Margaret Reeves v. Camden Clark Memorial Hospital Corporation and Adam Kaplan ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                     FILED
    June 23, 2021
    EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
    STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA                             SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
    SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS                                 OF WEST VIRGINIA
    Margaret L. Reeves, Administratrix of the
    Estate of Pamela Sue Reeves,
    Plaintiff Below, Petitioner
    vs.) No. 20-0353 (Wood County 17-C-53)
    Camden Clark Memorial Hospital Corporation and
    Adam Kaplan, M.D.,
    Defendants Below, Respondents
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Petitioner Margaret L. Reeves, by counsel David H. Carriger, Richard D. Lindsay, and
    Richard D. Lindsay II, appeals the order of the Circuit Court of Wood County, entered on May 6,
    2020, denying her motion to alter or amend the circuit court’s judgment, which was set forth in
    the circuit court’s order entered on June 5, 2019. 1 Respondent Camden Clark Memorial Hospital
    Corporation (“Camden Clark”) appears by counsel Christine S. Vaglienti, Carlie M. Lacy, and
    Mark A. Moses. Respondent Adam Kaplan appears by counsel Edward C. Martin and Ryan A.
    Brown.
    This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal
    arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided
    by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record
    presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons,
    a memorandum decision affirming the order of the circuit court is appropriate under Rule 21 of
    the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    Ms. Reeves, as administratrix of the estate of her daughter Pamela Reeves (“the decedent”),
    filed a complaint for wrongful death under the state’s Medical Professional Liability Act in the
    Circuit Court of Wood County in February of 2017. Ms. Reeves asserted that the decedent died as
    a result of a hypoxic brain injury following a hysterectomy, subsequent laparotomies, and
    intubation in 2016. The trial was initially scheduled for September of 2018, and Ms. Reeves was
    directed (under an extension granted by the court) to disclose expert witnesses by December 1,
    1
    Ms. Reeves’s counsel’s actions before the circuit court are central to the issues discussed
    in this decision. There is no indication that Ms. Reeves’s appellate attorneys played a part in the
    problematic discovery described herein.
    1
    2017. On that date, Ms. Reeves (through a supplement to an earlier disclosure) explained that she
    had retained three expert witnesses, all general surgeons, who would testify to a reasonable degree
    of medical certainty that respondents
    deviated from the standard of care by negligently failing to properly treat and suture
    [the decedent’s] surgical incision following her . . . procedure as it continued to
    bleed and therefore required additional surgery; negligently failing to apply a
    tension free repair; and negligently failing to prevent and/or preclude the decedent’s
    respiratory arrest/failure.
    In response to the disclosures, Camden Clark filed a motion to compel a summary of the ground
    for each opinion, including a statement on the standard of care.
    A little more than one month after providing her disclosure, Ms. Reeves voluntarily
    dismissed the surgeon she earlier named as a defendant. She filed an amended complaint in April
    of 2018 (more than a year after the filing of the initial complaint), naming Dr. Adam Kaplan, a
    general surgeon who cared for the decedent while she was hospitalized on the weekend preceding
    her death. In the amended complaint, Ms. Reeves asserted that Dr. Kaplan failed to diagnose and
    address decedent’s “deteriorating condition [in the two days that she was under his care] . . .;
    specifically, Dr. Kaplan negligently failed to consider [decedent’s] hemoglobin and hematocrit
    levels in the setting of her failure to recover from surgeries. . . .” The decedent was found
    unresponsive soon after Dr. Kaplan’s shift ended, and she died six days later.
    Pursuant to an amended scheduling order entered on July 20, 2018, Ms. Reeves was to
    identify her trial experts by October 1, 2018, with details of the experts’ expected testimony by
    October 31, 2018. The trial had, by this point, been delayed to March of 2019. Ms. Reeves
    identified a single medical expert, Dr. Bruce Charash, as an expert in cardiology and internal
    medicine, then provided this summary of his anticipated testimony on the final date:
    Dr. Charash is expected to testify to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that
    Adam Kaplan, M.D. and Camden Clark Memorial Hospital, by and through its
    agent, servants and/or employees; negligently fell below the standard of care by
    failing to properly remove and reattach the abdominal binder that was placed after
    [the decedent’s] surgery. Specifically, Dr. Charash will testify that said abdominal
    binder was attached too tightly and/or incorrectly and that [respondents] failed to
    notice or remedy the problem.[ 2] Dr. Charash will further testify that such
    negligence was a proximate cause of her cardiac arrest and, ultimately her death.
