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18-P-1373 Appeals Court
JOHN E. PARSONS, THIRD, personal representative,1 vs. DARIUS
AMERI & others.2
No. 18-P-1373.
Middlesex. October 8, 2019. - February 26, 2020.
Present: Massing, Sacks, & Hand, JJ.
Practice, Civil, New trial, Instructions to jury. Negligence,
Medical malpractice, Gross negligence, Causation. Medical
Malpractice.
Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on
July 16, 2015.
The case was tried before Edward P. Leibensperger, J., and
a motion for a new trial or for judgment notwithstanding the
verdict was heard by him.
Tory A. Weigand (David M. Gould also present) for the
defendants.
Adam R. Satin (Julie A. Gielowski also present) for the
plaintiff.
1 Of the estate of Laura Parsons.
2 Louise Pothier and North Suburban Surgical Associates,
P.C.
2
MASSING, J. The plaintiff brought this medical malpractice
wrongful death action on behalf of the estate of his late wife,
Laura Parsons (Parsons), against a physician, a nurse, and the
professional corporation that employed them. A jury determined
that the physician's negligence in performing a surgical
procedure resulted in Parsons's death and that the nurse's
negligence contributed to Parsons's pain and suffering. The
primary issue in this appeal is whether the evidence supported
the jury's finding that the physician's actions amounted to
gross negligence, for which the jury awarded punitive damages of
$2.5 million. We affirm.
Background.3 1. The surgery. Parsons was referred to
defendant Dr. Darius Ameri for treatment of a hiatal hernia in
her diaphragm. The diaphragm separates the chest cavity from
the abdomen; the hiatus is an opening in the diaphragm that
permits the esophagus to travel down through the chest into the
stomach. A hiatal hernia is an abnormality in which the stomach
protrudes up through the hiatus into the chest. Ameri
determined that hiatal hernia repair surgery was necessary to
restore Parsons's stomach to its proper anatomical position. He
informed Parsons that she needed to lose weight prior to the
3 We recite the evidence as the jury could have found it,
reserving certain evidence for the discussion section.
3
surgery. A few months later, Parsons was admitted to Winchester
Hospital for laparoscopic surgery.4
Ameri performed the surgery, assisted by defendant
registered nurse first assistant Louise Pothier. Ameri chose to
repair the hiatal hernia by attaching a mesh closure to
Parsons's diaphragm with a medical device called the Ethicon
Securestrap, which is used during hernia repair surgery to
attach prosthetic materials to soft tissue. Commonly referred
to as a "tacker," the device attaches absorbable "tacks" (also
called "straps" or "fasteners") through mesh into tissue.5 On
their own, the tacks are approximately five millimeters in
length, but at the time of insertion, the tacker presses them as
much as 6.7 millimeters into the tissue.
The manufacturer's instructions for the tacker included
several cautions. A minimum tissue thickness was required, and
use of the device was contraindicated if the total distance from
the surface of the tissue to any underlying bone, vessel, or
organ was less than 6.7 millimeters. Moreover, it should not be
4 Laparoscopic surgery is performed by making small
incisions on the body and inserting long tools to make internal
repairs. Surgeons rely on small surgical cameras during these
procedures to see inside body cavities. Photographs taken by
these cameras during the course of Parsons's surgery were
admitted in evidence and discussed by the expert witnesses.
5 We refer hereafter to the Ethicon Securestrap as the
tacker.
4
used to insert tacks "in the diaphragm in the vicinity of the
pericardium, aorta, or inferior vena cava during diaphragmatic
hernia repair." The pericardium is a membrane containing fluid
surrounding the heart; the inferior vena cava and the aorta are
the major blood vessels that carry blood to and from the heart.6
6 The relevant portions of the instructions appeared as
follows:
"CONTRAINDICATIONS
The device is not intended for use when prosthetic
material fixation is contraindicated.
Do not use the system on tissue that cannot be inspected
visually for hemostasis.
A minimum tissue thickness is required when applying the
fastener over underlying bone, vessels, or viscera. If
the total distance from the surface of the tissue to the
underlying structure is less than the minimum tissue
thickness, or may be comprised to a total distance less
than the minimum tissue thickness, use of the device is
contraindicated.
This device should not be used in tissues that have a
direct anatomic relationship to major vascular
structures. This would include the deployment of
fasteners in the diaphragm in the vicinity of the
pericardium, aorta, or inferior vena cava during
diaphragmatic hernia repair." (Emphasis added.)
