FILED
Oct 09 2018, 5:25 am
CLERK
Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Steven K. Hahn Robert R. Faulkner
Allyson R. Breeden Evansville, Indiana
Molly E. Briles
ZIEMER STAYMAN WEITZEL & H. Wayne Turpin
SHOULDERS, LLP Evansville, Indiana
Evansville, Indiana
Richard L. Schultheis
Karl L. Mulvaney Indianapolis, Indiana
Margaret M. Christensen
BINGHAM GREENEBAUM
DOLL LLP
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
St. Mary’s Ohio Valley Heart October 9, 2018
Care, LLC, et al., Court of Appeals Case No.
Appellants-Defendants, 82A05-1711-PL-2594
Appeal from the Vanderburgh
v. Circuit Court
The Honorable David D. Kiely,
Derek F. Smith, Judge
Appellee-Plaintiff Trial Court Cause No.
82C01-1405-PL-317
Altice, Judge.
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Case Summary
[1] In 2012, Elizabeth G. Butler, M.D. (Dr. Butler) removed a portion of Derek F.
Smith’s lower left lung during a surgery that began with a wedge resection and
biopsy. Pathologist Hongyu Yang, M.D. (Dr. Yang) provided intraoperative
analysis of frozen section pathology slides (frozen slides) of the specimen. Dr.
Yang interpreted the frozen slides as cancerous or suggestive of cancer and
communicated his findings to Dr. Butler, who then proceeded with a
lobectomy. The permanent section slides (permanent slides), which could not
be read until the following day, however, revealed that the biopsy specimen was
benign.
[2] Smith filed a medical malpractice action against Dr. Butler, St. Mary’s Ohio
Valley Heart Care, LLC, St. Mary’s Medical Center, and Ohio Valley Heart
Care, Inc. (collectively, the Surgical Defendants), as well as Dr. Yang and Tri-
State Pathology Associates (collectively, the Pathology Defendants). The
Medical Review Panel (the Panel) unanimously found in favor of the Surgical
Defendants and the Pathology Defendants. To rebut the Panel’s findings,
Smith submitted the affidavit of E. Allen Griggs, M.D., J.D. (Dr. Griggs), an
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expert in pathology, who opined that Dr. Yang violated the pathological
standard of care in his diagnosis of the frozen slides in this case.
[3] The Surgical Defendants and the Pathology Defendants both filed motions for
summary judgment, which were denied by the trial court. They now bring an
interlocutory appeal, pursuant to Indiana Appellate Rule 14(B), of the denials
of summary judgment.
[4] We reverse and remand.
Facts & Procedural History
[5] On February 14, 2012, Smith sought emergency medical treatment due to
shortness of breath and wheezing. An x-ray of his chest was abnormal, and a
subsequent CT scan revealed a 1.3 cm noncalcified lesion on his left lower lung.
Smith’s treating physician at the time noted that the lung mass did not “look
terribly suspicious in a nonsmoker” and that Smith was to follow up with a
pulmonologist for further evaluation. Appellants’ Appendix Vol. 2 at 117.
[6] Pulmonologist Victor Chavez, M.D. (Dr. Chavez) evaluated Smith on March 9,
2012, and obtained a history from him, which included that Smith had “worked
in a coal mine, strip mine for the last 30 years.” Id. at 137. Dr. Chavez opined
that the lung mass had a benign appearance but ordered a repeat chest CT in
May to assess the lesion’s stability. The chest CT, performed on May 21, 2012,
revealed that the mass had increased in size from about 15 mm in length to 20
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mm in length. As a result, Dr. Chavez referred Smith to Dr. Butler, a
cardiothoracic surgeon, for a biopsy and possible lobectomy.
[7] On May 30, 2012, Smith had a preoperative appointment with Dr. Butler, who
evaluated Smith, assessed his treatment history, and reviewed the CT scans and
a more-recent PET scan. Dr. Butler noted that Smith, although a nonsmoker,
lived with two smokers and that he had worked in the coal mines for the last
thirty years. Dr. Butler obtained informed consent from Smith to perform a
biopsy of the left pulmonary nodule and a possible lobectomy if cancer was
present. The surgery was scheduled for the following day at St. Mary’s Medical
Center in Evansville.
[8] While in the operating room on May 31, 2012, Dr. Butler performed a wedge
resection of the left lower lobe of Smith’s lung, and the specimen was sent to the
pathology lab for intraoperative consultation and analysis of frozen slides. Dr.
