Fernandez v. Corporacion Insular De Seguros

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

                                           
                                                     

No. 95-1288

                     ALBA FERNANDEZ, ET AL.,

                     Plaintiffs, Appellants,

                                v.

             CORPORACION INSULAR DE SEGUROS, ET AL.,

                      Defendants, Appellees.

                                           
                                                     

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

       [Hon. Raymond L. Acosta, Senior U.S. District Judge]
                                                                    

                                           
                                                     

                       Cyr, Circuit Judge,
                                                   

                  Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
                                                      

                                           
                                                     

   Kevin  G. Little,  with whom Law  Offices of  David Efron  was on
                                                                      
brief for appellants.
   Carlos A. Del Valle Cruz for appellees GIC, et al.
                                     
   Alfonso Miranda  Cardenas, with  whom Pedro J.  Cordova, Jose  A.
                                                                              
Miranda Daleccio, Jose E. O'Neil Font, Carmen M. Vivas Pietri and Jose
                                                                              
M.  Torres Morales  were on  brief for  appellee Dr.  Ricardo Martinez
                          
Cortinez.

                                           
                                                     

                          March 21, 1996
                                           
                                                     


          CYR, Circuit Judge.   Family members filed this medical
                    CYR, Circuit Judge.
                                      

malpractice action in federal  district court following the death

of  Hiram Fernandez, and a  jury ultimately found  for the health

care defendants.   On appeal, plaintiffs  challenge several trial

court rulings,  including  the denial  of  their motion  for  new

trial.  We affirm the district court judgment.

                                I
                                          I

                            BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND
                                                

          On November 4, 1991, Hiram  Fernandez was taken to  the

emergency room  of Federico  Trilla Hospital in  Carolina, Puerto

Rico, after awakening  with chest pains,  severe leg cramps,  and

vomiting.   The 64-year-old  Fernandez informed Dr.  Pedro Rivera

Bermudez  ("Dr. Rivera") that the chest pain had stopped after he

vomited,  but  the severe  leg pain  had  not abated.   Fernandez

failed to tell  Dr. Rivera that he was taking medication for both

asthma and  hypertension.  Since  Fernandez did  not complain  of

recurring chest pain, and his vital statistics were within normal

or borderline  range, Dr. Rivera tentatively  diagnosed a pinched

nerve  but  nonetheless  ordered an  electrocardiogram  (EKG),  a

urinalysis, and an x-ray  of the lumbosacral region and  the left

leg.  All tests were negative.

          A  few hours  later,  Dr. Rivera  was  relieved in  the

emergency room by Dr.  Ricardo Martinez Cortinez ("Dr. Martinez")

whose examination  confirmed that Fernandez was  in stable condi-

tion, with no complaints of chest pain.  As a blood test showed a

slightly  elevated  white blood  count,  Dr.  Martinez ordered  a

                                2


second urinalysis,  as well  as a chest  x-ray, to  rule out  any

urinary or  pulmonary infection which  might have been  caused by

the vomiting.  The chest x-ray coincidently revealed that Fernan-

dez  had a dilated aorta, which Dr. Martinez attributed to normal

borderline hypertension  in a  patient of Fernandez'  age, rather

than  an  emergent  symptom  of aortal  dissection,  a  condition

usually accompanied by excruciating  and unrelenting chest  pain,

fainting  spells, profuse  sweating, and  tachycardia.   Like Dr.

Rivera, Dr. Martinez diagnosed a pinched nerve.  Shortly thereaf-

ter Dr. Martinez referred  Fernandez to a neuropathic specialist,

and discharged him. 

          The next  day, when  Fernandez was unable  to recognize

family  members,  he was  taken  to his  personal  physician, Dr.

Abelardo Vargas, who performed a physical examination and another

EKG (also negative), and ordered an upper gastrointestinal series

to  determine whether there was a hiatal  hernia.   The next day,

on  his way to undergo these tests, Fernandez collapsed and died.

An autopsy  revealed the cause of  death as a  dissected aorta, a

condition treatable with surgery in more than 90% of cases.

          The  decedent's  spouse,  children,  and  grandchildren

filed  a  medical  malpractice  suit in  federal  district  court

pursuant  to 28  U.S.C.    1332 (diversity  jurisdiction) against

Drs. Rivera,  Martinez, and Vargas, and  against various insurers

of  the  Federico  Trilla  Hospital, including  Global  Insurance

Company.    Subsequently, Dr.  Vargas  was dismissed  as  a party

defendant.  