"WARNINGS
". . .
The total distance from the surface of the tissue to the
underlying bone, vessels, or viscera should be evaluated
prior to application and should be a minimum of 6.7 mm."
5
Ameri testified that he had used the tacker in many hernia
repair surgeries. He preferred to fasten mesh with the tacker
because the tacks were less likely than sutures to tear, which
could potentially raise the risk of hernia recurrence. Ameri
used the tacker to affix mesh to Parsons's diaphragm crura, that
is, the muscular edge of the diaphragm closest to the esophagus.
Although he understood the contraindications associated with the
tacker, Ameri stated that the tacker was nonetheless "almost
always" used to fix the mesh to the edge of the diaphragm
because the crura is so thick that the tacks were "not going to
get anywhere beyond this thickness." Used in this way, the
tacker was "nowhere close to," "does not have any relationship
whatsoever, or a proximity or getting close," and was "far away
from any major vessel or heart or any part of the pericardium."
He admitted that he did not measure the thickness of Parsons's
diaphragm crura at the time of the surgery, but he
"ballpark[ed]" its thickness to be ten millimeters, thick enough
to withstand the five millimeter tacks without allowing them to
pierce through the diaphragm. He agreed that puncturing the
pericardium or the myocardium, the heart muscle itself, during
hiatal hernia repair surgery would be below the standard of care
expected of the average qualified general surgeon.
2. Postoperative complications and cause of death. After
the surgery, Parsons's vital signs were stable. Two days after
6
the surgery, however, she complained that her heart was racing
and that she had abdominal pain. An echocardiogram showed the
presence of excess fluid in Parsons's pericardium near where the
tacks were placed; her heart rate was very elevated and
irregular. She was administered blood-thinning medication and
morphine. Approximately one hour later, Parsons went into
cardiac arrest. She made "raspy, guttural sounds," her
breathing became labored, and she was unresponsive except for
moaning. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) was performed, but
efforts to resuscitate her were unsuccessful.
The provisional autopsy report stated that Parsons's cause
of death was "cardiac in nature," caused by blood in the
pericardial sac resulting in tamponade -- or compression of the
heart due to excess fluid in the pericardium -- likely occurring
from prolonged CPR. The medical examiner produced the
provisional autopsy report based on external and internal
examinations of Parsons's body.
The final autopsy report, produced after microscopic
evaluation of Parsons's heart, noted "puncture marks on the
posterior aspect of the heart with hemorrhage just below the
level of the cardiac valves," and the presence of 250 cubic
centimeters (about eight ounces) of blood in the pericardium.7
7 The autopsy report also described the puncture marks as a
"superficial cleft like defect in the epicardial fat and
7
The report noted both "acute and chronic" pericarditis, or
inflammation of the pericardium, with "the acute inflammation
and hemorrhage likely occurring at the time of hiatal hernia
repair." "Although trauma was considered as a potential cause
of the pericarditis, unequivocal evidence of surgical trauma
. . . could not be demonstrated." Parsons did not have a
pulmonary embolism, or blood clot, in her lungs, the presence of
which could have contributed to irregular heartbeat. The report
concluded, "The final cause of death is ascribed to a
combination of pericarditis, myocarditis and hemopericardium" --
that is, inflammation of the pericardium, inflammation of the
heart muscle, and bleeding within the pericardial sac -- "with
tamponade leading to cardiac arrest."
3. Plaintiff's expert testimony. At trial, the plaintiff
presented the expert testimony of Dr. Brian Carmine, a general
surgeon who had performed nearly 1,000 hiatal hernia surgeries.
Carmine testified to a reasonable degree of medical certainty
that Ameri and Pothier's treatment of Parsons was below the
standard of care expected from the average qualified surgeon and
registered nurse first assistant and was a substantial
contributing factor to Parsons's death. Specifically, based on
subepicardium," that is, the muscle of the heart. The report
further stated, "The focal defect on the epicardial surface of
the posterior left ventricle was superficial with only minimal
extension into the [heart muscle]."
8
his review of the final autopsy report and the photographs from
the surgery, Carmine opined that it was more likely than not
that Ameri pierced Parson's pericardium and punctured her heart
with the tacker, resulting in her cardiac arrest and death.