    2
    The abdominal binder (a compression belt to assist with recovery) referenced in this
    disclosure was applied by, or at the direction of, the decedent’s surgeon after the decedent
    underwent a second laparotomy, on July 15, 2016. Several Camden Clark nurses testified that they
    checked, removed, or reattached the abdominal binder while the decedent was hospitalized
    following the second laparotomy. There is no evidence that Dr. Kaplan personally adjusted or
    applied the binder.
    2
    The discovery deadline was January 18, 2019. Dr. Kaplan requested the deposition of Dr.
    Charash by letters dated October 16, November 7, November 16, December 3, and December 11,
    2018, and Camden Clark requested the deposition by letter dated December 12, 2018, but Ms.
    Reeves’ counsel did not respond to the requests. Dr. Kaplan filed a motion to compel Dr. Charash’s
    deposition on January 2, 2019. Ms. Reeves then agreed to produce Dr. Charash on February 5,
    2019. Ms. Reeves cancelled this deposition the day before it was to occur and rescheduled the
    deposition to February 21, 2019.
    When Dr. Charash’s deposition was finally conducted on February 21, 2019, he testified
    that he did not receive (or, therefore, review) Ms. Reeves’ expert witness disclosure until the night
    before his deposition. Dr. Charash stated that the disclosure contained a “highly incomplete”
    representation of his opinion. He explained that he had spoken to Ms. Reeves’s counsel for the
    first time since reviewing the decedent’s records on the day preceding his deposition. The prior
    day’s conversation, he confirmed, was the first occasion that he spoke to counsel since reviewing
    the file. Dr. Charash explained that the application of the abdominal binder was a factor
    contributing to the decedent’s “respiratory arrest from the restriction in her breathing and the
    pharmacotherapy that she received.” When asked if the binder caused cardiac arrest, he testified,
    “[n]o, respiratory. . . this was a primary respiratory arrest based on several factors.” He testified
    that doctors should have used a continuous pulse oximeter to monitor for reduction of oxygen
    saturation. Counsel for both respondents advised that they reserved the right to leave the deposition
    open, but they elected not to continue at that time because Dr. Charash was expressing opinions
    not previously provided.
    Both respondents filed pretrial motions asking the circuit court to exclude Dr. Charash’s
    testimony. Within a few days of the filing of those motions, the associate attorney primarily
    assisting Ms. Reeves resigned suddenly from the law firm that represented her. The circuit court
    ultimately stayed the scheduling order until the thirtieth day after the conclusion of the state’s 2019
    legislative session pursuant to West Virginia Code § 4-1-17, which excuses a legislator’s
    appearance from administrative and judicial tribunals while he or she is engaged in certain
    legislative duties, because one of the firm’s principle attorneys was a West Virginia state senator
    who notified the circuit court that he required a stay of proceedings. The trial date was cancelled.
    The circuit court granted respondents’ motions to exclude Dr. Charash’s testimony on June
    5, 2019. In its order, the circuit court noted that Dr. Charash “testified to a new, previously
    undisclosed standard of care and causation opinion[,]” at his deposition and that the opinions he
    offered were inconsistent with the amended complaint. The court noted that discovery had been
    conducted and six nurses had been deposed on the theory of cardiac arrest. The court specifically
    found that Ms. Reeves’s counsel offered Dr. Charash’s opinions without input from Dr. Charash
    and the disclosure was, therefore, made in bad faith. The court concluded that, because the
    exclusion left Ms. Reeves with no medical basis for her claims, a grant of summary judgment to
    both respondents was appropriate. Ms. Reeves filed a motion to alter or amend judgment pursuant
    to Rule 59(e) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure. The circuit court denied the motion
    by order entered on May 6, 2020.
    On appeal, Ms. Reeves presents three assignments of error. She argues, first, that the circuit
    court erred in imposing the extreme sanction of excluding her expert witness rather than imposing
    3
    a less-severe sanction because, with no pending trial date, there was time to cure any prejudice to
    respondents. She argues, second, that even if he is precluded from offering evidence concerning
    Dr. Kaplan’s part in the application of the abdominal binder, Dr. Charash could offer testimony
    about Dr. Kaplan’s failure to order pulse oximetry monitoring of the decedent. She argues, finally,
    that the circuit court erred in denying her motion to alter or amend the court’s judgment made
    pursuant to Rule 59(e) of the West Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure. “The standard of review
    applicable to an appeal from a motion to alter or amend a judgment, made pursuant to W. Va. R.