Yang had difficulty interpreting the slides and consulted with his partner.
Ultimately, Dr. Yang determined that the frozen slides were highly suspicious
of cancer.
[9] Dr. Yang communicated his diagnosis via intercom into the surgery suite.
According to Dr. Butler’s operative notes, the frozen slides “came back
bronchoalveolar carcinoma.” Id. at 169. Dr. Yang, however, avers that he
informed Dr. Butler at the time that the frozen slides were “very difficult to
interpret and not straightforward” but that they were “suggestive of a well-
differentiated adenocarcinoma with bronchioalveolar features.” Id. at 193. Dr.
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Butler does not recall Dr. Yang qualifying his diagnosis, but she testified during
her deposition that pathologists often relay diagnoses in terms of “suspicious or
suggestive” of cancer. Id. at 198. Regardless of whether Dr. Yang used the
definitive or the suggestive language, Dr. Butler testified that she would have
proceeded with the lobectomy as she did. Dr. Butler explained:
In a patient who has spent 30 years in the coal mines, who
presented with dyspnea, who was followed by a pulmonologist,
who has a mass that has enlarged on CT scan, who lived with
two smokers, I think that there is, given the entire clinical picture,
a good chance that if a pathology frozen section demonstrates
cancer, I would go ahead and do a lobectomy….[W]e are
treating the entire clinical picture. That’s often why a pathologist
may say suggestive but they are not privy to all the studies and
patient history that the surgeon has reviewed.
Id. at 199-200. Dr. Butler testified that she planned to perform the lobectomy
unless “the diagnosis of the frozen section at the time was clearly not
cancerous”. Appellants’ Appendix Vol. 3 at 16. The lobectomy resulted in a
reduction of Smith’s lung capacity by approximately twenty percent.
[10] The day after the lobectomy, Dr. Yang examined the permanent slides and
continued to find the slides difficult to interpret. Accordingly, he sent the slides
and tissue blocks to Thomas V. Colby, M.D. of the Mayo Clinic (Dr. Colby), a
renowned expert in the field, for a second opinion. Dr. Colby determined that
the permanent slides were all benign but noted the difficulty of making a
diagnosis based on the frozen slides:
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I think this case illustrates one of the classic traps at frozen
section. Scarring and metaplasia may be an extremely difficult
diagnosis at the time of frozen section…. I think the original
wedge biopsy shows marked peribronchiolar metaplasia which is
a well known mimic of what used to be called bronchioloalveolar
carcinoma. This is a reflection of some bronchiolar scarring….
Appellants’ Appendix Vol. 2 at 184. After receiving Dr. Colby’s report, Dr. Yang
completed his final surgical pathology report on June 8, 2012, with a final
diagnosis indicating no evidence of malignancy identified. Dr. Yang
communicated the discrepancies between the final diagnosis and the frozen
section diagnosis with Dr. Butler that same day.
[11] Smith initiated this medical malpractice action in May 2014 against Dr. Butler,
Dr. Yang, their respective practice groups, and the hospital where the
lobectomy was performed. Pursuant to the Indiana Medical Malpractice Act,
Smith also submitted his proposed complaint for consideration by the Panel.
The Panel members included two cardiothoracic surgeons and one pathologist.
On March 11, 2015, after reviewing the written submissions of the parties, the
Panel entered its unanimous expert opinion in favor of each of the defendants,
concluding that the evidence did not support the conclusion that any of the
defendants failed to meet the applicable standard of care as charged in the
complaint.
[12] On August 14, 2015, Smith filed his amended complaint seeking damages from
the Surgical Defendants and the Pathology Defendants. Smith disclosed one
expert witness, Dr. Griggs, to rebut the Panel’s findings regarding the Pathology
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Defendants. Dr. Griggs provided an affidavit in January 2016 and was deposed
in December 2016. In Dr. Griggs’s expert opinion, Dr. Yang should have
deferred his diagnosis of the “unusual tumor” until he could review the
permanent section slides. Id. at 91. Dr. Griggs, however, testified that he
would not have faulted Dr. Yang for offering a leaning along with the deferred
diagnosis (i.e. that the slides were suggestive of cancer). Dr. Griggs conceded
that the frozen slides could not have been called normal/benign at the time and
that they had characteristics that were in fact suggestive of cancer.
