NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court."
Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the
parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1483-16T3
MAURINE A. VILLAPANDO,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
RARITAN BAY MEDICAL CENTER,
ARNOLD DERMAN, M.D.,
VIRGINIA KO CHUA, R.N.,
and LIZA ABUNDO, R.N.,
Defendants,
and
CARL NATH, M.D.,
Defendant-Respondent.
_________________________________
Argued May 3, 2018 – Decided August 13, 2018
Before Judges Haas, Rothstadt, and Gooden
Brown.
On appeal from Superior Court of New Jersey,
Law Division, Middlesex County, Docket No.
L-2845-12.
Howard D. Crane argued the cause for appellant
(Koerner & Crane, LLC, attorneys; Howard D.
Crane, on the briefs).
Peter L. Korn argued the cause for respondent
(McElroy, Deutsch, Mulvaney & Carpenter, LLP,
attorneys; Peter L. Korn, of counsel and on
the brief; William S. Mezzomo, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
In this foreign object medical malpractice case, plaintiff
Maurine Villapando appeals from the December 2, 2016 Law Division
order denying her motion for a new trial, following the October
25, 2016 jury verdict in favor of defendant Carl Nath, M.D, and
the entry of the November 1, 2016 conforming judgment in favor of
Nath. We affirm.
The underlying facts in this case are not in dispute. In
August 2005, plaintiff went to the emergency room at Raritan Bay
Medical Center (Raritan Bay), complaining of severe abdominal pain
on her right side. The emergency room staff performed a physical
examination, an ultrasound, and a CAT scan on plaintiff's abdomen
and pelvis, which revealed an ovarian cyst. Dr. Nath, an
obstetrician/gynecologist (OB/GYN) surgeon, performed a
laparotomy, an open incision directly into the abdomen, to remove
the cyst.
Per Raritan Bay's policy, a laparotomy involved three
distinct "counts" of instruments and lap pad sponges performed by
the nurses, who, in this case, were defendants Virgina Ko Chua,
the circulating nurse, and Liza Abundo, the scrub nurse. Before
2 A-1483-16T3
the surgery commenced, an initial count was conducted to determine
the number of instruments and sponges circulating in the operating
room. The second count occurred upon the initial closure of the
peritoneal lining1, wherein the nurses would count aloud for
everyone in the operating room to hear. The third and final count
occurred when the surgeon was ready to close the skin.
After the second and third counts, the nurses would verbally
inform the surgeon that the count was correct and would document
the count by denoting hash marks on a "count sheet" for each item
removed from the operating field, including used sponges, in order
to ensure that all items were accounted for. At the end of the
procedure, the circulating nurse would sign the count sheet,
indicating that the surgeon was verbally notified of the final
count status, and the surgeon would acknowledge the count report
by signing the count sheet.
In this case, although a total of thirteen lap sponges were
used during plaintiff's surgery, the hash marks denoting the tally
revealed a count of only twelve sponges retrieved, indicating that
one sponge was unaccounted for. However, the circulating nurse
mistakenly wrote the number "thirteen" next to the hash marks
after adding them incorrectly. Neither nurse noticed the computing
1
The peritoneal lining is "the lining of the abdomen underneath
the skin."
3 A-1483-16T3
error, and, after verbally advising Nath that the count was
correct, Nath acknowledged the count by signing the count sheet.
Immediately after the surgery, another CAT scan was performed
because plaintiff developed a fever and continued to have pain.
However, according to Arnold Derman, the radiologist, the CAT scan
did not reveal any abnormal findings in the abdomen and plaintiff
was later discharged from Raritan Bay once her symptoms abated.
Approximately five years after the surgery, plaintiff injured
her back and an x-ray was taken at U.S. HealthWorks. She was told
that "something [was] wrong with [her] x-ray" and directed to see
her primary care physician. After ordering a CAT scan, her primary
care physician referred her to an OB/GYN. The OB/GYN performed a
pelvic examination and "felt a mass on the right side of
[plaintiff's] lower abdomen" that, based on the CAT scan, may have
been a cancerous tumor. The OB/GYN referred plaintiff to an OB/GYN
oncologist, who performed exploratory surgery on plaintiff in May
2010.
The 2010 surgery revealed that plaintiff had a large amount
of scar tissue and a foreign object in her lower abdomen, which
had attached itself to her ovary. The foreign object was the
unaccounted for lap sponge from the 2005 laparotomy. As a result,
plaintiff's right ovary and fallopian tube were removed and
plaintiff, who was then thirty-one years old, was informed that
4 A-1483-16T3
she would not be able to get pregnant without some sort of assisted
reproductive technology.
