Arden J. Curry
Arden J. Curry, II
Pauley, Curry, Sturgeon & Vanderford
Charleston, West Virginia
Attorney for the Appellants
Dino S. Colombo
Richard W. Stuhr
Jacobson, Maynard, Tuschman & Kalur
Morgantown, West Virginia 26505
Attorney for the Appellee
The Opinion of the Court was delivered PER CURIAM.
JUSTICE NEELY dissents.
2. "Where a treatise is recognized by a medical expert
witness as authoritative, then he can be asked about its statements
for purposes of impeachment during cross-examination." Syllabus
point 3, Thornton v. CAMC, Etc., 172 W.Va. 360, 305 S.E.2d 316
(1983).
3. "If a medical expert witness refuses to recognize a
medical treatise as authoritative, the cross-examining party may
prove the authoritativeness of the medical treatise, either through
judicial notice or through the testimony of another medical expert
witness. Once the trial court has concluded that the
authoritativeness of the medical treatise has been established,
then the expert may be cross-examined on it." Syllabus point 4,
Thornton v. CAMC, Etc., 172 W.Va. 360, 305 S.E.2d 316 (1983).
Per Curiam:
The jury in this medical malpractice action returned a
verdict in favor of the defendant, Dr. N.T. Shanmugham. The
appellants, Homer R. Hager, and his wife, Nancy Hager, who were the
plaintiffs below, moved, at various times, for a directed verdict,
for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and to have the verdict
set aside. The trial court denied the appellants' motions and
entered judgment for Dr. Shanmugham.
On appeal, the appellants claim that the evidence adduced
during trial clearly demonstrated that Dr. Shanmugham violated the
applicable standard of care and was negligent in performing a
urological procedure on the appellant, Homer R. Hager, and that, in
fact, Dr. Shanmugham admitted that he violated the standard of
care. They also claim that the trial court improperly allowed Dr.
Shanmugham's attorney to cross-examine their medical expert by
using learned treatises. Under the circumstances, the appellants
claim that they were entitled to a malpractice award and that the
trial court erred in entering judgment for Dr. Shanmugham.
After reviewing the evidence adduced during trial as well
as the questions presented, this Court is of the view that the
trial court did not err in denying the appellants' motions and in
entering judgment for Dr. Shanmugham. Accordingly, the judgment of
the Circuit Court of Kanawha County is affirmed.
In December, 1988, the appellant, Homer Hager, was
examined by Dr. Kyle Fort, a urologist in Lewisburg, West Virginia,
who had previously treated him for prostate problems. Dr. Fort, as
a result of his examination, concluded that Mr. Hager's prostate
was constricting around his urethra and that a surgical procedure
known as a transurethral resection of the prostate was indicated.
Dr. Fort, however, was unwilling to perform the procedure until Mr.
Hager, who had had a history of cardiovascular problems, was
examined by a cardiologist.
On December 12 or 13, 1988, Mr. Hager was admitted to St.
Francis Hospital in Charleston, West Virginia, where he underwent
a complete cardiac examination. While he was in the hospital the
urological problems caused by the constricting of his urethra
worsened, and a urologist, Dr. N.T. Shanmugham, the defendant in
the present case, was called in for a consultation.
Dr. Shanmugham, like Dr. Fort, concluded that a
transurethral resection of Mr. Hager's prostate was indicated, and
on December 14, 1988, discussed it with Mr. Hager and his wife.
During the discussion, it appears that Dr. Shanmugham advised the
Hagers of the risks and complications of the procedure and
indicated that the risks and complications included incontinence
and impotence. Dr. Shanmugham subsequently documented this
conversation regarding the possible risks and complications of the
surgery in a progress note dated December 14, 1988.
Mr. Hager decided to undergo the transurethral resection
surgery, and on December 15, 1988, Dr. Shanmugham performed it on
him.
Following the surgery, Mr. Hager developed persistent
incontinence and ultimately consulted Dr. Fort about it. Following
the evaluation, Dr. Fort concluded that Mr. Hager's external
urinary sphincter, a muscle which plays a significant role in
controlling continence, had been injured during the transurethral
resection surgery. Dr. Fort subsequently recommended the
implantation of an artificial sphincter, and the artificial
sphincter was inserted on July 12, 1990. Mr. Hager, who had
sometime prior to the transurethral resection surgery had an
impotency problem, also suffered a recurrence of that problem. He
subsequently had a penile implant for that condition.
Sometime after the development of the post-surgical
incontinence and impotency problems, Mr. Hager and his wife
instituted the present medical malpractice action against Dr.
Shanmugham. They, in essence, claimed that Dr. Shanmugham had
damaged Mr. Hager's external urinary sphincter during the prostate
surgery and that that damage had resulted from medical malpractice.
The case was tried before a jury on September 8,
September 9, September 10, and September 11, 1992.
