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Harrison v. United States

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 2002-04-01
Citations: 284 F.3d 293
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            United States Court of Appeals
                       For the First Circuit


No. 01-1373

               MELVIN D. HARRISON, PPA KENYEDA TAFT,
                       Plaintiff, Appellant,

                                 v.

                     UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
                        Defendant, Appellee.



            APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

            [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]



                               Before

                    Torruella, Lynch and Lipez,
                          Circuit Judges.



     Adam   R. Satin, with whom Andrew C. Meyer, Jr., William J.
Thompson,   and Lubin & Meyer, P.C., were on brief, for appellant.
     Mary   Elizabeth Carmody, Assistant U.S. Attorney, with whom
James B.    Farmer, United States Attorney, were on brief, for
appellee.



                           April 1, 2002
            TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. This is an appeal from a bench

trial in a medical malpractice case brought under the Federal Tort

Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b).           Kenyeda Taft, on behalf of her

minor son, Melvin Harrison, sued Dr. Louis Laz, her obstetrician

and a federal employee, for injuries allegedly sustained by Melvin

during his birth.     The complaint set forth two grounds for finding

negligence: failure to meet the standard of care and lack of

informed consent.      The district court, after a five-day trial,

concluded that Dr. Laz was not negligent under either theory and

concomitantly entered judgment for the defendant of record, the
United States.    Plaintiff-appellant, Melvin Harrison, appeals the

judgment on the informed consent claim.         For the reasons discussed
below, we vacate the judgment and remand to the district court
judge.

                                     I.

            In 1996, Kenyeda Taft ("Ms. Taft") was pregnant with

Melvin    Harrison,   her   second   child.     In   March   of   that   year,
Ms. Taft, almost four months pregnant, began her prenatal care at
the Lynn Community Health Center ("Lynn CHC") with an initial
screening visit conducted by a nurse practitioner.                During this

visit, Ms. Taft provided a medical history, including the fact that

her first child, due to her large size of 9 pounds and 3 ounces,

suffered an injury during vaginal birth that resulted in Erb's

Palsy.1

1
    Erb's Palsy is a brachial plexus injury, which results in
decreased mobility and functionality of the affected upper

                                     -2-
             Ms. Taft first met with Dr. Louis Laz ("Dr. Laz"), a

Board-certified obstetrician and gynecologist, at the Lynn CHC on

April 29, 1996.      Ms. Taft informed Dr. Laz that her first child
suffers from Erb's Palsy as a result of a shoulder dystocia,2 due
to the baby's large size.         At the time, Dr. Laz's general practice

with patients who had had a prior large baby was to determine the
estimated fetal weight by ultrasound at about 37 weeks' gestation.

If the estimated weight was 4500 grams or more, Dr. Laz would offer

the patient an elective Cesarean section ("C-section").                If the

estimated weight was under this threshold, Dr. Laz would recommend

inducing labor at 37 or 38 weeks' gestation.

             In   addition   to   her    previous   large   child,   Ms.   Taft

presented with other risk factors that increased the likelihood
that her second baby would also be large, and therefore more likely

to suffer complications, such as a shoulder dystocia or brachial

plexus injury, during a vaginal birth: she was pregnant with her
second child, and second children are usually larger than first;

the fetus was male, and males are generally larger; Ms. Taft was an

obese woman at the time of her pregnancy; Ms. Taft experienced

excessive weight gain during the pregnancy; and her prior delivery

resulted in an Erb's Palsy injury.            While Dr. Laz recognized these




extremity.
2
   Shoulder dystocia is a complication that can occur during a
vaginal birth where the fetus' shoulders impede the fetus' passage
through the birth canal after the head has been delivered.
Shoulder dystocia can cause Erb's Palsy, although Erb's Palsy can
also occur spontaneously.

                                        -3-
risk factors, he considered them to be normal birth risks and

therefore did not discuss them with Ms. Taft.