On February 20, 2013, plaintiff filed an amended medical
malpractice complaint against Raritan Bay, Nath, Chua, Abundo,
Derman, and various fictitious individuals and entities. In 2014,
plaintiff's motion for partial summary judgment was granted,
shifting the burden of proof to defendants Nath, Chua and Abundo.2
In 2015, plaintiff settled with all remaining defendants except
Nath, who proceeded to trial.3
A trial was conducted from October 11 to 25, 2016, during
which plaintiff testified on her own behalf and introduced the
deposition testimony of the OB/GYN oncologist who performed the
2010 surgery, as well as the testimony of a psychiatrist who
evaluated her. Chua also testified for plaintiff and acknowledged
that it was the nurses' responsibility to count the sponges. Chua
admitted informing Nath that the count was correct and admitted
that she did not notice the error in the tally nor how it occurred.
2
In a March 14, 2014 order, the complaint was dismissed with
prejudice against Raritan Bay Medical Center.
3
Based on the court's burden shifting ruling, at trial, Nath had
to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that he was not
negligent. If he failed to do so, then the jury would consider
the conduct of the settling defendants, and the burden of proving
that the settling defendants were at fault rested on Nath. See
Lucia v. Monmouth Med. Ctr., 341 N.J. Super. 95, 107-08 (App. Div.
2001).
5 A-1483-16T3
Nath testified on his own behalf and confirmed that he was
verbally informed by the circulating nurse that the counts were
correct. Although he signed the count sheet, he testified that
he had never been involved in sponge counts or count sheets, and
was not responsible for verifying the nurses' counts. According
to Nath, he did not read the entire form before signing and his
signature on the count sheet simply meant that he "was told that
the . . . counts were correct." Nath also presented the testimony
of a diagnostic radiologist who detected "a foreign body" in the
CT scan of plaintiff's abdomen performed three days after the 2005
surgery, a psychiatrist who evaluated plaintiff, and Geraldine
Giovanni, a retired registered nurse with forty-five years of
experience at Raritan Bay.
As to Nath's compliance with the applicable standard of
medical practice in the OB/GYN field, plaintiff presented the
expert testimony of Dr. Richard Luciani, an OB/GYN. In turn, Nath
presented the expert testimony of Dr. Anthony Quartell and Dr.
Myles Dotto, who, like Luciani, were both OB/GYNs. Luciani
admitted that at the two hospitals where he worked, "the
responsibility for counting all of the sponges . . . rest[ed] with
the nurses" and surgeons were not responsible for the sponge count.
In fact, he testified that once the nurses complete the count,
they indicate that the count is correct verbally, and the surgeons
6 A-1483-16T3
acknowledge by saying, "[t]hank you very much," and do not double
check the nurses' count.
Notwithstanding this practice, Luciani testified that:
The standard . . . in [m]edicine . . . in
terms of documents is very, very simple. When
a doctor signs a document in [m]edicine,
whether it be an operative report, a progress
note, a nurse's note, an order on a chart,
[or] a count form, . . . if you're told that
you have to sign it, the standard of care is
to read it, because the contents of those
particular medical documents can have an
impact on the health and welfare of the
patient.
Luciani continued:
[I]n this particular hospital, they have a
protocol that the doctor has to sign this
form. Are we to believe that the protocol is
that the doctor has to sign the form, but
. . . the hospital doesn't care if the doctor
reads it? He just has to sign it. . . . Is
that the most ludicrous thing . . . you or I
have ever heard? You have to sign it, but you
don’t have to read it.
So the bottom line is in [m]edicine when
you sign a document, you read the document
before you sign it.
Luciani explained that Nath's mistake was "not reading what
he was signing," which led to the sponge being left in plaintiff's
abdomen. According to Luciani, because "[s]even lap pads were not
used, . . . that would mean that there were [thirteen] that went
in the abdomen, because there were [twenty] to begin with."
Luciani continued:
7 A-1483-16T3
[H]ad Dr. Nath, who signed this [form] read
this appropriately, which is the standard of
care, he would . . . see that there were
[twelve] that came off the field so this could
not have been a final count . . . and the
question would be, "[w]ell, where's the
sponge?" And they would have counted.
In contrast, Quartell opined that Nath "complied completely
with accepted standards." Quartell testified that Raritan Bay's
policy requiring the surgeon to acknowledge the count sheet at the
end of the procedure via signature was something he "had never
seen . . . before" and was not a requirement in other hospitals.
