J-A19010-22
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
JOHN BUKOWSKI : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant :
:
:
v. :
:
:
WILLIAM HEIM, M.D., AND :
HEMATOLOGY AND ONCOLOGY :
ASSOCIATES OF NORTHEASTERN PA, :
P.C.; SCRANTON QUINCY HOSPITAL :
COMPANY, LLC D/B/A MOSES :
TAYLOR HOSPITAL; SCRANTON :
QUINCY HOME CARE SERVICES, LLC : No. 1344 MDA 2021
D/B/A COMMONWEALTH HEALTH OF :
MOSES TAYLOR :
Appeal from the Judgment Entered October 19, 2021
In the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County Civil Division at
No(s): 2015-03662
BEFORE: BOWES, J., KING, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED: DECEMBER 23, 2022
John Bukowski (“Plaintiff”) appeals from the judgment entered in this
medical malpractice action upon a jury verdict in favor of William Heim, M.D.,
Hematology and Oncology Associates of Northeastern Pa, P.C., Scranton
Quincy Hospital Company, LLC d/b/a Moses Taylor Hospital, and Scranton
Quincy Home Care Services, LLC d/b/a Commonwealth Health of Moses Taylor
(collectively “Defendants”). We affirm.
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* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
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We provide the following background information, taken from the trial
testimony viewed in the light most favorable to Defendants as the verdict
winners. Plaintiff was born with hemophilia and was primarily treated for his
condition at Hershey Medical Center (“Hershey”). Specifically, Plaintiff’s blood
at baseline contained only ten percent of the expected level of Factor VIII, one
of the factors necessary for his blood to clot properly, while normal levels are
between fifty and 100 percent. Plaintiff utilized a Factor VIII blood product to
remedy the deficiency and had in the past administered infusions of the
product at home.
Plaintiff also suffered from hemorrhoids and was referred by Hershey to
Dr. Joseph R. Bannon, who performed hemorrhoidectomy procedures at Moses
Taylor Hospital (“Moses Taylor”). Hershey, contemplating an in-patient
procedure, indicated that the hospital would have to stock up on Factor VIII
product to administer to Plaintiff in the event of an active bleed. Dr. Bannon,
in turn, referred Plaintiff to Dr. William Heim, a hematologist/oncologist with
Hematology & Oncology Associates of Northeastern Pennsylvania, P.C., to
formulate a plan for managing Plaintiff’s care.
Ultimately, Dr. Heim developed the following plan. Dr. Bannon would
perform the procedure at Moses Taylor on an out-patient basis, as was usual
for that type of surgery. A five-to-seven-day supply of Advate, a brand of
Factor VIII product, was shipped directly to Plaintiff’s home, and he was given
instructions on how to manage his twice-daily infusions. Plaintiff was to bring
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a dose of Advate with him to Moses Taylor for infusion one hour before the
surgery. Afterwards, Moses Taylor would leave the IV port in for Plaintiff to
administer a post-operative Factor VIII infusion at 2:00 a.m. at home.
Thereafter, Plaintiff would have his blood tested daily to monitor his Factor
VIII levels and follow up with Dr. Heim to manage the dosages.
Plaintiff underwent the surgery at Moses Taylor on June 6, 2013, and
was discharged with pain medication, stool softener, and instructions to
proceed with his Advate infusions. His blood tested at fifty-nine percent on
next day, with no bleeding. On June 8, 2013, Plaintiff had his first post-
surgery bowel movements, causing him to begin bleeding at the surgical site.
Plaintiff went to the emergency room at Moses Taylor, where Dr. Manoj Das,
a first-year resident, erroneously informed Plaintiff that the hospital had no
Factor VIII products available. In actuality, what Moses Taylor lacked was the
Advate brand of Factor VIII, but had available in its pharmacy over 6,000 units
of Helixate, a comparable Factor VIII product, and Humate-P, another product
used to treat a Factor VIII deficiency. Plaintiff had an infusion of Advate at
Moses Taylor from his home supply, bringing his Factor VIII level up to 135
percent. However, rather than remain there to investigate the cause of the
bleeding, Plaintiff chose to check himself out against medical advice so he
could seek treatment at Hershey.