                                3


          At trial,  Dr. William T. Brown,  a Miami-based cardiac

specialist, provided expert testimony  in behalf of plaintiffs on

the  applicable duty of care.  Drs. Rivera and Martinez testified

in  their  own  defense,  but presented  no  independent  medical

testimony.  After the jury returned a verdict for all defendants,

plaintiffs unsuccessfully  filed a motion for  new trial pursuant

to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59, then brought this appeal.

                                II
                                          II

                            DISCUSSION
                                      DISCUSSION
                                                

          Appellants challenge  four trial court rulings.  First,

they focus  on the denial  of their request  for rebuttal  to the

closing argument  made  by the  defense.   Although  trial  court

rulings on the conduct, timing, and ordering of closing arguments

are  reviewed only for abuse of discretion, see Bonilla v. Yamaha
                                                                           

Motors Corp., 955  F.2d 150, 155 (1st Cir. 1992); see also United
                                                                           

States v. Wood, 982 F.2d 1, 4  (1st Cir. 1992), appellants insist
                        

that civil-action plaintiffs  have an absolute right to rebut the
                                                        

closing argument  of  the defense.   See  Martin v.  Chesebrough-
                                                                           

Pond's, Inc., 614 F.2d  498 (5th Cir. 1980) (noting  that "[n]or-
                      

mally the  party with the burden  of proof has the  right to open

and  close," but  holding that  a  particular codefendant  had no
                                                                   

right to  rebuttal as against  another codefendant where  the two

had asserted mutual cross-claims).  
                             

          Appellants  are mistaken.    The Martin  court did  not
                                                           

describe  a  civil-action  plaintiff's  "right"  to  rebuttal  as

absolute,  but merely  reconfirmed  that the  decision to  permit

                                4


rebuttal is  a procedural  matter  which rests  within the  sound

discretion  of the trial judge, id. at  501, and rarely (if ever)
                                             

provides fertile  ground for appeal.   See Lancaster  v. Collins,
                                                                          

115 U.S. 222,  225 (1885);  Montwood Corp. v.  Hot Springs  Theme
                                                                           

Park, 766 F.2d 359, 364 (8th Cir. 1985); Moreau v. Oppenheim, 663
                                                                      

F.2d  1300, 1311  (5th Cir.  1981), cert.  denied, 458  U.S. 1107
                                                           

(1982); Commercial Iron & Metal Co. v. Bache Halsey Stuart, Inc.,
                                                                          

581 F.2d  246, 249 (10th Cir.  1978), cert. denied, 440  U.S. 914
                                                            

(1979).  

          Appellants  further  argue that  rebuttal was  vital to

counteract the  "inflammatory"  statements made  in  argument  by

defense  counsel,  who  portrayed, as  inexplicable,  plaintiffs'

voluntary dismissal of  their claims against Dr. Vargas.  Defense

counsel  argued to the jury that Dr. Vargas, the decedent's long-

time personal physician,  was the  one most likely  to have  been

negligent  since he  was the  last to  treat Fernandez,  and more

familiar  with  his medical  history.    Defense counsel  further

argued that  Dr. Vargas,  like the defendant-physicians,  had not

suspected  that the  Fernandez  symptoms indicated  an  incipient

aortal dissection but rather a  hiatal hernia.  Appellants there-

fore  contend that  they  were entitled  to  remind the  jury  in

rebuttal that:  (1)  the defendants had the right to  implead Dr.

Vargas if they  believed he was the only  negligent party and the

sole  proximate cause of Fernandez' death, and (2) Dr. Vargas had

not  treated Fernandez  in a  hospital; thus,  unlike defendants,

could not as readily have obtained a chest x-ray.  

                                5


            As plaintiffs failed to challenge the statements made

by  defense counsel in closing argument, we review only for plain

error.   See Johnson  v. National Sea Prods.,  Ltd., 35 F.3d 626,
                                                             

631 (1st  Cir. 1994).   The  statements  made by  the defense  in

closing were  in  no sense  inflammatory, but  rather a  measured

response to earlier observations by plaintiffs' counsel that "Dr.

