FILED
NOV. 20,2014
In the Office of the Clerk of Court
W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION THREE
PAMELA CLONINGER, individually, and )
as Personal Representative of the ESTATE ) No. 31833-8-III
OF GLEN CLONINGER, )
)
Appellant, )
)
v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION
)
KIM CHEN, D.O. and JANE DOE CHEN, )
husband and wife; ANESTHESIA )
ASSOCIATES OF SPOKANE, P.S.; and )
DEACONESS MEDICAL CENTER, )
)
Respondents. )
KORSMO, J. The sole issue in this tragic medical malpractice case concerns
the trial court's refusal to give the jury a spoliation instruction. Concluding that the
appellant did not establish that any evidence existed that the defendants could have had
a duty to preserve, we affirm.
FACTS
Glen Cloninger went to Deaconess Medical Center (Deaconess) for a routine
lithotripsy procedure to address a kidney stone problem. He did not survive the
procedure.
Although the kidney stone treatment was unremarkable, problems arose after
defendant anesthesiologist Dr. Kim Chen attempted to revive Mr. Cloninger from the
No. 31833-8-111
Cloninger v. Anesthesia Assoc.
general anesthetic used for the procedure. Dr. Chen had used a Datascope machine to
monitor vital signs, including blood pressure, heart rate, oxygen saturation, and
temperature. The machine had been set to its factory default setting-the readings were
displayed in "real time" but not recorded by the device.
After the procedure, Dr. Chen began to reverse the anesthesia and wake Mr.
Cloninger. While still intubated, Mr. Cloninger became combative; nurses had to calm
and restrain him. He was eventually extubated. A short time thereafter, a laryngospasm l
blocked Mr. Cloninger's airway and caused him to asphyxiate. Dr. Chen attempted to
ventilate Mr. Cloninger with a positive pressure face mask. However, Mr. Cloninger
became bradycardic 2 and the medical staff called a "code" and began chest compressions.
Dr. Chen twice attempted to reintubate Mr. Cloninger, but was unsuccessful. Another
anesthesiologist, Dr. King, responded to the "code" and was able to reintubate Mr.
Cloninger. Dr. Chen later testified that it took 60 to 90 seconds from when the "code"
was declared until Dr. King was able to reintubate Mr. Cloninger.
Mr. Cloninger's vital signs were restored by the chest compressions and a
ventilator between 73 and 77 minutes after the "code" was called. He was disconnected
from the surgery room Datascope and connected to another Datascope machine for a
transfer to the Intensive Care Unit. The surgery room was then "turned over" for the
1 A laryngospasm is a spasm of the vocal cords that blocks access to the trachea.
2 A bradycardic heart rate is less than 60 beats per minute in an adult human.
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next procedure. As part of that routine, the Datascope originally used on Mr. Cloninger
was reset, effectively erasing any infonnation that may have been in the machine. That
occurred roughly 42 minutes after Mr. Cloninger was moved to ICU.
Mr. Cloninger suffered brain damage during the fight to revive him and was
rendered pennanently vegetative. He died four days later when life support measures
were tenninated.
Mr. Cloninger's widow and children sued Dr. Chen 3 and Deaconess Medical
Center. The suit focused on the actions of Dr. Chen from the attempt to revive Mr.
Cloninger after the lithotripsy until the "code" was called. Dr. Chen spent significant
time creating and editing his narrative of the event. The plaintiffs sought the records of
the Datascope machine in order to address the doctor's narrative and expected testimony.
Discovery revealed that no records from the machine existed.
Pretrial, the plaintiffs indicated that they would be seeking a spoliation instruction
based on a theory of negligent failure to preserve evidence. The proposed instruction
would have pennitted the jury to infer that the machine's evidence was unfavorable to
the hospita1. 4 Plaintiffs viewed the hospital's actions in routinely resetting the device as
3 Dr. Chen's practice group, Anesthesia Association of Spokane, P.S., was also a
defendant. We refer to Dr. Chen and the practice group collectively as Dr. Chen.
4 Plaintiff s Proposed Instruction A read: "If Deaconess Medical Center failed to
produce evidence which was under their control and reasonably available to them and not
reasonably available to plaintiff, then you may infer that the evidence was unfavorable to
the defendant who could have produced it and did not." Clerk's Papers at 576.
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Cloninger v. Anesthesia Assoc.
negligent in light of its sentinel event policy and knowledge of the "code" call. The
veteran trial judge indicated that she believed spoliation instructions were only proper
when evidence was intentionally destroyed; she was open to giving the instruction if that
foundation was satisfied.
At trial, the evidence was unclear about the capabilities of the Datascope used
on Mr. Cloninger, in part because the machine could not be identified and probably
had been disposed of by the hospital. There was testimony indicating that many of the
Datascope machines could be programmed to record the machine's readings for up to
two hours. However, Dr. Chen did testify that the machine used on Mr. Cloninger was
set to the default "display only" setting and that he did not print out any readings
because he did not know that the machine had the ability to print the information.