Plaintiff collapsed shortly after returning home and was taken back to
Moses Taylor by ambulance. As Plaintiff steadfastly expressed his desire to
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be treated at Hershey, arrangements were made to fly Plaintiff there via
helicopter after he was stabilized through, inter alia, the administration of
4,000 units of Helixate from the Moses Taylor pharmacy. When his blood was
first tested upon arrival at Hershey, Plaintiff’s Factor VIII level was at 282
percent, yet his bleeding continued. More Factor VIII product was
administered to bring his level to 524 percent, but his bleeding did not stop.
After Plaintiff had additional sutures placed at the surgical site and the affected
area was packed, the bleeding ceased. Plaintiff developed pneumonia at
Hershey and was hospitalized for two weeks. He thereafter complained of
experiencing weakness and incontinence.
Plaintiff sued Dr. Heim, Moses Taylor, and their related entities for
malpractice.1 Specifically, Plaintiff claimed that “due to various ‘lack of
communication’ issues, impermissible and improper record keeping and
medical chart practices, and other deviations from accepted standards of
care,” Moses Taylor did not, or believed that they did not, have sufficient
Factor VIII product to prevent and treat his bleeding, and Dr. Heim failed to
ensure that the hospital would have an adequate supply. See Trial Court
Opinion, 10/13/21, at 3. Plaintiff sought both compensatory and punitive
damages.
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1 Plaintiff also sued Dr. Bannon, his surgeon, but the claims against him were
dismissed before trial and are not at issue in this appeal.
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Discovery produced evidence that Moses Taylor’s recordkeeping was
imperfect. For example, the records from Plaintiff’s emergency visit with
Dr. Das repeatedly referenced an attending physician who was on vacation,
notes concerning Moses Taylor’s final administration of Factor VIII product to
Plaintiff indicated that the infusion was given after his helicopter had left for
Hershey, and some documents were not signed until months after they were
created. Plaintiff also proffered expert reports from a bevy of different
experts, including a pharmacist, a colorectal surgeon, and an emergency
department doctor, who expressed opinions regarding various actors’
deviations from the standard of care in relation to Moses Taylor’s
recordkeeping and the availability of Factor VIII product for Plaintiff at Moses
Taylor. Defendants filed motions in limine to exclude all or part of these
opinions, largely based upon the witnesses’ lack of expertise in the specific
areas upon which they opined. The trial court granted several motions in part,
limiting the scope of testimony several witnesses could offer at trial.
At the conclusion of an eight-day trial, the jury returned a verdict in
favor of Defendants, finding no negligence. Following the denial of his motion
for post-trial relief, judgment was entered on the verdict and Plaintiff filed a
timely notice of appeal to this Court. Thereafter, both Plaintiff and the trial
court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
Plaintiff presents the following questions for our determination, which
we have re-ordered for ease of disposition:
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1. Whether the trial court erred in not granting Plaintiff’s
motion for post-trial relief where the verdict was against the
weight of the evidence as: (i) Dr. Das whom [sic] saw [Plaintiff]
when [he] presented testified there was no Factor VIII available
for [Plaintiff]; and (ii) Plaintiff’s experts testified that Defendants’
actions/inactions were not only negligent, but egregious and a
severe breach from the standard [of care]?
2. Whether the trial court erred and/or abused its discretion in
limiting the testimony/opinions of Plaintiffs’ experts at trial based
on the qualifications and experience of Plaintiff’s experts, and the
trial court’s application/interpretation of the MCARE Act[, 40 P.S.
§§ 1303.101-1303.910,] and Thompson v. Nason Hosp., 591
A.2d 703 (Pa. 1991)?
Plaintiff’s brief at 4 (cleaned up).
We begin with Plaintiff’s claim that he is entitled to a new trial because
the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. The following legal
standards apply to our review of this claim:
In evaluating a claim that a verdict is against the weight of the
evidence, Pennsylvania courts employ a shocks-the-conscience
test. The trial court should grant a new trial only in truly
extraordinary circumstances, i.e., when the jury’s verdict is so
contrary to the evidence as to shock one’s sense of justice and the
award of a new trial is imperative so that right may be given
another opportunity to prevail.