[13] The Pathology Defendants and the Surgical Defendants filed separate motions
for summary judgment on May 30, 2017, and June 29, 2017, respectively.
Following a summary judgment hearing, the transcript of which has not been
provided on appeal, the trial court denied both summary judgment motions in
September 2017. Thereafter, the Pathology Defendants and the Surgical
Defendants sought certification of the summary judgment orders for
interlocutory appeal pursuant to App. R. 14(B)(1), which the trial court granted.
On December 15, 2017, this court accepted jurisdiction pursuant to App. R.
14(B)(2) and consolidated the two appeals under the current cause number.
The trial court’s denial of the motions for summary judgment is now properly
before us. Additional information will be provided below as needed.
Discussion & Decision
[14] Our standard of review of a summary judgment decision is well-settled.
Summary judgment shall be granted where “the designated evidentiary matter
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shows that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving
party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Trial Rule 56(C). “We
construe all evidence in favor of and resolve all doubts as to the existence of a
material issue in favor of the non-moving party.” Stafford v. Szymanowski, 31
N.E.3d 959, 961 (Ind. 2015). In Indiana, generally the nonmovant is not
required to come forward with contrary evidence until the party seeking
summary judgment demonstrates the absence of a genuine issue of material
fact. Id. “In medical malpractice cases, however, a unanimous opinion of the
medical review panel that the physician did not breach the applicable standard
of care is ordinarily sufficient to establish prima facie evidence negating the
existence of a genuine issue of material fact entitling the physician to summary
judgment.” Id. Consequently, in such situations, the burden shifts to the
plaintiff, who may rebut with expert medical testimony in order to survive
summary judgment. Id.; see also Bhatia v. Kollipara, 916 N.E.2d 242, 245 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2009). “Failure to provide expert testimony will usually subject the
plaintiff’s claim to summary disposition.” Bhatia, 916 N.E.2d at 246.
The Surgical Defendants
[15] The Surgical Defendants argue that they are entitled to summary judgment
because Smith failed to present expert testimony rebutting the Panel’s
unanimous opinion in favor of Dr. Butler. Smith does not dispute that he
presented no expert testimony regarding the standard of care applicable to Dr.
Butler or whether she breached that standard of care. He argues, instead, that
the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur applies, making expert testimony unnecessary.
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[16] Like other negligence actions, a medical malpractice plaintiff must prove that
the defendant owed him a duty and that the defendant breached that duty,
which proximately caused an injury to the plaintiff. Narducci v. Tedrow, 736
N.E.2d 1288, 1292 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000). “Physicians are not held to a duty of
perfect care.” Id. “Instead, the doctor must exercise the degree of skill and care
ordinarily possessed and exercised by a reasonably skillful and careful
practitioner under the same or similar circumstances.” Id. As noted above,
expert testimony is generally required to establish the applicable standard of
care and to show a breach of that standard. Id. “Because medicine is an
inexact science, an inference of negligence will not arise simply because there is
a bad result without proof of some negligent act.” Id.
[17] Nevertheless, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur is a limited exception to the general
rule that the mere fact of injury will not create an inference of negligence. Syfu
v. Quinn, 826 N.E.2d 699, 703 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005). It recognizes that “the
facts or circumstances accompanying an injury may be such as to raise a
presumption, or at least permit an inference, of negligence on the part of the
defendant.” Id. “Application of the doctrine does not in any way depend on
the standard of care imposed by law but, rather, depends entirely upon the
nature of the occurrence out of which the injury arose.” Id.
[18] Determining whether the doctrine applies in any given negligence case is a
mixed question of law and fact, with the question of law being whether the
plaintiff’s evidence included all of the underlying elements of res ipsa loquitur.
Id. at 703-04.
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Under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, negligence may be inferred
where 1) the injuring instrumentality is shown to be under the
management or exclusive control of the defendant or his
servants, and 2) the accident is such as in the ordinary course of
things does not happen if those who have management of the
injuring instrumentality use proper care.
Id. at 704 (quoting Vogler v. Dominguez, 624 N.E.2d 56, 61 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993),
trans. denied). A plaintiff may establish the second element – the one at issue
here – by relying on common knowledge or expert testimony. Id. Expert
testimony is required only when the issue of care is beyond the realm of the
layperson. Id.