           After     meeting     with    Ms.    Taft,     Dr.     Laz    obtained     the
delivery record for Ms. Taft's first child, Keneisha Taft, from

Salem Hospital.           At trial, Dr. Laz testified that it was his

general practice to request the hospital delivery notes for any
patient who had a history of delivery complications.                     The delivery

record of Dr. Orkin, the treating obstetrician, indicated that

Keneisha's birth occurred "without any complications."                           Dr. Laz,

considering the obstetrician's delivery notes to be the "gold

standard of what happened at that delivery," concluded that Ms.

Taft did not experience a shoulder dystocia during her first birth.

Therefore,     Dr.   Laz     believed    that      the    Erb's    Palsy     developed
spontaneously, rather than as a result of a shoulder dystocia.

Although Dr. Laz testified that he would have discussed an elective

C-section with a patient where there was documented evidence of a
prior shoulder dystocia resulting in an injury, he did not do so in

this   case,      since    the   delivery      notes     did    not     document     such

complication.

             On    September     12,    1996,      at   approximately        37    weeks'

gestation, in accordance with Dr. Laz's general practice, Ms. Taft

had an ultrasound at Union Hospital to estimate the fetal weight.

The ultrasound report estimated the fetal weight to be 3676 grams

(a little over 8 pounds).          Because the estimated weight was under

the 4500     grams    threshold,       Dr.   Laz    determined        that   a    vaginal

delivery, as opposed to a C-section, was the appropriate mode of


                                         -4-
childbirth. Dr. Laz recommended to Ms. Taft that labor be induced,

but he did not discuss with her either the risks of vaginal birth

or the possibility of a C-section.
           On    September        17,    1996,    Ms.    Taft,      at   37.5   weeks'

gestation, was admitted to Beverly Hospital for induction of labor.

During labor, the baby's head crowned, but the shoulders did not
deliver.   Dr. Laz and the delivery team followed standard steps to

attempt to resolve the shoulder dystocia.                 After these steps were

unsuccessful, Dr. Laz delivered the posterior (right) arm, which

then allowed delivery of the baby at 12:46 a.m. on September 18.

The baby, Melvin Harrison, weighed 4508 grams (9 pounds and 15

ounces) at birth and had a weakness of the right arm and hand,

which was subsequently diagnosed as Erb's Palsy.
           The plaintiff filed suit against Dr. Laz for medical

malpractice in Essex County Superior Court. However, since Dr. Laz

was a federal employee at the time he treated Ms. Taft, the action
was removed to the United States District Court for the District of

Massachusetts,        and   the   United    States      was   substituted       as   the

defendant.      The plaintiff's suit was premised on two grounds of

negligence: (1) Dr. Laz's failure to meet the standard of care by

not originally offering an elective C-section and by not performing

a C-section during labor based on fetal heart monitorings; and (2)

Dr. Laz's failure to obtain Ms. Taft's informed consent by not

discussing      the    risks      of    vaginal   birth       and   disclosing       the

alternative of a C-section.             A bench trial began on December 18,

2000.   At the close of the plaintiff's case, the district court


                                          -5-
granted the United States' motion for judgment as a matter of law

on the question of Dr. Laz's compliance with the standard of care

during labor.
            At the conclusion of the trial, the district court

determined that Dr. Laz did not fail to obtain the patient's

informed consent and entered judgment for the defendant. The court
found that, although the risks of vaginal birth for the baby were

"something more than negligible," when these risks were balanced

against the risks to the mother from a C-section, "a cesarean

section to avoid brachial plexus injury was not a reasonable

medical judgment."     Therefore, even though the court found that

Ms. Taft would have opted for a C-section if informed of the

possibility,    the court concluded that "Dr. Laz was under no duty
to afford [Ms. Taft] the opportunity to have a cesarean section .

. . ."

            The plaintiff appeals the court's judgment only on the
informed    consent   claim,   arguing   that   Dr.   Laz,   because   such

information was material to her decision to deliver vaginally, did

have a duty to inform Ms. Taft of both the risks of vaginal birth

and the availability of a C-section as an alternative method of

childbirth.

                                   II.

            We review a district court's factual findings for clear

error.     See Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a); La Esperanza de P.R., Inc. v.