In his opinion, the policy meant that the surgeon "acknowledge[d]
the fact that the nurse told him that the sponge counts were
correct." When asked if he was aware of any practice where
surgeons were required to double check the nurses' arithmetic, he
responded, "No, not at all," and it made no sense to him why this
policy would be in effect.
He elucidated that the standard of care he was familiar with,
which was what every operating room he had ever worked at did, was
that
when you operate, at the end of the
operation[,] the scrub tech and the
circulating nurse do the count, and you let
them know when you’re closing the . . .
peritoneum, . . . you say . . . we’re closing
now, and they’ll come back and say count is
correct. And then when you’re about to close
the skin[,] they do a second count and they
tell you . . . that count is correct also.
8 A-1483-16T3
When questioned about the surgeon's response after the nurses
read the counts aloud, Quartell replied, "You just say thank you,"
which was an acknowledgment that you correctly heard their count.
While acknowledging that he had trained Luciani and worked with
him at Saint Barnabas, Quartell found Luciani's opinion to be
"ludicrous" because Saint Barnabas followed the same procedure he
(Quartell) described where surgeons were not required to double
check the arithmetic of the nurses, but rather acknowledge that
the counts were what the nurses relayed to them. According to
Quartell, "[n]ever anywhere does it say you're supposed to count
hash marks and figure it out."
Likewise, Dotto agreed that Nath "compl[ied] with . . . the
standard[] of care." He testified that the nurses performed the
sponge counts and reported to the surgeon that the counts were
correct. The surgeon then did "nothing further" besides closing
up the patient. When asked whether surgeons typically relied upon
the sponge counts conveyed to them by the nurses, he responded,
"Yes, absolutely." He explained that the significance of the
acknowledgement policy at Raritan Bay was to corroborate that "the
sponge counts were reported as correct." When asked whether he
had ever encountered a surgeon double checking a sponge count in
9 A-1483-16T3
the operating rooms he worked in, he unequivocally responded, "No,
never."
During her forty-five year career at Raritan Bay, Giovanni
had worked as a circulating nurse, scrub nurse, coordinator,
supervisor, and manager. She was ultimately promoted to Director
of Surgical Services. She testified that she was directly involved
in drafting the hospital's count sheet policy and explained that
the word "acknowledge" in the policy meant that the surgeon was
acknowledging "[w]hatever [count] the circulating nurse told him.
If she told him that . . . the count was correct, that's what he
[was] acknowledging." According to Giovanni, in all her years
working in the operating room at Raritan Bay, she had "never seen
[a surgeon] go over the math" on the form.
At the conclusion of the trial, the jury reached a verdict
in favor of Nath, finding by a vote of 7-1 that he proved by a
preponderance of the credible evidence that he did not deviate
from accepted standards of medical care in his treatment of
plaintiff. Accordingly, the trial judge entered judgment in favor
of Nath. Following the trial, plaintiff moved for a new trial,
asserting that Nath failed to articulate a standard of care.
On December 2, 2016, the trial judge denied plaintiff's motion
on the papers. In an oral decision placed on the record on
December 22, 2016, applying Rule 4:49-1, the judge found no clear
10 A-1483-16T3
and convincing evidence of "any miscarriage of justice under the
law." The judge determined that "there was sufficient evidence
to sustain [the] verdict," and "there [was] no legal or factual
basis to disturb the verdict of the jury." In rendering his
decision, the judge related that the evidence showed that Nath
"did not perform the count" and "did not oversee the count."
Instead, "[i]t was the responsibility of the nurses" to perform
the count correctly, and "Nath was then asked to sign a document"
which acknowledged "that the count had occurred." In fact, the
judge recalled that at counsel's request, the jury had been
instructed on the definition of the word acknowledge.4
The judge continued that even the plaintiff's expert
acknowledged "that even in [his] practice [he] had never been
required to sign off on a count sheet and [he] ha[s] always relied
upon the nursing staff to provide [him] with oral acknowledgment
that the count was correct which was [the] procedure followed by
Dr. Nath." The judge noted further that the defense experts
testified that "Nath met the standard of care simply by signing
4
Indeed, from one source, the judge instructed the jury on the
definition of acknowledge as "to say that you accept or do not
deny the truth or existence of something; to regard or describe
someone or something as having or deserving a particular status;
and . . . to tell or show someone that something such as a letter
or message has been received." The judge defined acknowledge from
another source as "to recognize as a fact; admit the truth of."