[19] “In the medical malpractice context, application of this exception is limited to
situations in which the defendant’s conduct is so obviously substandard that a
jury need not possess medical expertise in order to recognize the defendant’s
breach of the applicable standard of care.” Methodist Hosps., Inc. v. Johnson, 856
N.E.2d 718, 721 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006); see also Syfu, 826 N.E.2d at 705 (“expert
testimony is not required when the fact-finder can understand that the
physician’s conduct fell below the applicable standard of care without technical
input from an expert witness”). “Such actions have typically arisen from
physicians leaving a foreign object in the patient’s body; juries can understand
without independent explanation that the object should have been removed.”
Syfu, 826 N.E.2d at 705.
[20] Here, Dr. Butler’s surgical decision to perform the lobectomy was informed by
her review of Smith’s medical and social history, as well as Dr. Yang’s
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intraoperative pathology consultation. Further weighing in on Dr. Butler’s
decision was the advantage of doing a single surgery rather than waiting for the
permanent slides and possibly having to put Smith through the risks of a second
thoracic surgery.1 Dr. Butler testified that regardless of whether Dr. Yang
specifically reported to her that the frozen slides revealed cancer or that they
were suggestive of cancer, she would have proceeded with the lobectomy under
the circumstances presented.
[21] We agree with the Surgical Defendants that this is not the type of case in which
the applicable standard of care is within the realm of the common knowledge of
a layperson. See Naducci, 736 N.E.2d at 1293-94 (injury and removal of spleen
during colon surgery did not trigger the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur because it
was not “apparent that a fact-finder possesses the knowledge and expertise
necessary to render an informed decision on the issue of negligence”, including
“some understanding of the procedures involved in the colon surgery, the
location in the body of the various organs at issue, and the nature of the
spleen”). An evaluation of Dr. Butler’s conduct and the medical reasons for
proceeding with the lobectomy in light of Smith’s entire clinical picture clearly
require expert testimony, which Smith has not provided. Accordingly, the trial
court erred when it denied the Surgical Defendants’ motion for summary
1
The risks associated with the surgery included death, infection, bleeding, “prolonged air leak”, and
“prolonged mechanical ventilation”. Appellants’ Appendix Vol. 2 at 146. Additionally, following surgery,
Smith would continue to have a chest tube and be in the hospital “as long as the chest tube is in.” Id.
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judgment. On remand, the trial court is directed to enter summary judgment in
favor of the Surgical Defendants.
The Pathology Defendants
[22] We now turn to the denial of the Pathology Defendants’ motion for summary
judgment.2 The Pathology Defendants acknowledge that Smith designated
expert testimony to rebut the Panel’s opinion that Dr. Yang did not breach the
applicable standard of care. They argue, however, that Dr. Griggs’s testimony
failed to create a genuine issue of material fact because he found “no fault with
Dr. Yang’s intraoperative diagnosis and testified that Dr. Yang did not breach
the applicable standard of care in interpreting the frozen slides.” Pathology
Defendants Appellants’ Brief at 15. Alternatively, the Pathology Defendants argue
that Dr. Butler’s testimony reveals that she would have performed the
lobectomy had Dr. Yang given any intraoperative diagnosis other than a
definitive diagnosis that the lesion was benign and, therefore, the designated
evidence establishes a lack of causation.
[23] During his deposition, Dr. Griggs acknowledged that pathologists regularly
provide intraoperative diagnoses to surgeons based on frozen slides – even
though frozen slides are inferior to permanent slides. “The usual standard of
care is a frozen section and then it’s turned into a permanent section and
2
Smith argues that the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur also applies to the Pathology Defendants. For the reasons
set out in the discussion of the Surgical Defendants, it does not apply here either.
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finalized that way.” Appellants’ Appendix Vol. 3 at 39. According to Dr. Griggs,
in the vast majority of cases, a pathologist can make a clear diagnosis
(cancerous or noncancerous) based on frozen slides, which are then confirmed
with permanent slides. In cases where the frozen slides are inconclusive, Dr.
Griggs testified that the pathologist should defer the diagnosis until review of
the permanent slides. Dr. Griggs acknowledged that when communicating a
deferral to a surgeon intraoperatively, the pathologist may, without deviating
from the standard of care, indicate a leaning along with the deferral.
[24] Dr. Griggs’s opinion was not contingent on whether Dr. Yang reported
intraoperatively that the specimen was cancer or suggestive of cancer. Dr.