Pérez y Cía. de P.R., Inc., 124 F.3d 10, 15 (1st Cir. 1997).           "We

deem a finding to be clearly erroneous only when, after reviewing

                                   -6-
the   entire   record,   we   are    left   with   the   definite    and   firm

conviction that a mistake has been committed."            La Esperanza, 124

F.3d at 15 (internal quotation marks omitted).                 Questions of
negligence decided in a bench trial are treated as questions of

fact, or as mixed questions of fact and law, and are therefore

evaluated under this deferential standard.           See id. at 15-16.

            However, when the district court's factual findings are

premised on an incorrect interpretation of the relevant legal

principles, we do not owe the court the same level of deference.

See United States v. 15 Bosworth St., 236 F.3d 50, 54 (1st Cir.

2001); Vinick v. United States, 205 F.3d 1, 6-7 (1st Cir. 2000).

"Instead, we treat the trial court's conclusion as a question of

law," Vinick, 205 F.3d at 7, and review it de novo.             15 Bosworth

St., 236 F.3d at 53.

                                     III.

            Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b),
state law is "the source of substantive liability."            Fed. Deposit

Ins. Corp. v. Meyer, 510 U.S. 471, 477-78 (1994).           To recover under
a theory of informed consent in Massachusetts, a patient must prove
that the physician has a duty to disclose certain information and

that a breach of that duty caused the patient's injury.             See Halley

v. Birbiglia, 458 N.E.2d 710, 715 (Mass. 1983).              To establish a
breach of the physician's duty of disclosure, the plaintiff must

establish      that:   (1)    a     sufficiently    close    doctor-patient
relationship exists; (2) the doctor knows or should know of the

information to be disclosed; (3) the information is such that the

                                      -7-
doctor should reasonably recognize that it is material to the

patient's decision; and (4) the doctor fails to disclose this

information.    See id.   In this case, only the materiality of the
information to the patient is contested.3
            If a duty exists, a physician must disclose "sufficient

information to enable the patient to make an informed judgment
whether to give or withhold consent to a medical or surgical

procedure." Harnish v. Children's Hosp. Med. Ctr., 439 N.E.2d 240,

242   (Mass.   1982).     Failure    to   do   so   constitutes   medical

malpractice.   See id.

            There are two primary standards for determining the

requisite scope of the physician's disclosure in informed consent

cases: "customary practice" and "materiality."        See id. at 243-44;
Canterbury v. Spence, 464 F.2d 772, 786-87 (D.C. Cir. 1972).         Many

jurisdictions require a physician to disclose whatever information

a reasonable physician in similar circumstances would customarily
disclose.   See Harnish, 439 N.E.2d at 243; Canterbury, 464 F.2d at

786 & n.70.      The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, however, has

rejected the customary practice standard as providing insufficient

protection for the patient's autonomy, which is the very purpose of

disclosure.4    See Harnish, 439 N.E.2d at 243-44; Precourt v.

3
   Appellee, in its brief, states that the doctor's knowledge of
the information is also disputed. However, the doctor's knowledge
is not at issue given his and defense counsel's admission at trial
that he was aware of Ms. Taft's risk factors for delivering a large
child.
4
  The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts has, in prior cases,
cited Canterbury with approval for its explanation rejecting the
customary practice standard:

                                    -8-
Frederick, 481 N.E.2d 1144, 1149 (Mass. 1985) (balancing patient's

right   to   self-determination     and    desire   to   not    unduly   burden

practice of medicine).         Instead, Massachusetts has adopted the
"materiality"     standard,     requiring    the    physician    to   disclose

"information he should reasonably recognize is material to the

[patient's] decision."        Harnish, 439 N.E.2d at 243.

             "'Materiality may be said to be the significance a

reasonable person, in what the physician knows or should know is

his patient's position, would attach to the disclosed risk or risks

in deciding whether to submit or not to submit to surgery or

treatment.'" Id. at 243 (quoting Wilkinson v. Vesey, 295 A.2d 676

(R.I. 1972)).    Material information "may include the nature of the

patient's condition, the nature and probability of risks involved,
the benefits to be reasonably expected, . . . the likely result of


             The decision to unveil the patient's condition
             and the chances as to remediation, as we shall
             see, is ofttimes a non-medical judgment and,
             if so, is a decision outside the ambit of the
             special [medical] standard. Where that is the
             situation,    professional    custom    hardly
             furnishes the legal criterion for measuring
             the physician's responsibility to reasonably
             inform his patient of the options and the
             hazards as to treatment.
                                 . . . .
                  . . . Any definition of scope [of
             disclosure] in terms purely of a professional
             standard is at odds with the patient's
             prerogative to decide on projected therapy
             himself. That prerogative, we have said, is
             at the very foundation of the duty to
             disclose, and both the patient's right to know
             and the physician's correlative obligation to
             tell him are diluted to the extent that its
             compass is dictated by the medical profession.