11 A-1483-16T3
the count sheet . . . which acknowledged that the nursing staff
had informed him that the count was correct." Moreover, according
to the judge,
[b]oth defense experts testified that Dr. Nath
was not obligated to read the count sheet and
make certain that the nurses' calculations as
to the number of pads inserted and removed
were correct, simply that he was required
. . . by the hospital under their particular
procedures to sign that document.
The judge also explained that in addition to the expert
testimony, DiGiovanni "confirmed that the protocol at the hospital
for a surgeon under these circumstances was to sign that sheet so
as to simply acknowledge that the surgeon had received an oral
confirmation from the nursing staff that the count was complete
and was correct." The judge continued that "DiGiovanni testified
that in her [forty] years of experience at Raritan Bay . . . she
never witnessed a surgeon reviewing the sheet to confirm a correct
count." Thus, the judge concluded that given the "testimony from
experts as well as [lay] witnesses that Dr. Nath had comported
with the standard of care applicable to a gynecological surgeon
under the circumstances and . . . acted within the hospital's
protocol within the operating suite," the "jury simply rejected
the plaintiff's argument that . . . Dr. Nath was negligent in some
fashion." This appeal followed.
12 A-1483-16T3
We begin with the well-established fundamental principle that
jury trials are the cornerstone of our civil jurisprudence and
that the fact-finding functions of a jury deserve a high degree
of respect and judicial deference. See, e.g., Lockley v. Turner,
344 N.J. Super. 1, 13 (App. Div. 2001), modified and aff'd, 177
N.J. 413 (2003). A jury verdict is "impregnable unless so
distorted and wrong, in the objective and articulated view of a
judge, as to manifest with utmost certainty a plain miscarriage
of justice." Doe v. Arts, 360 N.J. Super. 492, 502-03 (App. Div.
2003) (quoting Carrino v. Novotny, 78 N.J. 355, 360 (1979)). Thus,
a trial judge shall grant a new trial only where "it clearly and
convincingly appears that there was a miscarriage of justice under
the law." R. 4:49-1; see also Dolson v. Anastasia, 55 N.J. 2, 7
(1969).
Our Supreme Court has described the miscarriage of justice
standard as:
a pervading sense of "wrongness" needed to
justify [an] appellate or trial judge undoing
of a jury verdict . . . [which] can arise
. . . from manifest lack of inherently
credible evidence to support the finding,
obvious overlooking or under-valuation of
crucial evidence, [or] a clearly unjust
result.
[Risko v. Thompson Muller Auto. Grp., Inc.,
206 N.J. 506, 521 (2011) (alterations in
original) (quoting Lindenmuth v. Holden, 296
N.J. Super. 42, 48 (App. Div. 1996)).]
13 A-1483-16T3
In deciding a motion for a new trial, the trial judge must "canvass
the record, not to balance the persuasiveness of the evidence on
one side as against the other, but to determine whether reasonable
minds might accept the evidence as adequate to support the jury
verdict." Kulbacki v. Sobchinsky, 38 N.J. 435, 445 (1962).
We review a trial judge's decision on a new trial motion
under the same standard. Dolson, 55 N.J. at 7; R. 2:10-1. We
must make our own determination as to whether there was a
miscarriage of justice, but defer to the trial judge with respect
to "intangible aspects of the case not transmitted by the written
record," such as, "witness credibility and demeanor and the 'feel
of the case.'" Carrino, 78 N.J. at 360-61 n.2 (quoting Pressler,
Current N.J. Court Rules, comment 4 on R. 2:10-1 (1979)). In
reviewing a trial judge's decision on a motion for a new trial,
we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the party
opposing the new trial motion. Caldwell v. Haynes, 136 N.J. 422,
432 (1994).
With these principles in mind, we are satisfied that the
evidence was such that the jury could reasonably have found that
Nath was not negligent in operating on plaintiff. Thus, there was
no "miscarriage of justice." On appeal, plaintiff argues that
Nath failed to meet his burden of proof by failing to provide
14 A-1483-16T3
expert testimony setting forth "the generally accepted standard
of care as it applies to the circumstances here where a surgeon
signs the sponge count sheet." Instead, according to plaintiff,
Nath only provided expert testimony about "the standard of care
. . . for situations where the hospital protocol does not require
the surgeon to sign the sponge count sheet." As such, plaintiff
asserts she was entitled to a judgment against Nath on the issue
of liability and "the jury had no basis in the evidence to come
to its conclusion." We disagree.