The trial court’s authority to override a jury verdict on
weight-of-the-evidence grounds is so narrowly circumscribed
because questions of weight and credibility are for the factfinder.
A trial judge cannot grant a new trial because of a mere conflict
in testimony or because the trial judge on the same facts would
have arrived at a different conclusion. The court nonetheless has
some discretion to grant a new trial where it concludes the verdict
is against the weight of the evidence. However, determining
whether the verdict was objectively shocking is within the sole
discretion of the trial court, and rightly so, as it has had a first-
hand view of the evidence.
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In contrast, our review is necessarily second-hand. As a
result, a party who failed to convince the trial judge that the
verdict was against the weight of the evidence may obtain relief
on appeal only if it shows that the trial court acted capriciously or
palpably abused its discretion.
Kimble v. Laser Spine Inst., LLC, 264 A.3d 782, 800 (Pa.Super. 2021)
(cleaned up).
The trial court rejected Plaintiff’s weight-of-the-evidence arguments,
explaining as follows:
Plaintiff points to the testimony of Dr. Manoj Das. Dr. Das was a
resident in the Moses Taylor emergency department when Plaintiff
presented with bleeding the day after his surgery. There seems
[to be] little dispute that Dr. Das testified both in his deposition
and at trial that he was told that the Moses Taylor Pharmacy did
not have Factor [VIII], and that he related that to Plaintiff and his
wife. Plaintiff’s analysis, however, stops there. Had the jury’s
consideration of evidence stopped at that point, Plaintiff’s
argument would be meritorious. However, there was evidence
submitted by the Defendants contradicting Das’[s] belief. Indeed,
nurse Anne Marie Paris testified that she administered Factor
[VIII] to Plaintiff in Moses Taylor Hospital prior to his transfer to
Hershey Medical Center. Other witnesses testified contrary to Dr.
Das’[s] belief. Nurse Arthur Price testified that he never heard
anyone relate to him that there was no Factor [VIII] at the
hospital.
Next, Plaintiff argues that the trial testimony of Dr. [Evadine
G.] Marcolini “confirms that the actions/inactions of defendant
Moses Taylor Hospital, and their (sic) agents were not only
negligent but severely/egregiously below the standard of care.”
Plaintiff goes on to identify various parts of Dr. Marcolini’s
testimony where she opined that the actions in Moses Taylor’s
emergency department deviated from the standard of care. She
criticized the medical records system in place, she criticized and
expressed concerns regarding the resident physicians and how
they interacted with attending physicians at the time. Much was
made of the fact that although the chart reflected an attending
physician identified as Dr. Deck, Dr. Deck testified that he never
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saw Plaintiff and that he was not involved in the decision to
transfer Plaintiff to Hershey Medical Center.
Plaintiff next argues that the trial testimony of his expert,
Dr. Henry Rinder, highlighted communication issues and issues
with the policies and procedures of Hematology & Oncology
Associates, as well as Dr. Heim, characterizing their
actions/inactions as not only negligent but also
severely/egregiously below the standard of care. In Dr. Rinder’s
opinion, there were “either miscommunications or failures to
communicate that severely affected [Plaintiff’s] medical
condition.” Like the testimony of Dr. Marcolini, the testimony of
Dr. Rinder was also based on the premise that, according to
Plaintiff, “both [sic] Dr. Heim, Hematology & Oncology Associates,
and Moses Taylor Hospital had a duty to provide competent
medical care to [Plaintiff] which included having an adequate
amount of Factor [VIII] to treat him should any complications, or
bleeding, arise.”
Plaintiff also argues that the testimony he presented from
Julio Viola, M.S., Pharm.D., further confirms that the
actions/inactions of the Defendants and their agents were not only
negligent but severely/egregiously below the standard of care.
Plaintiff presented the testimony of Mr. Viola, an accomplished
pharmacist with a bachelor’s degree in pharmacy, a master’s
degree in clinical pharmacy, and a doctorate in pharmacy. For the
last six years, he has been a self-described successful
management executive, managing and developing centralized
pharmacy services. . . .