    Civ. P. 59(e), is the same standard that would apply to the underlying judgment upon which the
    motion is based and from which the appeal to this Court is filed.” Syl. Pt. 1, Wickland v. American
    Travellers Life Ins. Co., 
    204 W. Va. 430
    , 
    513 S.E.2d 657
     (1998).
    Ms. Reeves’s assignments of error attack the circuit court’s order excluding the testimony
    of Dr. Charash, which is tantamount to a sanction for litigation conduct. “The imposition of
    sanctions by a circuit court under W. Va. R. Civ. P. 37(b) for the failure of a party to obey the
    court’s order to provide or permit discovery is within the sound discretion of the court and will not
    be disturbed upon appeal unless there has been an abuse of that discretion.” Syl. Pt. 1, Bell v.
    Inland Mut. Ins. Co., 
    175 W. Va. 165
    , 
    332 S.E.2d 127
     (1985). We find that the circuit court
    exercised sound discretion in excluding Dr. Charash’s testimony, and there is no reversible error.
    Ms. Reeves supports her first and third assignments of error with the same argument, and
    we consider those assignments together. She does not dispute that she provided respondents a
    misleading or inaccurate summary of Dr. Charash’s opinion but argues instead that the circuit
    court’s sanction was extreme because “no trial date was pending” when the court excluded the
    testimony. She further maintains that the court erred in finding that her counsel acted in bad faith,
    but the court nevertheless could have sanctioned her counsel in some manner that did not affect
    the pendency of her claims.
    We note that the trial date was cancelled only after Ms. Reeves’s counsel filed a notice of
    a stay of the proceedings pursuant to the legislative exemption. However, a trial date was
    scheduled—and, indeed, imminent—at the time respondents filed motions to exclude Dr.
    Charash’s testimony. Despite ignoring at least six requests for Charash’s deposition by
    respondents, beginning almost immediately after Dr. Charash was disclosed by petitioner,
    petitioner failed to make him available for a deposition until February 21, 2019, a date significantly
    after the close of discovery and only weeks before the trial, which was then scheduled for March
    9, 2019. Moreover, Dr. Charash was only made available by petitioner after Dr. Kaplan filed a
    motion to compel his attendance at a deposition. When Dr. Charash testified, he explicitly rejected
    the summary of his opinion as provided by petitioner’s counsel—that an abdominal binder caused
    decedent’s cardiac arrest—and explained that the restrictive abdominal binder was a factor, but as
    to respiratory arrest induced by multiple factors including pharmacotherapy. Dr. Charash denied
    that the summary provided by Ms. Reeves’s counsel was complete or accurate, and denied having
    a meaningful discussion with Ms. Reeves’s counsel about his expert opinion prior to the night
    preceding the deposition, even though he reviewed material provided by Ms. Reeves’s counsel as
    early as September of 2018. Thus, it is apparent that Ms. Reeves’s counsel allowed both
    respondents to conduct discovery for months on theories crafted by someone other than the expert
    witness who was expected to testify about those theories. These actions, bordering on fraudulent,
    were indeed made in bad faith and create more than “the usual prejudice related to receiving an
    4
    untimely expert opinion[,]” as Ms. Reeves suggests.
    Ms. Reeves argues, however, that we suggested in Anderson v. Kunduru, 
    215 W. Va. 484
    ,
    
    600 S.E.2d 196
     (2004), that “justice compels that a sanction be directed toward the dilatory
    attorney, not the dilatory attorney’s client.” In that case we did not specifically prescribe a circuit
    court’s ability to employ sanctions that would adversely affect a party, but held:
    “Although Rules 11, 16, and 37 of the West Virginia Rules of Civil
    Procedure do not formally require any particular procedure, before issuing a
    sanction, a court must ensure it has an adequate foundation either pursuant to the
    rules or by virtue of its inherent powers to exercise its authority. The Due Process
    Clause of Section 10 of Article III of the West Virginia Constitution requires that
    there exist a relationship between the sanctioned party’s misconduct and the matters
    in controversy such that the transgression threatens to interfere with the rightful
    decision of the case. Thus, a court must ensure any sanction imposed is fashioned
    to address the identified harm caused by the party’s misconduct.” Syllabus Point 1,
    Bartles v. Hinkle, 
    196 W.Va. 381
    , 
    472 S.E.2d 827
     (1996).