Carmine was familiar with the tacker Ameri used in the
laparoscopic procedure performed on Parsons as well as other
techniques for hiatal hernia repair. Injury to the pericardium
or any part of the heart muscle should not have occurred if
proper surgical techniques were used, and causing such injury
during hiatal hernia surgery would violate the applicable
standard of care. The average qualified surgeon would have been
aware of the risks of using a tacker: "the concern is that when
you fire one of these pressure-loaded fasteners, that it can
penetrate through and hit structures on the other side of the
diaphragm that you can't see, and cause life-threatening
injury." Once the stomach was moved down into its correct
anatomical position and the hernia was closed or reduced, the
back of the heart was just "the thickness of a diaphragm away"
from where the tacks were placed; this distance could be as
little as three to five millimeters. When asked whether Ameri
used the tacker to place tacks on Parsons's diaphragm "in the
vicinity of the pericardium," Carmine answered, "Yes. There
were some that were concerningly anterior," that is, too close
to the front of the chest, near the back of the heart. In
9
Carmine's opinion, Ameri's choice to use the tacker directly on
the diaphragm, when it was very close to the pericardium, was
below the standard of care.
Moreover, Carmine testified that Ameri's use of the tacker
was directly contraindicated by the manufacturer's instructions,
which stated that the tacker should not be used in a
"diaphragmatic hernia repair" where tacks are inserted "in the
diaphragm in the vicinity of the pericardium." The average
qualified surgeon would know or should have known this
information, and Ameri's use of the tacker in Parsons's surgery
violated the standard of care.
Carmine further testified that it was the surgical tacks
that caused the puncture marks on Parson's heart, not CPR as the
defendants contended. The puncture marks in the autopsy reports
were not consistent with an injury related to CPR but, rather,
were consistent with an injury occurring during the surgery.
Carmine also noted that Parsons went into cardiac arrest before
CPR was performed.
4. Defense's expert testimony. The defendants' theory of
the case was that Parsons died of longstanding damage to her
heart caused by the hiatal hernia, aggravated by prolonged CPR.
Ameri emphatically denied "enter[ing]" Parsons's heart with the
tacks during the performance of the surgery. The defense's
expert witness, Dr. David Brooks, a general and gastrointestinal
10
surgeon, opined that Ameri's actions and conduct were
appropriate and in accord with the accepted practice of the
average qualified general surgeon. He believed that Parsons's
death was caused not by an injury during the hiatal hernia
repair surgery but rather by the use of blood-thinning
medication and attempts to resuscitate her through CPR.
Brooks testified that the tacks did not enter Parsons's
heart. He believed it highly unlikely that the tacks could have
injured Parsons's pericardium because the puncture marks were
"miles away" from where the tacks were placed. Like Ameri,
Brooks estimated the thickness of the crura to be approximately
ten millimeters. He stated that the location of the
hemorrhaging, the location of the tacks, and the technique used
to close the hernia and move the stomach back to its proper
position all indicated that Parsons's pericardium was not
injured during surgery. He also pointed to a sentence in the
provisional autopsy report stating that "no surgical penetration
of the pericardium was identified." He suggested that Parsons's
initially stable postoperative condition was not consistent with
someone who suffered a pericardium injury during surgery. He
believed that the echocardiogram performed on the second day
after surgery would have revealed more fluid in the pericardium
if it had been injured during surgery. He also pointed to the
autopsy findings of chronic pericarditis and stated that he
11
believed that Parsons's hiatal hernia was responsible for that
condition. In his opinion, the prolonged CPR caused an injury
"that led to bleeding into the pericardial sac." He stated that
the evidence that the CPR broke Parsons's second rib supported
his conclusion that it also injured the heart.
Brooks too was familiar with the tacker and the
contraindications for its use. He stated that despite the
warnings, he used it routinely in laparoscopic hiatal hernia
surgery. Based on his personal experience and review of the
medical records, he opined that Ameri's use of the tacker was
appropriate for Parsons's procedure "if used wisely and safely."
In his opinion, "the warnings that are on the package insert are
largely a defensive maneuver" by the manufacturer so "it would
not be involved in litigation." He added, "[I]f you look at the
package insert next time you buy [ibuprofen], you'll be
horrified of the number of complications that could possibly
occur."