As a general rule, "a plaintiff in a medical malpractice
action must prove the applicable standard of care, that a deviation
has occurred, and that the deviation proximately caused the
injury." Verdicchio v. Ricca, 179 N.J. 1, 23 (2004) (citations
omitted). However, in very limited circumstances, such as occurred
here, the plaintiff's burden of proof will be shifted to the
defendants. Anderson v. Somberg, 67 N.J. 291, 298-301 (1975).
In Anderson, our Supreme Court established a bright line rule
that
where an unconscious or helpless patient
suffers an admitted mishap not reasonably
foreseeable and unrelated to the scope of the
surgery (such as cases where foreign objects
are left in the body of the patient), those
who had custody of the patient, and who owed
him a duty of care as to medical treatment,
. . . can be called to account for their
default. They must prove their
15 A-1483-16T3
nonculpability, or else risk liability for the
injuries suffered.
[67 N.J. at 298.]
The Court held that in those instances, "a mere shift in the
burden of going forward . . . is insufficient." Id. at 300.
Rather, "not only the burden of going forward shift[s] to
defendants, but the actual burden of proof as well." Ibid. In
Estate of Chin v. St. Barnabas Med. Ctr., 160 N.J. 454 (1999), our
Supreme Court reaffirmed the application of the Anderson
principles where a "case presents a fact pattern that mirrors that
presented in Anderson." Chin, 160 N.J. at 465.
Here, our review of the trial record does not support
plaintiff's contention that defendant failed to meet his burden
of proof. On the contrary, defendant's experts established the
applicable standard of care in the field of OB/GYN. They explained
that surgeons are not required nor expected to verify the
arithmetic of the nurses who perform the count, but simply
acknowledge verbally that the nurses stated the count was correct.
Indeed, all the experts, including plaintiff's expert, admitted
that they had never seen a hospital protocol like Raritan Bay's
where the surgeon was required to acknowledge the count sheet by
signing it. Instead, they all opined that the circulating nurse
was solely responsible for performing the count correctly, and the
16 A-1483-16T3
surgeon had no duty to verify the accuracy of the count. Thus,
regardless of Raritan Bay's unique protocol, the standard of care
delineated by all three experts was the accepted practice in the
medical community.
Under Raritan Bay's protocol, the surgeon's acknowledgement
on the form simply indicated that the nurses' verbal count was
provided to him or her. In fact, DiGiovanni explicitly stated
that the protocol did not create an added responsibility on the
part of the surgeon to double check the counts.5 We also reject
plaintiff's contention that the defense experts' testimony
regarding their own personal standards resulted in a manifest
injustice. "[T]he weight to be given to the evidence of experts
is within the competence of the fact-finder." LaBracio Family
P'ship v. 1239 Roosevelt Ave., Inc., 340 N.J. Super. 155, 165
(App. Div. 2001). Therefore, the fact-finder is free to "accept
5
We reject plaintiff's contention that DiGiovanni's testimony
was "totally irrelevant" and "should not have been allowed." As
a fact witness, DiGiovanni's testimony was permissible under
N.J.R.E. 602, as she had extensive personal knowledge of the
hospital's protocol and how the sponge count was performed based
on her forty-five years of experience at Raritan Bay Medical
Center. Moreover, N.J.R.E. 701 permits a lay witness's "testimony
in the form of opinions or inferences . . . if it (a) is rationally
based on the perception of the witness and (b) will assist in
understanding the witness' testimony or in determining a fact in
issue." To the extent DiGiovanni's testimony represented an
opinion on the hospital's protocol, it was permissible under
N.J.R.E. 701.
17 A-1483-16T3
some of the expert's testimony and reject the rest." State v.
M.J.K., 369 N.J. Super. 532, 549 (App. Div. 2004).
Moreover, the jury was properly instructed that "[w]hen
determining the applicable standard of care, [they] must focus on
the accepted standards of practice in OB/GYN surgery, radiology
and the standards applicable to the surgical nurses, and not based
upon the personal subjective belief or practice of a particular
defendant." We presume that the jury followed the judge's
instructions. State v. Burns, 192 N.J. 312, 335 (2007) ("One of
the foundations of our jury system is that the jury is presumed
to follow the trial court's instructions."). Therefore, on this
record, we are satisfied that there is no basis for our
intervention because the jury's verdict is sound.
Affirmed.
18 A-1483-16T3