464 F.2d 785-86.

                                     -9-
no treatment, and the available alternatives, including their risks

and benefits."     Id.

             Whether a risk of injury is material to a patient depends
upon   the   severity    of   the   potential   injury    as   well   as   the

probability of its occurrence.        See Precourt, 481 N.E.2d at 1148.

If the likelihood of an injury occurring is negligible, then the
risk is not considered material, and the risk is insufficient to

trigger the physician's duty to disclose.5        See Feeley v. Baer, 679

N.E.2d 180, 182 (Mass. 1997) (holding that physician had no duty to

disclose risk of serious infection because plaintiffs failed to

prove that there was "more than a negligible risk"); Precourt, 481

N.E.2d at 1148 (noting that a risk of injury "cannot be considered

a material factor" if the probability of its occurrence "is so
small as to be practically nonexistent").                Similarly, if the

severity of the potential injury is "very minor,"               the risk is

immaterial and need not be disclosed. Precourt, 481 N.E.2d at 1149

(quoting LaCaze v. Collier, 434 So.2d 1039, 1046 (La. 1983))

(internal quotation marks omitted).

             In the case at hand, the plaintiff, citing to Feeley,

argues that any risk that is more than negligible automatically

qualifies as a material factor that must be disclosed. See Feeley,

679 N.E.2d at 182 (stating that "[t]he risk that must exist in

order to invoke informed consent principles in this case is a more

5
    We note, however, that there is no "magic number" for
determining whether a probability of injury is sufficient to make
the risk material. See Canterbury, 464 F.2d at 788 & n.86 (citing
cases, among which one percent chance of loss of hearing was
material but 1.5 percent chance of loss of eye was not material).

                                     -10-
than negligible risk . . . ."). The defendant, however, challenges

the   plaintiff's   understanding   of   the   Commonwealth's   informed

consent law.    The defendant argues that Feeley and the other
Massachusetts informed consent cases indicate that materiality

requires more than just non-negligibility.       The defendant contends

that Feeley stands for the proposition that if a plaintiff can show

evidence of only a negligible risk, then there is no duty to

disclose, because such a risk is, as a matter of law, not material.

See id., 679 N.E.2d at 182 (holding that there was no duty to

disclose because plaintiff failed to show "more than a negligible

risk").

           The district court seemingly adopted the plaintiff's

interpretation of the law by stating that "the doctor must inform
the patient where there exists more than a negligible risk of one

or more serious consequences from the course of treatment that is

being undertaken by the doctor."     After hearing the evidence, the
court found that Dr. Laz was aware of the risk factors for a birth

injury and that these risk factors were "something more than

negligible."   However, the court then weighed the risks to the

mother of a C-section, which the court found to be "more than

normally associated with the birth of a child," against the risks

to the child of a vaginal birth and found "that Dr. Laz was under

no duty to afford [Ms. Taft] the opportunity to have a cesarean

section and on the particular circumstances of this case a cesarean

section to avoid brachial plexus injury was not a reasonable

medical judgment."


                                -11-
            We    believe       that    the     district     court   erred   in     its

interpretation of Massachusetts law, thereby triggering de novo

review of its finding that Dr. Laz owed no duty to disclose the
risks and alternative methods of childbirth.                  See 15 Bosworth St.,

236 F.3d at 54; Vinick, 205 F.3d at 6-7.                      As discussed above,

Harnish and Precourt establish materiality as the standard for
determining      whether    a    physician       has    an   affirmative     duty    to

disclose.    See Harnish, 439 N.E.2d at 243 (noting duty to disclose

material information, but that this does not require the disclosure

of all risks); Precourt, 481 N.E.2d at 1148-49 (recognizing duty to

disclose material information, which does not include "remote

risks").    However, Precourt reserved the issue of how to determine

when a risk need not be disclosed, except for indicating there is
no duty to disclose negligible risks:

            The development of our law concerning the
            distinction between risks that as a matter of
            law may be considered remote, and those that
            may be left to the determination of a fact
            finder, must await future cases. It is clear,
            however, that when, as in this case, the
            evidence does not permit the jury to draw an
            inference   that    the   physician  knew  or
            reasonably   should    have  known  that  the
            probability that a particular risk would
            materialize was other than negligible, the
            evidence is insufficient to warrant a finding
            that the physician violated his duty of
            disclosure.

481 N.E.2d at 1149-50.

            Feeley   did    not        change    this   materiality    approach      to

informed consent. In Feeley, a mother sued for medical malpractice

when her child died from streptococcus pneumonia five days after

birth.      See 679 N.E.2d at 181.                The mother alleged that the

                                          -12-
treating physician, who opted for spontaneous labor (as opposed to

inducing labor) after her water broke, failed to disclose any risk

of infection from this procedure.         See id.   The Supreme Judicial
Court of Massachusetts, citing Harnish and Precourt, undertook a

materiality analysis and concluded that "[t]he evidence would not

permit a finding that the risk to the child of serious infection
was more than negligible."       679 N.E.2d at 181.    Thus, because the

severity of the potential injury was minimal, the court concluded

that the information was not material, and the doctor, therefore,

had no duty to disclose.       See id. at 181-82.

            The plaintiffs in Feeley, similar to the plaintiff in

this case, argued that there was more than a negligible risk and,

as a result, that risk had to be disclosed.            See id.      On the
particular facts, however, the Feeley court determined that the

risk was not more than negligible.          See id. at 182.       Thus, the

court stated that "[t]he risk that must exist in order to invoke
informed consent principles in this case is a more than negligible

risk   of   one   or    more   infections    that   will   have     serious
consequences."    Id.    This context clarifies that the court was

merely negating any duty to disclose negligible risks.            The court

was not, as plaintiff argues, declaring an affirmative duty to

disclose any risk that is "more than negligible."             Thus, the

caselaw stands for the proposition that there is no duty to

disclose negligible risks, not that all non-negligible risks are

actionable if not revealed.




                                   -13-
             As a result, when the district court's analysis focused

on whether the risks were "more than negligible" rather than on

materiality,    the   district   court    applied   the    incorrect   legal
standard. Thus, we vacate the district court's judgment and remand

the case to the district court judge to assess the materiality of

the risks of vaginal birth to a reasonable person in Ms. Taft's
position.6

             Moreover,   the   court   made   a   second   legal   error   by

balancing the risks to the child from a vaginal birth against the

risks to the mother from a C-section and concluding that, because

the C-section presented a greater risk and was therefore not

medically recommended, the doctor had no duty to disclose the risks

of either procedure.     The materiality standard for disclosure does
not incorporate a balancing test by which the court can weigh the

risks of alternate treatments in deciding what information is

material to the patient.       An obstetrician in the delivery room is
in the unique situation of having to take into account the best

interests of two individuals, mother and child, in rendering

medical care.     Cf. Thomas v. Ellis, 106 N.E.2d 687, 689-90 (Mass.

1952) (holding that evidence could support finding of negligence

where doctor's external turning of fetus' position, causing a

6
   Materiality, since it is a factual determination, is properly
left for the district court to determine.        See Kissinger v.
Lofgren, 836 F.2d 678, 681 (1st Cir. 1988) (finding that once jury
had heard evidence on likelihood and severity of injury, it was
jury's responsibility to determine materiality); Harnish, 439
N.E.2d at 243; Canterbury, 464 F.2d at 787, 788, 794; McMahon v.
Finlayson, 632 N.E.2d 410, 413 (Mass. App. Ct. 1994) (stating that
materiality is issue for the fact finder once there has been expert
testimony regarding the likelihood of the injury).

                                   -14-
separated placenta, endangered health of both mother and child).