Griggs explained:
[M]y concern is that the intraoperative consultation as we see
here, suggestive of – would have – they – the pathologist could
have had that discussion with the surgeon. Yeah, I think it’s
suggestive of, but I think it – the frozen section should have been
deferred and there should have been a written frozen section
diagnosis given to the surgeon. I think that’s the standard of care
in – in hospitals, an accreditation requirement….[T]he diagnosis
would have been positive for cancer or negative for cancer or
deferred…. I think what he should have done was defer it here.
Id. at 41.3 Dr. Griggs went on to clarify that the tumor in question was “an
unusual tumor” and that “the frozen slides had components that certainly
3
When asked if he would withdraw his criticism if Dr. Yang gave a “less than definitive” cancer diagnosis,
Dr. Griggs responded that he would not withdraw his criticism and explained: “I think that by not deferring
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closely mirrored or mimicked carcinoma”, making the slides difficult to
interpret. Id. at 41, 45. Although Dr. Griggs would not have faulted Dr. Yang
for indicating in a “sidebar conversation” with Dr. Butler that the slides were
suggestive of cancer, Dr. Griggs remained critical of Dr. Yang’s failure to defer
the diagnosis. Id. at 48. In Dr. Griggs’s opinion, if Dr. Yang had deferred,
Smith “would not have lost the lobe of his lung.” Id. at 44.
[25] The whole of Dr. Griggs’s deposition testimony does not definitively and
unequivocally demonstrate what the standard of care is and that Dr. Yang
breached it. Rather, as set out above, Dr. Griggs testified in terms of what he
would have done differently or what Dr. Yang should have done. Dr. Griggs
did not testify that it was malpractice not to have deferred the diagnosis, and he
expressly indicated that Dr. Yang could have properly stated, along with the
deferral, that the frozen slides were suggestive of cancer. See Oelling v. Rao, 593
N.E.2d 189, 190-91 (Ind. 1992) (“affirming grant of summary judgment when
plaintiff’s expert’s affidavit stated only how expert would have treated patient
differently and did not specifically state that defendant’s treatment fell below
the applicable standard of care).
[26] But even if Dr. Griggs’s testimony establishes a counterpoint to the medical
review panel’s opinion creating a question of fact as to whether Dr. Yang
breached the applicable standard of care, the Pathology Defendants have
it the confusion was allowed to occur. Or the message didn’t get across…. I think they should have deferred
it then.” Id. at 48.
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designated evidence that Smith’s alleged injury was not caused by Dr. Yang’s
performance.4 Indeed, the designated evidence establishes that Dr. Butler
intended to proceed with the lobectomy unless the intraoperative diagnosis was
“clearly not cancerous”. Appellants’ Appendix Vol. 3 at 16. Dr. Griggs conceded
that such a diagnosis was not appropriate in this case, as the frozen slides were
a “tough call” and demonstrated characteristics that were suggestive of cancer.
Id. at 46. Dr. Colby of the Mayo Clinic similarly noted the difficulty of making
a diagnosis based on the frozen slides in this case. Given that the slides were
difficult to interpret and were suggestive of cancer, along with Smith’s entire
clinical picture and patient history, Dr. Butler’s deposition testimony reveals
that she would have proceeded with the lobectomy regardless of whether Dr.
Yang deferred with a lean, indicated that the slides were suggestive of cancer, or
diagnosed the specimen as cancerous. Smith has designated no contrary
evidence that Dr. Butler, the ultimate decisionmaker regarding the lobectomy,
would have changed course had Dr. Yang provided an intraoperative diagnosis
of inconclusive and deferred for analysis of the permanent slides the next day.
See Carey v. Ind. Physical Therapy, Inc., 926 N.E.2d 1126, 1129 (Ind. Ct. App.
2010) (“Proximate cause requires, at a minimum, that the harm would not have
occurred but for the defendant’s conduct.”), trans. denied. Thus, the designated
4
In a medical malpractice action, a plaintiff generally must establish three elements: (1) the physician owed a
duty to the plaintiff; (2) the physician breached that duty; and (3) the breach proximately caused the
plaintiff’s injuries. See Green v. Robertson, 56 N.E.3d 682, 692 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016), trans. denied.
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evidence presents no question of fact regarding causation. On remand, the trial
court shall enter summary judgment in favor of the Pathology Defendants.
[27] Judgment reversed and remanded.
Najam, J. and Robb, J., concur.
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