The premise of Plaintiff’s argument that the verdict was
against the weight of the evidence is that there was insufficient
Factor [VIII] available at Moses Taylor when Plaintiff returned to
the emergency room following his discharge from surgery.
Plaintiff fails, indeed, refuses, to acknowledge the evidence in the
record contradicting his premise. Indeed, Plaintiff’s own expert,
Mr. Viola, testified that the hospital did in fact have Factor [VIII]
on hand.
Dr. Marcolini initially testified that Plaintiff had not received
Factor [VIII] at Moses Taylor. However, Dr. Marcolini also testified
that Mr. Viola, the pharmacist, was in a better position to
determine whether Plaintiff had in fact received Factor [VIII] while
at Moses Taylor. Dr. Marcolini was present and observed Mr.
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Viola’s testimony. Dr. Marcolini acknowledged that her opinion
about whether or not Plaintiff received Factor [VIII] at Moses
Taylor was “completely opposite” to that of Mr. Viola. In fact, Dr.
Marcolini could not say whether she was correct or Mr. Viola was
correct on the issue of whether Plaintiff received Factor [VIII] at
Moses Taylor.
To be sure, the testimony presented by Plaintiff pointed out
some inconsistencies in charting and recordkeeping which
certainly, it could be argued, left something to be desired. At the
end of the day, however, this case turned on the issue of whether
Moses Taylor maintained a sufficient supply of Factor [VIII] and
whether [Plaintiff] was administered Factor [VIII] prior to his
transfer to Hershey Medical Center. Even Plaintiff’s expert, Dr.
Henry Rinder, testified that Plaintiff received Factor [VIII] at
Moses Taylor and that it was a different brand of Factor [VIII] from
Plaintiff’s preferred brand. Thus, the lion’s share of evidence
presented by the Plaintiff and by the Defendants established that
Plaintiff received Factor [VIII] from Moses Taylor while he was at
Moses Taylor. In short, the jury did exactly what a jury should
do. It considered all the evidence.
Trial Court Opinion, 10/13/21, at 24-28 (cleaned up, emphasis in original).
In arguing for reversal, Plaintiff points to the evidence that was
favorable to his position and suggests that it was entitled to the greater
weight. See Plaintiff’s brief at 24-32. He does not explain how the trial court
abused its discretion in reaching its conclusion that the jury’s verdict was not
conscience-shocking. As such, he has failed to establish his entitlement to
relief from this Court on his weight claim. See Kimble, supra at 800 (“[A]
party who failed to convince the trial judge that the verdict was against the
weight of the evidence may obtain relief on appeal only if it shows that the
trial court acted capriciously or palpably abused its discretion.”).
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With his remaining issues, Plaintiff challenges rulings of the trial court
regarding the admissibility of expert testimony from several witnesses. We
initially observe that “whether a witness has been properly qualified to give
expert witness testimony is vested in the discretion of the trial court.” Frey
v. Potorski, 145 A.3d 1171, 1176 (Pa.Super. 2016) (cleaned up). “An abuse
of discretion may not be found merely because an appellate court might have
reached a different conclusion, but requires a manifest unreasonableness, or
partiality, prejudice, bias, or ill-will, or such lack of support so as to be clearly
erroneous.” E. Steel Constructors, Inc. v. Int’l Fid. Ins. Co., 282 A.3d
827, 844 (Pa.Super. 2022) (cleaned up). Further, “to constitute reversible
error, an evidentiary ruling must not only be erroneous, but also harmful or
prejudicial to the complaining party.” Id. (cleaned up).