5. Verdict and posttrial motion. After a six-day trial,
the jury found that Ameri and Pothier were negligent in their
treatment and care of Parsons, that Ameri was grossly negligent,
that Ameri's negligence was a substantial contributing factor in
causing Parsons's conscious pain and suffering and death, and
that Pothier's negligence was a substantial contributing factor
in causing Parsons's pain and suffering but not her death. The
12
jury awarded $100,000 to the estate for Parsons's conscious pain
and suffering; $1.5 million to the plaintiff in his individual
capacity and $500,000 each to Parsons's son and daughter, to
compensate them for past and future loss of consortium; and $2.5
million punitive damages against Ameri for his gross negligence.8
After judgment entered, the defendants filed a motion seeking a
new trial or judgment notwithstanding the verdict; in the event
neither of those requests was granted, the defendants sought
exclusion of prejudgment interest on the damages awarded on the
gross negligence claim and remittitur of the damages awarded.
The judge denied the requests for a new trial or judgment
notwithstanding the verdict, but he allowed Ameri's request to
amend the judgment to exclude any prejudgment interest on the
punitive damages award. The request for remittitur was also
denied. An amended judgment then entered.9
8 The parties stipulated, before the case was submitted to
the jury, that Ameri and Pothier were at all relevant times
employees of defendant North Suburban Surgical Associates, P.C.,
and that the corporation would be vicariously liable for the
negligence of its employees.
9 The amended judgment entered on June 28, 2018. The
defendants' notice of appeal, dated June 29, 2018, states that
they appeal from the judgment entered on June 1, 2018 (not the
amended judgment dated June 28), and from the order on their
motion entered on June 27, 2018. As nothing turns on this
oversight, we treat the defendants' appeal from the judgment as
one from the amended judgment.
13
Discussion. 1. Causation. The defendants contend that
the trial judge erred in denying their request for a new trial
because the verdict, particularly as to causation, was against
the weight of the evidence. "The judge should only set aside a
verdict as against the weight of the evidence when it is
determined that the jury 'failed to exercise an honest and
reasonable judgment in accordance with the controlling
principles of law.'" O'Brien v. Pearson, 449 Mass. 377, 384
(2007), quoting Robertson v. Gaston Snow & Ely Bartlett, 404
Mass. 515, 520, cert. denied, 493 U.S. 894 (1989). See W.
Oliver Tripp Co. v. American Hoechst Corp., 34 Mass. App. Ct.
744, 748 (1993) (to conclude that new trial is warranted, judge
must find "the verdict is so markedly against the weight of the
evidence as to suggest that the jurors allowed themselves to be
misled, were swept away by bias or prejudice, or for a
combination of reasons, including misunderstanding of applicable
law, failed to come to a reasonable conclusion"). We review the
denial of the defendants' motion for new trial for abuse of
discretion, see O'Brien, supra, extending "considerable
deference" where the trial judge and motion judge were the same.
Gath v. M/A-Com, Inc., 440 Mass. 482, 492 (2003).
"To prevail on a claim of medical malpractice, a plaintiff
must establish the applicable standard of care and demonstrate
both that a defendant physician breached that standard, and that
14
this breach caused the patient's harm." Palandjian v. Foster,
446 Mass. 100, 104 (2006). To establish causation, the
plaintiff must demonstrate a causal connection between a
defendant's negligent actions and the injuries suffered. See
Glicklich v. Spievack, 16 Mass. App. Ct. 488, 492 (1983).
"Testimony that such a relation is possible, conceivable, or
reasonable, without more, is insufficient to meet this burden."
Id. at 492-493. The jury had to determine, based on a
preponderance of the evidence, that if Ameri and Pothier had
provided proper care, Parsons "would not have been injured to
the same extent." Id. at 493.
The judge found that "[t]here was credible evidence . . .
to allow a jury reasonably to conclude that defendants'
negligence caused the injuries and death," and "there is nothing
to suggest that the jury in this case [were] biased or
prejudiced or that they misunderstood the facts or law presented
to them." We agree.
The jury heard testimony from expert witnesses and the
defendants; they viewed photographs from Parsons's surgery and
were led through the preliminary and final autopsy reports in
detail. The plaintiff's expert witness, Carmine, offered his
opinion that Ameri caused Parsons's death by puncturing her
heart with the surgical tacker, causing her pericardium to fill
with fluid and constrict her heart, and that Parsons would not
15
have died if Ameri had provided the standard of care of the
average qualified surgeon.10 His opinion was consistent with the
final autopsy report, which found "puncture marks on the
posterior aspect of the heart" and "acute inflammation and
hemorrhage likely occurring at the time of hiatal hernia
repair," and concluded that the cause of death was "a
combination of pericarditis, myocarditis, and hemopericardium
with tamponade, leading to cardiac arrest."
