STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
UNPUBLISHED
EUGENE ROGERS and JEANETTE CAMPBELL July 20, 2017
ROGERS,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v No. 332117
Oakland Circuit Court
ST. JOSEPH MERCY HEALTH SYSTEMS, LC No. 2015-146159-NO
doing business as ST. JOSEPH MERCY
HOSPITAL-OAKLAND,
Defendant-Appellee.
Before: MURPHY, P.J., TALBOT, C.J., and O’CONNELL, J.
PER CURIAM.
Plaintiffs, Eugene Rogers and Jeanette Campbell Rogers, appeal as of right the trial
court’s order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant St. Joseph Mercy Health
Systems (the hospital).1 Plaintiffs pursued this lawsuit as an ordinary negligence case and not as
an action for medical malpractice, foregoing the service of a notice of intent, MCL 600.2912b,
and the filing of an affidavit of merit, MCL 600.2912d, as required in medical malpractice suits.
The trial court concluded that plaintiffs’ claims entailed matters involving the exercise of
medical judgment within the context of a professional relationship; therefore, the action sounded
in medical malpractice, necessitating summary dismissal. We affirm.
Rogers, himself a physician, was admitted as a patient at the hospital on March 28, 2013.
On the evening of that date, while in his hospital room, Rogers claimed that he pushed the call
button “a number of times,” seeking ambulatory assistance to use the bathroom. According to
Rogers’ testimony, after 30 minutes without a response, he attempted to walk to the bathroom by
himself and fell, suffering injuries to his head, back, and right arm and shoulder. A rapid
response team at the hospital documented the incident and the injuries. Rogers asserted that
several hours later he again pushed the call button for help to use the bathroom, waiting
1
Jeanette Rogers’ claim, alleging loss of consortium, is derivative of her husband Eugene
Rogers’ action for injuries that he suffered at the hospital. We shall refer to Mr. and Mrs. Rogers
collectively as “plaintiffs,” while Eugene Rogers will be referred to as “Rogers.”
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approximately 45 minutes without a response before he again attempted to walk to the bathroom.
He then fell for the second time, suffering injuries comparable to those sustained in the first fall,
with an intensification of the pain being experienced in his right shoulder.
There was deposition testimony by a registered nurse who was on duty when Rogers fell
for the second time, and she indicated that situations can arise in which multiple patients are
using their respective call buttons at the same time. In those circumstances, according to the
nurse, the staff is forced to prioritize which patient to attend to first, implicating nursing
judgment, although she could not recall any patient ever having to wait 30 or more minutes for a
response to an activated call button.
Plaintiffs filed a negligence action against the hospital, absent the preliminary service of a
notice of intent and the filing of an affidavit of merit. See MCL 600.2912b and MCL 600.2912d.
The complaint alleged one count of negligence and one count of loss of consortium. With
respect to the negligence claim, plaintiffs alleged that the hospital, through its employees, staff,
and agents, breached the duty of care owed to Rogers by: (1) negligently failing to regularly
monitor and supervise Rogers’ needs: (2) negligently failing to regularly monitor the patient call
system; (3) negligently failing to respond when Rogers used the call system; (4) negligently and
recklessly permitting Rogers to fall twice on the same day; and (5) negligently violating Rogers’
rights as a hospital patient. The trial court subsequently granted the hospital’s motion for
summary disposition, concluding that there existed a professional relationship between the
hospital and Rogers at the time of his treatment, which is undisputed, and that plaintiffs’ action
involved questions of medical judgment beyond the realm of common knowledge and
experience, which matter is disputed. Plaintiffs appeal by right the court’s ruling.
We review de novo a trial court’s ruling on a motion for summary disposition, and the
determination whether the nature of a claim is ordinary negligence or medical malpractice
implicates MCR 2.116(C)(7) and is also subject to de novo review. Trowell v Providence Hosp
& Med Ctrs, Inc, 316 Mich App 680, 689-690; 893 NW2d 112 (2016). “In making a decision
under MCR 2.116(C)(7), we consider all documentary evidence submitted by the parties,
accepting as true the contents of the complaint unless affidavits or other appropriate documents
specifically contradict it.” Bryant v Oakpointe Villa Nursing Ctr, Inc, 471 Mich 411, 419; 684
NW2d 864 (2004). In RDM Holdings, Ltd v Continental Plastics Co, 281 Mich App 678, 687;
762 NW2d 529 (2008), this Court, in regard to MCR 2.116(C)(7), stated:
This Court must consider the documentary evidence in a light most
favorable to the nonmoving party. If there is no factual dispute, whether a
plaintiff's claim is barred under a principle set forth in MCR 2.116(C)(7) is a
question of law for the court to decide. If a factual dispute exists, however,
summary disposition is not appropriate. [Citations omitted.]