Plaintiff first assails the trial court’s refusal to allow Dr. Marcolini to offer
an opinion as to Defendants’ corporate negligence.2 We are unable to discern
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2 “Corporate negligence is a doctrine under which the hospital is liable if it fails
to uphold the proper standard of care owed the patient, which is to ensure the
patient’s safety and well-being while at the hospital.” Thompson v. Nason
Hosp., 591 A.2d 703, 707 (Pa. 1991). “This theory of liability creates a
nondelegable duty which the hospital owes directly to a patient.” Id. In order
to prove a hospital’s corporate negligence, a plaintiff must establish that: (1)
the hospital deviated from the standard of care; (2) the hospital had actual or
constructive notice of the conditions which caused the harm; and (3) the
hospital’s deviation was a substantial factor in bringing about the plaintiff’s
harm. See Seels v. Tenet Health Sys. Hahnemann, LLC, 167 A.3d 190,
205 (Pa.Super. 2017). “Unless a hospital’s negligence is obvious, an expert
witness is required to establish two of the three prongs: that the hospital
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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from Plaintiff’s brief what type of corporate negligence he sought to allege,3
or what opinions concerning corporate negligence that Dr. Marcolini, an
accomplished emergency department doctor, sought to testify about but was
precluded from offering. Plaintiff merely lists a portion of Dr. Marcolini’s
curriculum vitae and complains that, “[d]espite all of the above, and as
outlined more fully in the trial transcript, Dr. Marcolini was precluded from
giving an opinion on corporate negligence, recklessness, and other topics.”
Plaintiff’s brief at 17.
Next, Plaintiff asserts that the trial court should have allowed Dr. Rinder,
his hematologist expert, to opine that Moses Taylor recklessly deviated from
the standard of care applicable to a hospital pharmacy. He maintains that
Dr. Rinder was merely going to corroborate the opinion of Plaintiff’s pharmacy
expert, Dr. Viola, but “from a hematology perspective.” Id. at 20.
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deviated from the standard of care and that the deviation was a substantial
factor in bringing about the harm.” Id.
3There are four general areas comprising a hospital’s overall obligation to its
patients:
(1) a duty to use reasonable care in the maintenance of safe and
adequate facilities and equipment; (2) a duty to select and retain
only competent physicians; (3) a duty to oversee all persons who
practice medicine within its walls as to patient care; and (4) a duty
to formulate, adopt and enforce adequate rules and policies to
ensure quality care for the patients.
Thompson v. Nason Hosp., 591 A.2d 703, 707 (Pa. 1991) (cleaned up).
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Finally, Plaintiff argues that the trial court committed reversible error
based upon the trial court limiting the testimony of Dr. David Stewart, the
surgeon who operated on Plaintiff at Hershey. Specifically, Plaintiff contends
that Dr. Stewart, who was offered by Plaintiff both as a fact witness and as an
expert in colorectal surgery, was erroneously precluded from testifying as to
Plaintiff’s hearsay statement that a hematologist at Hershey told him that
Moses Taylor mismanaged his Factor VIII levels. Also, Plaintiff asserts that
Dr. Stewart should have been permitted to offer an opinion as to the
permanency of Plaintiff’s condition and future medical expenses, as well as to
Plaintiff’s economic damages. Id. at 21.
Following a review of the trial court’s opinion, the parties’ briefs, and
the pertinent portions of the certified record, we are unconvinced that the trial
court abused its discretion in making its evidentiary rulings. See Trial Court
Opinion, 10/13/21, at 12-14 (explaining that Dr. Marcolini’s experience in the
emergency department did not qualify her as an expert on the corporate
standard of care for hospitals and that she failed to establish a basis for her
contention that the Moses Taylor emergency physicians acted recklessly in
this case); id. at 14-18 (indicating that Dr. Rinder’s experience as a
hematologist did not qualify him to opine about the standard of care for
pharmacists, and that Dr. Rinder in his report did not “ever express what the
applicable standard of care is,” but “merely opine[d] that the actions of the
Defendants deviated from whatever it is” (emphasis omitted)); id. at 19-22
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(explaining the exclusion of inadmissible hearsay and Dr. Stewart’s lack of
qualifications as a colorectal surgeon to opine about the standard of care for
hematologists or the extent of Plaintiff’s economic damages).
Moreover, as Dr. Heim aptly observes, even if the trial court did
improperly exclude one or all of the experts’ proffered opinions, “it likely would
not have made any difference in the jury’s verdict[.]” Dr. Heim’s brief at 13.