Vargas [is not] responsible  for anything here simply  because he

did not have the x-rays that  these defendants had the benefit of

having because he was not in a position of having a full clinical

picture."    Indeed,  plaintiffs  not only  invited  the  defense

response they now claim gave rise to  a vital need for rebuttal,1

but their  invitation was itself  a sufficient "reminder"  to the

jury that plaintiffs had adduced evidence that Dr. Vargas did not

treat Fernandez in a hospital  setting where x-rays were  readily

obtainable.   Thus, the district court ruling was well within its

sound discretion.  

          In  addition,  though Fed.  R.  Civ.  P. 14(a)  permits
                                                                           

defendants to implead a joint tortfeasor, see also Reyes-Lopez v.
                                                                        

Misener Marine  Constr. Co., 854  F.2d 529,  535 n. 23  (1st Cir.
                                     

1988) (citing  to Puerto Rico case  law allowing joint-tortfeasor

contribution), Rule 14 is not mandatory.  Appellants do not cite,

nor have we found, any authority for  the proposition that a jury

must be permitted to draw an adverse inference from a defendant's

decision  to forego a Rule  14 impleader.   We therefore conclude
                    
                              

     1In fact,  defense counsel expressly noted  in closing argu-
ment:  "This is the same Dr.  Abelardo Vargas and I refer to this
because brother counsel did refer to it [in his closing]."

                                6


that there was no plain error.

          Second,  appellants  claim  that  it was  an  abuse  of

discretion to  refuse their timely  request to instruct  the jury

that defendants could have impleaded Dr. Vargas.  For the reasons

discussed above,  we find no abuse  of discretion.  See  Makuc v.
                                                                        

American  Honda Motor Co., 835 F.2d  389, 393 n.1 (1st Cir. 1987)
                                   

(noting that proponent  must cite to  some legal authority  which

would support its proposed jury instruction).

          Third, appellants  contend that over-repetition  of the

district court's unexceptionable jury instruction     that plain-

tiffs must establish  all elements of their  negligence claims   

constituted reversible error because it exaggerated the burden of

proof in the minds  of the jury.  See United  States v. Assi, 748
                                                                      

F.2d  62, 66  (2d Cir.  1984).   Similar reversible  error arose,

plaintiffs say, from the  district court's over-repetition of its

"error in judgment"  instruction, viz., that  a physician is  not
                                                

liable under Puerto Rico law for a faulty diagnosis or failure to

treat if  there existed "a reasonable or educated doubt as to the

[appropriate]  medical  course  to  [have]  follow[ed]."2    Once

again, we must disagree.

           As appellants  failed to object to the burden-of-proof

instructions  before the jury retired  to deliberate, see Fed. R.
                                                                   

Civ. P.  51,  we review  for  plain error.    See Kerr-Selgas  v.
                                                                       

                    
                              

     2Appellants  also argue that no "error-in-judgment" instruc-
tion was  appropriate because defendants failed  to adduce expert
medical testimony to support a jury finding that "a reasonable or
educated doubt" existed.  But see infra pp. 8-10. 
                                                 

                                7


American Airlines,  Inc., 69  F.3d  1205, 1213  (1st Cir.  1995).
                                  

Even though there may be a threshold beyond which further repeti-

tion of an otherwise proper jury instruction creates an unaccept-

able risk that the  jury will be misled, see  Davet v. Maccarone,
                                                                          

973 F.2d 22, 26 (1st Cir.  1992), appellants do not approach such

a showing by citing three brief references to the burden of proof

in the eleven-page jury charge.  

          Similarly, though plaintiffs asserted a contemporaneous

objection to the "multiple" error-in-judgment instructions, there

was no  error.  A correct understanding  of the error-in-judgment

principle, the  seminal legal concept  defining the duty  of care

incumbent upon  physicians under Puerto  Rico medical malpractice

law, was vital  to a  proper jury verdict.   Moreover, the  trial

court's  error-in-judgment  instructions,  individually   and  in

combination, were neither suggestive nor prejudicial.

          Finally, appellants claim that the district court erred

in denying  their motion for new  trial. See Fed. R.  Civ. P. 59.
                                                      

Plaintiffs'  independent expert, Dr.  Brown, testified  that Drs.