    Anderson, 215 W. Va. at 484, 
    600 S.E.2d at 196
    , Syl. Pt. 2. We also held:
    In formulating the appropriate sanction, a court shall be guided by equitable
    principles. Initially, the court must identify the alleged wrongful conduct and
    determine if it warrants a sanction. The court must explain its reasons clearly on
    the record if it decides a sanction is appropriate. To determine what will constitute
    an appropriate sanction, the court may consider the seriousness of the conduct, the
    impact the conduct had in the case and in the administration of justice, any
    mitigating circumstances, and whether the conduct was an isolated occurrence or
    was a pattern of wrongdoing throughout the case.
    
    Id.
     at Syl. Pt. 3 (citation omitted). In Anderson, we found that the circuit court abused its discretion
    in striking expert witness testimony and subsequently granting summary judgment to defendants
    after the plaintiff’s counsel failed to produce the expert witness’s report for more than sixteen
    months after consultation. The circuit court should have, we explained, sanctioned the bad actor—
    the attorney—rather than “eviscerat[ing]” the plaintiff’s claims.
    Anderson differs from the case before us in a key respect. In Anderson, the sole expert
    witness was the physician with whom the plaintiff consulted prior to filing her complaint, and on
    whose opinion the plaintiff formulated her theory of the case. Though there was significant delay
    in the production of the report, there is no indication that the theory of the case changed at any
    point. Moreover, the Anderson defendants were aware of the disadvantage they operated under in
    not having the report and were thus equipped to make strategic decisions. Comparatively, Dr.
    Kaplan and Camden Clark were provided a theory (long after the filing of the complaint) that was
    not formulated by a medical expert and was inconsistent with the theory that Ms. Reeves ultimately
    planned to present at trial. Under the circumstances of this case, the prejudice to respondents is so
    substantial that a cure would require considerable unwinding of key discovery conducted on a false
    theory.
    5
    In her second assignment of error, Ms. Reeves argues that Dr. Charash should not have
    been precluded from testifying entirely, because he opined during his deposition that Dr. Kaplan
    deviated from the standard of care in not ordering the use of a continuous pulse oximeter. However,
    there is no indication that this opinion concerning the standard of care was shared with respondents
    at any point prior to Dr. Charash’s deposition. Dr. Charash testified that Dr. Kaplan’s failure to
    order the use of a continuous pulse oximeter contributed to decedent’s death from respiratory
    arrest, however there is no indication from the record that respondents had prior notice of this
    opinion. Accordingly, we are not persuaded by this argument on appeal.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.
    Affirmed.
    ISSUED: June 23, 2021
    CONCURRED IN BY:
    Chief Justice Evan H. Jenkins
    Justice Tim Armstead
    Justice John A. Hutchison
    DISSENTING:
    Justice Elizabeth D. Walker
    Justice William R. Wooton
    Wooton, Justice, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent. I would have put this case on the Rule 19 docket for an in-depth
    review of the facts and circumstances presented, in light of the governing case law. In this regard,
    the factual assertions contained in the parties’ briefs paint starkly different pictures of what
    happened below; the appendix record is voluminous; and the sanction imposed by the circuit court
    was extreme, effectively sounding the death knell for plaintiff/petitioner’s case.
    I agree with the majority that the circuit court has significant discretion in imposing
    sanctions. However, as this Court pointed out in Anderson v. Kunduru, 
    215 W. Va. 484
    , 
    600 S.E.2d 196
     (2004, “[w]hile the circuit court was clearly within its discretion to impose sanctions,
    those sanctions should have been imposed to the detriment of the offending attorney and not the
    attorney's client.” Id. at 485, 
    600 S.E.2d at 197
     (emphasis added). The innocent party in this
    unfortunate case is Ms. Reeves, who lost her daughter due to alleged medical malpractice and now,
    as a result of what the circuit court characterized as her attorney’s bad faith maneuvering during
    the discovery process, will never have her day in court. I believe this result is unfair and unjust.
    Attorney misconduct can be addressed and punished in a variety of ways, but depriving the
    6
    attorney’s client of his or her right to a jury trial 3 should not be one of them, absent a finding of
    actual prejudice to the opposing party.
    Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
    3
    W. Va. Const., art. III, § 13.
    7