It is plain that Plaintiff’s whole case rested upon the foundation that Moses
Taylor either did not have, or believed that it lacked, a supply of Factor VIII
to administer to Plaintiff when he presented to the emergency department two
days after the surgery, and that this failure to adequately prepare for the
possibility that Plaintiff might need it following his hemorrhoidectomy was a
deviation from the standard of care.
However, the documentary evidence and the testimony of the fact and
expert witnesses, offered both by Defendants and by Plaintiff, undercut
Plaintiff’s foundational premise. First, the plan all along had been for Plaintiff
to maintain the necessary pre- and post-surgery supply of Factor VIII product
at his home because he was having out-patient surgery. See N.T. Trial,
6/23/21, at 74-75 (Dr. Bannon). With an outpatient pharmacy having
supplied the week-long supply of the product, Moses Taylor did not require
more than its usual emergency supply in order to be adequately prepared for
Plaintiff’s procedure. Id. at 107-09 (Dr. Bannon). See also N.T. Trial,
6/28/21, at 46-47 (Moses Taylor’s pharmacist indicating that Dr. Heim’s pre-
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operation order indicated that Plaintiff would use his own supply of Factor VIII
product so the hospital “would not have to go get anything”).
Second, Moses Taylor had a more-then-adequate supply of Factor VIII
product to administer to Plaintiff when he presented to the emergency
department two days later after experiencing a common complication of the
surgery for all patients, namely, bleeding from the surgical site. See N.T.
Trial, 6/23/21, at 119 (Dr. Bannon); N.T. Trial, 6/25/21, at 173
(Dr. Stephen Ferzoco, Defendants’ general surgeon expert). Even Plaintiff’s
experts Mr. Viola and Dr. Rinder acknowledged that Moses Taylor had over
6,000 units of Helixate in the pharmacy on June 8, 2013, and administered
4,000 units of it to Plaintiff before he left for Hershey. See N.T. Trial, 6/23/21,
at 92 (Mr. Viola); N.T. Trial, 6/28/21, at 76-77 (Dr. Rinder). While Plaintiff
attempted to argue that Moses Taylor’s records concerning the presence and
administration of the Factor VIII product may have been invalid, the fact that
Plaintiff’s Factor VIII level increased from 135 percent in his last test at
Moses Taylor to 282 percent in the first test at Hershey confirms that he
received an infusion at Moses Taylor.
Finally, the fact that Plaintiff continued to bleed from the surgical site
for days despite his Factor VIII level being continually maintained at more
than 100 percent eliminated a Factor VIII deficiency as the cause of his
bleeding. See N.T. Trial, 6/25/21, at 171-74 (Dr. Ferzoco opining that “Factor
VIII had no role in the bleed or the subsequent surgery at Hershey”); N.T.
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Trial, 6/23/21, at 118-19 (Dr. Bannon indicating that, with Plaintiff’s Factor
VIII at 135 percent, “rather than an air ambulance, he needed a surgeon . . .
because hemorrhoidal bleeding can occur or anal rectal bleeding can occur
after hemorrhoidal surgery regardless if they are hemophiliac or not”).
Since the evidence accepted by the jury overwhelmingly suggested that
any faults in Moses Taylor’s recordkeeping or resident supervision or internal
communications did not cause Plaintiff to go without Factor VIII product, the
excluded evidence from Drs. Marcolini and Rinder about those faults was not
likely to have changed the verdict. Since the jury found no negligence on the
part of Defendants and likely would have reached the same conclusion had
they heard the additional opinions of Drs. Marcolini and Rinder, Dr. Stewart’s
opinions about Plaintiff’s damages would never have been considered by the
jury. Since the verdict was likely to be the same even if the trial court
erroneously excluded the testimony of these witnesses, any arguable error did
not rise to the level of reversible error. See E. Steel Constructors, supra
at 844 (“[T]o constitute reversible error, an evidentiary ruling must not only
be erroneous, but also harmful or prejudicial to the complaining party.”
(cleaned up)).
Therefore, because Plaintiff failed to establish that the trial court
committed an error of law or abuse of discretion warranting relief from this
Court, we affirm the judgment entered on the jury’s defense verdict.
Judgment affirmed.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 12/23/2022
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