As such, in recommending a course of treatment to his patients, the

standard of care may require the doctor to consider the risks to
the mother, the risks to the child, and the appropriate balance of

these risks.

          However, the standard of care that governs a conventional
medical malpractice case differs from the materiality standard that

governs informed consent cases. See Steinhilber v. McCarthy, 26 F.

Supp. 2d 265, 272, 274-75 (D. Mass. 1998) (analyzing doctor's

negligence under the standard of care of an average member of his

profession but his duty to disclose under materiality of the

information).   Under informed consent law, if a risk to the baby or

a risk to the mother is material to the patient-mother's decision,
the doctor has a duty to disclose that risk.      See Harnish, 439

N.E.2d at 243 (asserting that physician has duty to disclose "all

significant information that the physician possesses" that is
material to the patient's decision).    Once these risks and other

material information have been disclosed, it is the patient's
prerogative to balance these risks and choose the form of treatment

that best meets that patient's needs.    See Harnish, 439 N.E.2d at

244 (declaring it is "the patient's right to decide for himself");

Canterbury, 464 F.2d at 781 ("To the physician, whose training

enables a self-satisfying evaluation, the answer may seem clear,

but it is the prerogative of the patient, not the physician, to




                                -15-
determine for himself the direction in which his interests seem to

lie.").7

           Thus, if, on remand, the district court finds that a risk
existed either as to the mother's health or as to the child's

health and that such information would have been material to a

reasonable patient in Ms. Taft's position, then Dr. Laz had a duty
to disclose that risk.      Moreover, because there are only two

methods of childbirth, if the district court finds the risk of

vaginal birth to be material to the patient, then Dr. Laz also had

a duty to present the alternative option of a C-section that   might

minimize such risk, regardless of his medical opinion on the proper

course of treatment.8




7
   The patient's opportunity to perform this balancing may assume
particular importance when the patient is a mother giving birth.
In such a case, the mother may purposefully discount risks to
herself in order to choose a treatment or procedure that will
present the least risk to her newborn child. While the treating
physician will undoubtedly feel the need to balance the welfare of
mother and child, the mother may consider her baby's health as the
paramount concern. See Statement by American Medical Association
on Forced Cesarean Section Court Case in Chicago, U.S. Newswire,
December 15, 1993, available at 1993 WL 7132850 (opining that in
cases where there is a "trade-off" between the health of the mother
and the child, "pregnant women routinely choose" and "should"
choose a cesarean section "for the benefit of their fetuses," even
though the risk to the woman is higher than from a vaginal
delivery).
8
   We emphasize that a duty to disclose, if it exists, does not
necessarily indicate any duty to offer or to perform a C-section if
the doctor does not consider one to be warranted in his medical
judgment. See Canterbury, 464 F.2d at 781 (separating physician's
duty "to treat [and diagnose] his patient skillfully" from his
"obligation to communicate specific information to the patient").
The duty to disclose is intended to be limited, so as not to unduly
burden the practice of medicine. See Harnish, 439 N.E.2d at 243.

                                -16-
                                      IV.

           The plaintiff also challenges on appeal the district

court's analysis of his claim for damages arising out of the

alleged malpractice.        The district court, in an effort to provide

a   "complete   record   of    factual      findings,"   analyzed   the   case

backwards, starting with an assessment of damages, then proceeding

to causation, negligence, and duty, in that order.               Although we

understand why the court engaged in this method of analysis, rather

than simply concluding its ruling after finding there was no duty

to disclose, such analysis resulted in extraneous factual findings.
Therefore, because the district court did not need to reach the

issue of damages, any findings regarding damages are dicta; the
district court did not actually award any damages.              As a result,
plaintiff's claims of error in computing the damages are premature.

See United States v. Ottati & Goss, Inc., 900 F.2d 429, 443 (1st

Cir.   1990)    (refusing     to   address    appeal   of   district   court's
liability finding since such finding was not necessary to the

judgment below).    Rather, plaintiff should raise his claims if, on
remand, the district court finds Dr. Laz liable and awards damages.

                                      V.

           For the reasons discussed herein, we vacate the district

court's judgment and remand the case to the district court judge

for a determination of materiality.

           Vacated and remanded for actions consistent with this

opinion.


                                     -17-