In Bryant, our Supreme Court addressed multiple claims of negligence brought against a
nursing facility, arising out of a death from positional asphyxiation, and the Court was called
upon to determine whether each claim sounded in ordinary negligence or medical malpractice.
Bryant, 471 Mich at 414. The Bryant Court set forth the applicable analytical framework,
observing:
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A medical malpractice claim is distinguished by two defining
characteristics. First, medical malpractice can occur only within the course of a
professional relationship. Second, claims of medical malpractice necessarily raise
questions involving medical judgment. Claims of ordinary negligence, by
contrast, raise issues that are within the common knowledge and experience of the
fact-finder. Therefore, a court must ask two fundamental questions in
determining whether a claim sounds in ordinary negligence or medical
malpractice: (1) whether the claim pertains to an action that occurred within the
course of a professional relationship; and (2) whether the claim raises questions of
medical judgment beyond the realm of common knowledge and experience. If
both these questions are answered in the affirmative, the action is subject to the
procedural and substantive requirements that govern medical malpractice actions.
***
After ascertaining that the professional relationship test is met, the next
step is determining whether the claim raises questions of medical judgment
requiring expert testimony or, on the other hand, whether it alleges facts within
the realm of a jury's common knowledge and experience. If the reasonableness of
the health care professionals' action can be evaluated by lay jurors, on the basis of
their common knowledge and experience, it is ordinary negligence. If, on the
other hand, the reasonableness of the action can be evaluated by a jury only after
having been presented the standards of care pertaining to the medical issue before
the jury explained by experts, a medical malpractice claim is involved . . . . [Id. at
422-423 (citations, quotation marks, and alteration brackets omitted).]
The gravamen of an action is determined by reading a complaint as a whole, looking
beyond the labels affixed by a party. Trowell, 316 Mich App at 695. And in resolving whether a
claim sounds in medical malpractice or ordinary negligence, we disregard the label placed on the
claim by a party. Id. “A complaint cannot avoid the application of procedural requirements
associated with a medical malpractice action by couching the cause of action in terms of ordinary
negligence.” Id. at 695-696 (citation omitted).
In this case, plaintiffs concede that Rogers’ injuries occurred within the course of a
professional relationship with the hospital. In addition, it is undisputed that plaintiffs failed to
comply with the applicable procedural requirements for a medical malpractice action, MCL
600.2912b; MCL 600.2912d, before the general two-year period of limitations for medical
malpractice actions expired, MCL 600.5838a(2); MCL 600.5805(1) and (6). The dispute that
needs to be resolved is whether plaintiffs’ claims raise questions of medical judgment requiring
expert testimony or, on the other hand, whether the claims concern facts within the realm of a
jury's common knowledge and experience. More specifically, the issue presented regards
whether the reasonableness of the response, or lack thereof, by the hospital’s nursing or medical
staff to the activated call button implicated matters of medical judgment.
“The fact that an employee of a licensed health care facility was engaging in medical care
at the time the alleged negligence occurred means that the plaintiff's claim may possibly sound in
medical malpractice; it does not mean that the plaintiff's claim certainly sounds in medical
malpractice.” Bryant, 471 Mich at 421; see also Trowell, 316 Mich App at 692-
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693. “[A]llegations concerning staffing decisions and patient monitoring involve questions of
professional medical management and not issues of ordinary negligence that can be judged by
the common knowledge and experience of a jury.” Dorris v Detroit Osteopathic Hosp Corp, 460
Mich 26, 47; 594 NW2d 455 (1999). And in Sturgis Bank & Trust Co v Hillsdale Community
Health Ctr, 268 Mich App 484, 498; 708 NW2d 453 (2005), this Court stated:
It is clear from the deposition testimony that a nursing background and
nursing experience are at least somewhat necessary to render a risk assessment
and to make a determination regarding which safety or monitoring precautions to
utilize when faced with a patient who is at risk of falling. While, at first glance,
one might believe that medical judgment beyond the realm of common
knowledge and experience is not necessary when considering [the patient’s]
troubled physical and mental state, the question becomes entangled in issues
concerning [her] medications, the nature and seriousness of the closed-head
injury, the degree of disorientation, and the various methods at a nurse's disposal
in confronting a situation where a patient is at risk of falling.