Rivera and  Martinez were negligent in failing  to record Fernan-

dez'  past medical history on the hospital charts; and in failing

to diagnose the  aortal dissection  on November 4,  based on  the

complaints of earlier  chest pain, and the chest x-ray disclosing

aortal dilation.    Appellants argue  that the  jury verdict  was

against the weight of the evidence  because the duty of care in a

malpractice  action can  only  be proven  through expert  medical

testimony;  their expert,  Dr.  Brown, was  the only  independent
                                                              

                                8


medical expert to testify at trial; and the self-serving,  biased

testimony by the defendant-physicians themselves concerning their

own duties of care was inherently untrustworthy. 

                                9


            A Rule  59 ruling,  denying  a motion  for new  trial

based on  an alleged insufficiency  of evidence, is  reviewed for

abuse of discretion.   See Lama v. Borras, 16  F.3d 473, 477 (1st
                                                   

Cir.  1994).  A new trial should  be granted only if the verdict,

though rationally based on the evidence, "was  so clearly against

the weight of the evidence as to amount to a manifest miscarriage

of  justice."   Id.  But  where there is  substantial evidence to
                             

support the verdict,  it is "'only in a very  unusual case'" that

denial of a Rule 59 motion  will be ruled an abuse of discretion.

Wagenmann v. Adams, 829  F.2d 196, 200 (1st Cir.  1987) (citation
                            

omitted).  This is not such a case. 

          At  trial, plaintiffs had to establish:   (1) the basic

norms of knowledge and medical care applicable to general practi-

tioners or  specialists;   (2) that the  defendant-physicians did

not  meet these basic norms in their treatment of Fernandez;  and

(3) a causal relation between the  defendants' acts or omissions,

and  Fernandez' death.  See Rolon-Alvarado v. Municipality of San
                                                                           

Juan, 1 F.3d 74, 77 n.2  (1st Cir. 1993).  Although jurors rarely
              

are  able to  determine the applicable  standard of  medical care

without the  benefit of expert  testimony, under Puerto  Rico law

"there exists  always a presumption that  the treating physicians
                                             

have observed a reasonable degree of care . . . in the process of

giving medical attention and  treatment.  [And] [p]laintiff bears

the  burden of refuting this  presumption."  Id.  at 78 (emphasis
                                                         

added).  Thus, appellants' premise    that malpractice defendants

must  invariably introduce  independent  expert testimony  on the

                                10


applicable duty of care    is flawed.  Although  defendant-physi-

cians often do adduce independent  expert testimony on the appli-

cable standard of medical care, the jury's implicit  rejection of

Dr.  Brown's  testimony in  this  case was  itself  sufficient to

support  a  verdict  for  defendants because  of  the  rebuttable

presumption of due care indulged under Puerto Rico law, see id.  
                                                                         

          The  jury  was  not  compelled to  credit  Dr.  Brown's

testimony.  "While not allowed to speculate, the factfinder is of

course  free to  find some  experts more  credible than  others."

Lama, 16 F.3d at  478.  On cross-examination, Dr.  Brown admitted
              

that he was not able  to read or speak Spanish fluently,  that he

had not  been provided initially with  certified English transla-

tions of the  hospital and medical records relating to Fernandez,

and that until  shortly before  trial he had  relied on  informal

translations    whose accuracy was seriously disputed at trial   

prepared by his  secretary and plaintiffs'  counsel.3  Given  the

infirmities in the only expert testimony presented by plaintiffs,

there was no abuse of discretion in denying a new trial.4 
                    
                              

     3For example, the hospital records stated that Fernandez had
vomited before  arriving at the  hospital, and that  this "ended"
his  chest pain, while the informal translations relied on by Dr.
Brown  merely indicated that the  chest pain had  "improved."  In
addition,  presented with a  medical treatise  describing typical
symptoms  of an  impending  aortal dissection,  Dr. Brown's  only
response was  the unexplicated assertion  that he simply  did not
care what the medical treatise provided.  

     4As concerns the contention by Dr. Brown that the defendant-
physicians were negligent in failing to record Fernandez' medical
history  on the medical charts,  the jury was  entitled to credit
the defendant-physicians'  testimony that they left  the "medical
history" section  of the hospital record  blank because Fernandez
informed them  (inaccurately) that he had  no significant medical

                                11


          The  district court  judgment is  affirmed.   Costs are
                    The  district court  judgment is  affirmed.   Costs are
                                                                           

awarded to appellees.
          awarded to appellees.
                              

                    
                              

history.  See supra p. 2.
                             

                                12