There was no evidence that the machine recorded any information while used on Mr.
Cloninger.
At the conclusion of testimony, the trial court declined to give plaintiffs'
proposed instruction. The jury returned verdicts in favor of Dr. Chen and the medical
center. The plaintiffs then timely appealed to this court.
ANALYSIS
The sole issue presented by this appeal is whether the court erred in failing to
give the proposed spoliation instruction. Plaintiffs admit they are asking this court to
expand Washington law to permit spoliation instructions when evidence is negligently
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destroyed or not preserved. Defendants raise several joint arguments, including
contentions that spoliation instructions are appropriate only when evidence is
intentionally destroyed, there was no duty to preserve the evidence, and no evidence
was destroyed. Separately, Dr. Chen argues that any error in failing to give the
instruction was harmless in his case since the proposed instruction applied only to
Deaconess.
We decline the opportunity to decide whether negligence is a sufficient basis to
give a spoliation instruction because, even if we accept the plaintiffs' argument, they
failed to establish an entitlement to the instruction because they cannot show that any
evidence was destroyed.
The plaintiffs' argument has its genesis in our decision in Henderson v. Tyrrell,
80 Wn. App. 592, 910 P.2d 522 (1996). That case involved an action for personal
injuries brought by the four occupants of a car involved in a single vehicle accident.
The three plaintiffs alleged that the car was driven by its owner, defendant Tyrrell, and
presented expert testimony supporting their position. Tyrrell, who sustained a head
injury in the accident, claimed one of the plaintiffs was driving and presented expert
testimony suggesting that was the case. Id. at 596-99. The automobile had been
preserved for approximately 22 months after the accident, but had been sent to salvage
before any experts examined it. Id. at 603-04. The plaintiffs sought to dismiss the
defendant's counterclaim or limit his evidence as a sanction for the destruction of the
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car. Id. at 604. Finding no willful destruction of evidence, the trial court declined to
instruct the jury on spoliation. Id.
This court affirmed after giving the issue significant consideration. Id. at
604-11. The court concluded that there was no evidence of bad faith by the defendant,
there was no duty to preserve the wrecked vehicle, and the evidence was available to
both parties over the 22 month period. Id. at 609-11. In the course of its analysis, this
court relied upon a legal dictionary to define spoliation as the intentional destruction of
evidence. Id. at 605. Citing to an Alaska decision, this court determined that whether
or not a sanction should be imposed was dependent upon the importance of the
evidence and the culpability of the party that destroyed the evidence. Id. at 607 (citing
Sweet v. Sisters ofProvidence, 895 P.2d 484 (Alaska 1995)). It was in this context that
this court concluded that Mr. Tyrrell had not acted in bad faith. Id. at 609-10.
The appellants urge this court to clarify Henderson and conclude that Washington
permits a spoliation claim when a party has a duty to preserve evidence and negligently
fails to do so. Henderson had begun its discussion of the spoliation issue by
acknowledging that there were various approaches to addressing such claims. Id. at
604-06. One approach was that adopted by Sweet, where Alaska decided that the failure
of the medical defendant to preserve necessary records resulted in a shift of the burden
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of the medical malpractice action from the plaintiff to the defendant. Id. at 605. 5 As
noted, even though it defined spoliation as the intentional destruction of evidence, the
Henderson court used Sweet's two-step duty and culpability analysis for determining
whether a sanction was appropriate. Id. at 607-11.
In light of the fact that Henderson essentially used a negligence standard for
determining that no sanction was required and that Henderson has been repeatedly cited
and followed in subsequent Washington cases, appellants ask that we confirm that
Washington recognizes a claim for negligent failure to preserve evidence. We decline
to do so because it would not aid appellants in this case.
There is no evidence in this record that the Datascope used on Mr. Cloninger in
surgery retained any information that could have been printed in a timely fashion. Dr.
Chen used the machine on a "display only" setting and did not even know that it could
record and print data. The hospital's policy was to reset the machines to a factory default
setting that did not record information. Although the Datascope could be programmed to
retain information for two hours, there simply was no evidence that the machine used on
Mr. Cloninger was ever recording any information. It is mere speculation to believe that
5 Sweet also involved a claim for negligent spoliation, a tort that the Alaska
Supreme Court did not then adopt after concluding that its burden shift in the underlying
malpractice action was sufficient remedy for the hospital's failure to preserve its records.
895 P.2d at 492-93.
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any information would have been obtained if Deaconess personnel had sought to print the
machine before "turning over" the surgery room.
In the absence of any evidence that could have been preserved, there is no basis
for determining whether the defendants had a duty to preserve the evidence or that the
failure to do so should be actionable via a spoliation instruction. Under these facts, we
would be doing nothing more than rendering an advisory opinion.
Accordingly, the trial court did not err in declining the requested instruction. The·
judgment is affirmed.
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to
RCW 2.06.040.
WE CONCUR:
Lawrence-Be
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