The jury also had a substantial basis on which to reject
the defense theory of the case. Both experts agreed that
injuries to the pericardium may not result in abnormal vital
signs until days after the injury occurs. Carmine explained why
he concluded that Parsons's death was not caused by preexisting
10Carmine also testified that Pothier departed from the
standard of care of the average qualified registered nurse first
assistant because she either was ignorant of the relevant
anatomy and risks of the surgery, or failed to inform Ameri that
he was operating too close to a vital organ, and if she had met
the standard of care, it is more likely than not that Parsons
would have lived. Although there was thus evidence that
Pothier's negligence caused Parsons's death, Pothier argues on
appeal that there was no independent evidence that her
negligence caused Parsons's conscious pain and suffering. The
evidence, however, allowed the jury to draw that inference.
They heard evidence that Parsons suffered abdominal pain and
rapid heartbeat, and that she had difficulty breathing before
she succumbed. It was reasonable for the jury to infer that the
same conduct that caused Parsons's death also caused her pain
and suffering immediately before she died. The verdict against
Pother is not inconsistent with the verdict against Ameri; if
anything, it indicates that the jury found Pothier less culpable
than Ameri.
16
heart defects or prolonged CPR. He believed that CPR did not
cause the puncture marks because there was no other damage to
the structures surrounding the heart. Rather, Carmine believed
that Parsons's pericardium was injured at the time of the
surgery because there were signs that it had begun to heal.
The jury's conclusion that in the course of the surgery
Ameri punctured Parsons's pericardium, leading to internal
bleeding and ultimately causing her death, was reasonable and
supported by the evidence. The judge did not abuse his
discretion in denying a new trial on the issues of negligence
and causation.
2. Gross negligence. Ameri contends that the trial judge
erred by denying his motion for directed verdict and request for
judgment notwithstanding the verdict on the question of gross
negligence, and that the judge also erred by denying a new trial
on the issue. When reviewing the denial of a motion for
directed verdict or judgment notwithstanding the verdict, we
apply the same standard as the trial judge. O'Brien, 449 Mass.
at 383. "Review of these motions requires us to construe the
evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and
disregard that favorable to the moving party." Id. "Our duty
in this regard is to evaluate whether 'anywhere in the evidence,
from whatever source derived, any combination of circumstances
could be found from which a reasonable inference could be made
17
in favor of the [nonmovant].'" Id., quoting Turnpike Motors,
Inc. v. Newbury Group, Inc., 413 Mass. 119, 121 (1992).
a. Instruction on gross negligence. The judge instructed
the jury in the language of the "classic," Christopher v.
Father's Huddle Cafe, Inc., 57 Mass. App. Ct. 217, 230 (2003),
and "long-standing definition of gross negligence in
Massachusetts," Aleo v. SLB Toys USA, Inc., 466 Mass. 398, 410
(2013), derived from Altman v. Aronson, 231 Mass. 588, 591-592
(1919). For the first time on appeal, Ameri contends that the
Altman language is "confusing, unhelpful, and ill-suited to
medical malpractice claims" because it does not provide guidance
concerning how far from the degree of care and skill of the
average qualified practitioner a defendant must deviate to
amount to gross, as opposed to ordinary, negligence. See
Johnson v. Omondi, 294 Ga. 74, 84 (2013) (Blackwell, J.,
concurring) (suggesting "that we articulate the 'gross
negligence' standard in a different way in medical malpractice
cases, so as to focus more explicitly upon the accepted
standards of medical care against which 'gross negligence' must
be measured in such cases").
We decline to address this claim. While Ameri opposed the
issue of gross negligence being submitted to the jury, he did
not object to the Altman instruction. To the contrary, when the
judge specifically asked defense counsel about the proposed
18
language for the instruction, counsel replied that it was
"fine." Indeed, the defendants cited Altman as the governing
standard in arguing that the gross negligence verdict was
against the weight of the evidence. Because they never brought
this argument to the trial judge's attention, it is waived. See
Aleo, 466 Mass. at 403 n.11; Jarry v. Corsaro, 40 Mass. App. Ct.
