that is pertinent to the facts of this case. Accordingly, Dr. Palmer’s lack of
    specialization in emergency medicine does not automatically disqualify him as an expert
    witness. Rather, it goes to the weight a jury could give his testimony if determined
    otherwise to be admissible. The district court therefore abused its discretion by determining
    that Dr. Palmer was not qualified as an expert on this erroneous and arbitrary basis.
    {18} We discern that the decisive issue with regard to Dr. Palmer’s capacity to provide
    expertise here turns on his experience or education with regard to administering Tamiflu, a
    newer drug used in the treatment of influenza. As well, we recognize that we could affirm
    the district court’s exclusion of Dr. Palmer’s testimony if the court correctly determined that
    he lacked the qualifications to offer opinions on the appropriate use of Tamiflu. Cordova
    v. World Fin. Corp., 2009-NMSC-021, ¶ 18, 
    146 N.M. 256
    , 
    208 P.3d 901
     (explaining that
    appellate courts may affirm a district court’s decision if it is right for any reason, so long as
    doing so would not be unfair to the appellant). However, Dr. Palmer’s Special Affidavit
    asserted that he had considerable experience in prescribing Tamiflu and in observing its
    effects on influenza. While Defendants moved to strike the Special Affidavit on various
    grounds, the district court never ruled on those motions. Consequently, the Special Affidavit
    was part of the record upon which the district court based its determination to exclude Dr.
    Palmer’s testimony, and the district court’s exclusion was therefore equally improper in light
    of the Special Affidavit.
    {19} Defendants suggest that we can determine whether the Special Affidavit was properly
    before the district court, but we decline that invitation. It is for the district court in the first
    instance to rule on motions and, if it has not done so, there is no ruling for us to review. We
    express no opinion about how the district court should rule on Defendants’ motions to strike.
    On remand, the district court may resolve the still-pending motions to strike, and the parties
    may renew or submit any motions, evidentiary or otherwise, they deem to be appropriate in
    light of that or our ruling. We therefore reverse and remand because, given the record before
    7
    it, including the Special Affidavit, the district court abused its discretion in excluding Dr.
    Palmer’s testimony.
    B.     Summary Judgment Was Improper
    {20} “Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues of material fact
    and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Self v. United Parcel Serv., Inc.,
    1998-NMSC-046, ¶ 6, 
    126 N.M. 396
    , 
    970 P.2d 582
    . “On appeal from the grant of summary
    judgment, we ordinarily review the whole record in the light most favorable to the party
    opposing summary judgment to determine if there is any evidence that places a genuine issue
    of material fact in dispute.” City of Albuquerque v. BPLW Architects & Eng’rs, Inc., 2009-
    NMCA-081, ¶ 7, 
    146 N.M. 717
    , 
    213 P.3d 1146
    . “However, if no material issues of fact are
    in dispute and an appeal presents only a question of law, we apply de novo review and are
    not required to view the appeal in the light most favorable to the party opposing summary
    judgment.” Id.
    {21} The district court based its order of summary judgment entirely on its exclusion of
    Dr. Palmer, stating that “Plaintiffs do not have competent, admissible expert testimony to
    support the elements of duty and negligence [and proximate cause.]” Since we hold that the
    district court abused its discretion in excluding Dr. Palmer, Plaintiffs may now have the
    ability to prove those elements of their claim. As such, we reverse the district court’s order
    of summary judgment.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    {22} For the reasons stated above, we conclude that the district court erred in excluding
    Dr. Palmer’s testimony. We reverse the court’s order excluding Dr. Palmer and its order of
    summary judgment and remand the case to the district court. As our holding is dispositive,
    we do not address Plaintiffs’ other arguments on appeal.
    {23}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Chief Judge
    ____________________________________
    CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
    8