A bit of the difficulty in analyzing this case is that there is no evidence specifically
indicating why hospital personnel did not respond to Rogers’ room after he repeatedly pressed
the call button preceding the two falls, assuming that he actually did so.2
In Trowell, 316 Mich App at 699-700, a case involving a claim that a nurse’s aide twice
dropped the plaintiff while assisting her in walking to a hospital bathroom and where the
allegations in the plaintiff’s complaint were all that could be considered because no documentary
evidence was submitted for purposes of summary disposition, this Court stated:
[M]edical judgment and experience may or may not be necessary to
evaluate whether the nurse's aide was negligent as to the manner in which she
physically assisted plaintiff, regardless of the allegation that the aide should have
sought help from another aide or nurse. Medical judgment, knowledge, and
expertise could certainly be pertinent in determining the proper technique to use
when holding and escorting a patient. A patient's physical and mental state or
condition, as affected by illness, surgery, anesthesia, medications, and the like,
may very well dictate how a patient should be physically handled when being
moved. However, in any given case and on the basis of common knowledge and
experience, lay jurors could evaluate whether negligence was involved in
assisting a patient if the nature of the assistance was so plainly unreasonable that
evidence of medical judgment and knowledge was simply rendered immaterial.
For example, accepting as true, as we must do, the allegation that the nurse's aide
dropped plaintiff, if evidence was developed showing that the aide dropped her
because the aide decided to answer a cell phone call or because the aide held
plaintiff with an extremely and ridiculously loose grip, a jury could likely utilize
common knowledge and experience to evaluate the reasonableness of the aide's
2
Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to plaintiffs, we shall proceed on the basis that
Rogers used the call button as testified to at his deposition.
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act without having to resort to medical judgment. . . . [W]e recognize that in
certain cases it may be necessary to examine matters that implicate medical
judgment in conjunction with matters that do not implicate medical judgment
relative to evaluating whether negligence occurred in handling a patient. But we
cannot determine solely from the allegations in plaintiff's complaint whether this
case falls into that category, thereby implicating medical judgment, or whether
medical judgment is simply not relevant in assessing whether the nurse's aide
acted reasonably.
The principle that emanates from Trowell is that, when determining whether the
reasonableness of an action can be evaluated absent contemplation of medical judgment, a court
must explore the nature of the action and the reason or reasons explaining why the action
occurred in the first place. Thus, in Trowell, this Court focused its attention on the range of
possibilities, as only slightly limited by the broad allegations in the complaint (no documentary
evidence), with respect to why the plaintiff was dropped by the nurse’s aide, as the different
factual possibilities that might explain the aide’s actions, i.e., dropping the plaintiff twice, would
have a bearing on the question whether medical judgment was implicated. Here, the action at
issue is the failure to respond to Rogers’ use of the call button when he had to use the bathroom.
To the extent that hospital personnel failed to respond because of staffing level decisions, patient
monitoring criteria, risk assessments, or patient prioritization determinations, the caselaw makes
clear that these matters typically concern and involve questions of medical judgment. Bryant,
471 Mich at 426-427; Dorris, 460 Mich at 47; Sturgis Bank, 268 Mich App at 498; Trowell, 316
Mich App at 697.
The instant case is in a different procedural posture than Trowell, as the hospital
submitted documentary evidence in support of its motion for summary disposition. Plaintiffs
submitted documentary evidence in response, but the evidence did not suggest or indicate that
the failure to respond to the call button was unassociated with the exercise of professional
medical judgment. For example, plaintiffs did not present documentary evidence from which it
could reasonably be inferred that there was a technical problem with the call button, e.g., a
battery or electrical failure, or that hospital staff just decided to ignore Rogers’ calls, despite
being able to respond, which matters would not generally implicate questions of medical
judgment. As such, and again assuming that Rogers actually utilized the call button as claimed,
plaintiffs have not established a triable factual issue regarding whether the failure to respond to
the call button was anything more than negligence connected to staffing levels, patient
monitoring, risk assessment, or priority determinations that involved medical judgment.
Although the discovery deadline had not yet elapsed when the hospital filed its motion for
summary disposition, plaintiffs make no claim that they were in need of further discovery or that
summary disposition was premature in light of the discovery deadline. In sum, reversal is
unwarranted.
Affirmed. Having fully prevailed on appeal, the hospital is awarded taxable costs
pursuant to MCR 7.219.
/s/ William B. Murphy
/s/ Michael J. Talbot
/s/ Peter D. O'Connell
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