601, 603-607 (1996); Mass. R. Civ. P. 51 (b), 365 Mass. 816
(1974).11
b. Evidence of gross negligence. Under Altman, 231 Mass.
at 591-592, "[g]ross negligence is substantially and appreciably
higher in magnitude than ordinary negligence. . . . It is an
act or omission respecting legal duty of an aggravated character
as distinguished from a mere failure to exercise ordinary
care. . . . It is a heedless and palpable violation of legal
duty respecting the rights of others. . . . Gross negligence is
a manifestly smaller amount of watchfulness and circumspection
than the circumstances require of a person of ordinary
prudence." The "voluntary incurring of obvious risk" and
11We are not persuaded by the defendants' contention that
we should overlook the waiver because any objection to the time-
honored Altman instruction would necessarily have been futile.
See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Russell, 470 Mass. 464, 474 (2015)
(trial judge did not err in departing from instruction in
Commonwealth v. Webster, 5 Cush. 295, 320 [1850], on proof
beyond reasonable doubt). In any event, we think it unlikely
that a more targeted instruction on gross negligence would have
affected the verdict.
19
"persistence in a palpably negligent course of conduct over an
appreciable period of time" are among "the more common indicia
of gross negligence." Lynch v. Springfield Safe Deposit & Trust
Co., 294 Mass. 170, 172 (1936). Moreover, "when the injury
likely to ensue from a failure to do that which ought to be done
is a fatal or very serious one, what otherwise would be a lack
of ordinary care may be found to be gross negligence." Renaud
v. New York, New Haven, & Hartford R.R. Co., 206 Mass. 557, 560
(1910). See Williamson-Greene v. Equipment 4 Rent, Inc., 89
Mass. App. Ct. 153, 157-158 (2016). "The judge's instructions
to the jury were consistent with these principles, and we accept
the conclusion of a properly instructed jury on a question
within their province." Christopher, 57 Mass. App. Ct. at 231.
Few published appellate cases have discussed the
application of the gross negligence standard in the medical
malpractice setting. In Matsuyama v. Birnbaum, 452 Mass. 1, 37
(2008), the court, citing Altman, 231 Mass. at 291-292,
summarily stated that the issue of gross negligence was properly
submitted to the jury based on evidence that the decedent's
doctor had "missed or ignored [the decedent's] known risk
factors for gastric cancer for a period of almost four years,"
and on the doctor's admission that the payment structure of his
practice made it difficult for him to provide patients such as
the decedent with optimum medical care. In that case, however,
20
the jury found for the defendant on the question of gross
malpractice; his objection was based on the premise that by
instructing the jury on gross negligence, the jury would be more
likely to find him liable in negligence. Id. at 36-37. As
"[e]ach [gross negligence] case must be decided upon its own
peculiar facts," Peace v. Gabourel, 302 Mass. 313, 316 (1939),
we turn to the evidence before the jury.
The jury could reasonably conclude that Ameri's decision to
use the tacker in close proximity to Parsons's pericardium
exhibited the hallmarks of gross negligence: he voluntarily
incurred an obvious risk, in circumstances where the failure to
exercise reasonable care could be fatal. The plaintiff's
expert, Carmine, testified that given Parsons's anatomy and the
tacker's contraindications, use of the tacker constituted an
obvious risk. In the photographs taken during surgery, Carmine
noted that Ameri had placed some tacks "concerningly" close to
the pericardium. The point where Ameri inserted the tacks,
which extend 6.7 millimeters when employed, was "the thickness
of a diaphragm" away from the heart, which could be as little as
three to five millimeters. Carmine explained that the risk is
obvious to surgeons performing this procedure "because you can
actually see the heart beating through the diaphragm right where
you're working." In these circumstances, the jury could take
Ameri's admission that he did not measure the thickness of
21
Parsons's diaphragm crura at the time of the surgery, instead
estimating it to be approximately ten millimeters, as indicative
of gross negligence.
Moreover, the dangers associated with using the tacker were
well known to the average qualified surgeon, even without the
manufacturer's warning: "the concern is that when you fire one
of these pressure-loaded fasteners, that it can penetrate
through and hit structures on the other side of the diaphragm
. . . and cause life-threatening injury." Witnesses for both
parties agreed that alternative methods were available.
Exacerbating Ameri's negligence was the fact the manufacturer's
contraindications warned against using the tacker exactly where
he used it: "in the vicinity of the pericardium, aorta, or
inferior vena cava during diaphragmatic hernia repair." The
judge, in denying the defendants' posttrial motion, cited this
fact as the reason he submitted the question of gross negligence
to the jury: "Dr. Ameri ignored the specific direction given
for use of the instrument."
Ameri argues in his brief that because the manufacturer's
use of the phrase "in the vicinity" is inexact, the
contraindication leaves it to the judgment of the surgeon to
determine whether and where the tacker can be used safely; he
maintains that he reasonably exercised such judgment here.
This, however, was not the approach that he took at trial.
22
Rather, Ameri testified that the use of the tacker on the
diaphragm crura is always acceptable. In closing argument, his
attorney referred to the defense expert's testimony that "the
tacker is absolutely safe to use in these circumstances, and
that [the expert] uses it in every case." Counsel further
asserted that the manufacturer's contraindication "is really a
self-serving document to prevent the manufacturer from getting
sued." The jury could have accepted the defense theory that the
manufacturer's warnings could be dismissed and that Ameri did
not injure Parsons in any way. However, the evidence also
permitted the jury to find, as they did, that Ameri heedlessly
ignored the manufacture's warnings, with catastrophic results.
See Altman, 231 Mass. at 591 (equating gross negligence with
"heedless and palpable violation of legal duty").12
While drawing the line between ordinary negligence and
gross negligence can be difficult, see Williamson-Greene, 89
Mass. App. Ct. at 158, "the distinction [between them] is well
established and must be observed, lest all negligence be
gradually absorbed into the classification of gross negligence."
Quinlivan v. Taylor, 298 Mass. 138, 140 (1937). Conceding that
12Ameri similarly argues that the judge erred by failing to
give the jury any instruction on whether or how the
manufacturer's warnings could be considered as evidence of gross
negligence. This argument, never raised at trial and asserted
for the first time in the defendants' reply brief, is waived.
See Truong v. Wong, 55 Mass. App. Ct. 868, 878 (2002).
23
the plaintiff's expert would not have been permitted to opine
that his conduct amounted to "gross negligence," see Puopolo v.
Honda Motor Co., 41 Mass. App. Ct. 96, 98 (1996), Ameri
nonetheless contends that the jury could not permissibly reach a
verdict on the issue without expert testimony, based on "factual
and medical consensus," that Ameri's conduct was not just below
the applicable standard of care, but also was "a flagrant and
egregious departure." We disagree. The evidence, including the
plaintiff's expert's testimony, provided the jury with a
reasonable basis to distinguish ordinary negligence from gross
negligence in this case. It was uncontested that injuring the
patient's pericardium or heart muscle during hiatal hernia
repair surgery would violate the standard of care for the
average qualified surgeon. The evidence as a whole permitted
the jury to find that Ameri's use of the tacker in Parsons's
surgery manifested many of the common indicia of gross
negligence. See Rosario v. Vasconcellos, 330 Mass. 170, 172
(1953), quoting Lynch, 294 Mass. at 172 ("some of the more
common indicia of gross negligence are set forth as 'deliberate
inattention,' 'voluntary incurring of obvious risk,' 'impatience
of reasonable restraint,' or 'persistence in a palpably
negligent course of conduct over an appreciable period of
time'").
24
To be sure, in determining whether a finding of gross
negligence is warranted, the defendant's conduct must "be
considered as a whole." Duval v. Duval, 307 Mass. 524, 528
(1940). See Williamson-Greene, 89 Mass. App. Ct. at 157. In
this regard, Ameri contends that he provided considerable and
attentive care to Parsons over the course of her treatment. But
even if Ameri's "inattention was only momentary, a jury has been
allowed to find gross negligence where the inattention occurred
in a place of great and immediate danger." Zavras v. Capeway
Rovers Motorcycle Club, Inc., 44 Mass. App. Ct. 17, 22 (1997),
quoting Dinardi v. Herook, 328 Mass. 572, 574 (1952). Such is
the case here.
In denying the defendants' request for new trial or
judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the judge found that the
jury's verdict of gross negligence "was reasonably justified by
the evidence that Dr. Ameri proceeded to use the tacker in this
surgery despite the explicit contraindication. It could
reasonably be found that he voluntarily subjected Laura Parsons
to an obvious risk when there were alternatives to the use of
the tacker." For this reason, he declined to disturb the jury's
finding of gross negligence. We discern no error in submitting
the question to the jury, and no abuse of discretion in the
determination that the verdict was not against the weight of the
evidence.
25
Amended judgment affirmed.