During trial, the Hagers introduced evidence which showed
that prior to the transurethral resection surgery, he had not
suffered incontinence and that for at least two years prior to the
operation he and his wife had had a satisfying sex life. He also
introduced evidence showing that following the procedure he
suffered chronic incontinence and impotence.
The Hagers called as an expert witness Dr. Ralph Emerson
Duncan, III, a Board certified urologist who was the author of
several articles in the field of urology. Dr. Duncan had performed
over 1,000 transurethral resection procedures. Dr. Duncan, who had
examined Mr. Hager, had observed damage to Mr. Hager's urinary
sphincter. Dr. Duncan, who did not have an opinion as to the
cause of Mr. Hager's impotency, testified that Mr. Hager's
sphincter had been cut on multiple occasions and that the damage
caused by those cuts kept it from closing completely, thereby
resulting in his incontinence.
Dr. Duncan, who had also reached the conclusion that Dr.
Shanmugham had cut and damaged Mr. Hager's sphincter during the
transurethral resection, testified that national standards for
performance of the transurethral resection procedure indicate that
the performing physician is not supposed to cut past an anatomical
landmark called the verumontanum. If a doctor does not cut past
the verunontanum, then the external sphincter cannot be cut. He
concluded that in Mr. Hager's case, Dr. Shanmugham had cut past the
verumontanum and cut Mr. Hager's external sphincter and that by so
doing, Dr. Shanmugham had violated the applicable standard of care.
The Hagers also introduced the testimony of Dr. Kyle
Fort, Mr. Hager's treating urologist in Lewisburg, West Virginia.
Dr. Fort, who, like Dr. Duncan, believed that damage to Mr. Hager's
external urinary sphincter had caused his incontinence, but who,
like Dr. Duncan, had no opinion as to the cause of his impotence,
testified that after Dr. Shanmugham's surgery, he had examined Mr.
Hager on two occasions and that on each he had found multiple cuts
in Mr. Hager's external urinary sphincter. He further testified
that approximately one week prior to the surgery by Dr. Shanmugham,
he had examined Mr. Hager and had actually visualized his external
sphincter and that at that time no damage existed. Given the fact
that the damage existed after Dr. Shanmugham's performance of the
procedure, Dr. Fort testified that to a reasonable degree of
medical certainty or probability, Mr. Hager's external sphincter
was actually cut by Dr. Shanmugham during the procedure in
December, 1988.
Dr. Fort testified that a physician who was trained and
skilled in the performance of a transurethral resection was not
supposed to cut the external urethral sphincter, and that based
upon his examination of Mr. Hager, there was no medical reason why
Dr. Shanmugham should have found cutting the sphincter to be
necessary. He concluded that the damage to Mr. Hager's sphincter
was caused by a mistake and that it should not have occurred if the
procedure had been properly performed.
To rebut the Hagers' testimony, Dr. Shanmugham called Dr.
Jonathan Jarrow, a Board certified urologist and an associate
professor of medicine at Bowman-Gray School of Medicine in Winston-
Salem, North Carolina. Dr. Jarrow, who instructed students in the
transurethral resection, testified that injury to the external
urinary sphincter resulting in incontinence was a known and
recognized complication of the procedure. He explained that this
was because the internal anatomy of all individuals was not
identical and because there were certain moments when a urologist
performing transurethral resection could not precisely observe the
internal anatomy of the patient. If a patient's internal anatomy
was slightly different in certain ways, the urologist, even if he
was performing the surgery precisely according to standards, could
inadvertently damage the sphincter.See footnote 1
Dr. Jarrow also testified that Dr. Shanmugham had
appropriately informed Mr. Hager of the potential risks and
complications of the surgery. He also expressed the opinion that
Dr. Shanmugham had performed the surgery as would a competent
urologist and that Mr. Hager had simply experienced a known and
recognized complication.
During trial, Dr. Shanmugham testified that in performing
a normal transurethral resection procedure, a physician was not
supposed to excise or cut or remove tissue that was a part of the
external urinary sphincter. He also admitted that the medical
evidence showed that Mr. Hager's sphincter had been cut and that he
had cut it.See footnote 2 He further testified:
Q: Do you believe you were negligent in the
way you performed this surgery?
A: No, Sir. I took all precautions that
I'm supposed to take and did the way I
was taught to do this procedure, do the
way I learned to do the procedure. I
did not see any problem during surgery
and I didn't see any problems suspected
after the surgery.
Q: And this, in your opinion, is a
generally recognized complication of TURP?
A: Generally recognized complication.
At the conclusion of the trial, as previously indicated,
the jury found for Dr. Shanmugham and refused to award the
appellants damages.
On appeal the appellants' principal contention is that
the evidence admitted during trial clearly showed that the
defendant Dr. Shanmugham violated the applicable standard of care
and was therefore negligent. Under the circumstances they claim
that they were entitled to a verdict in their favor.
In Orr v. Crowder, 175 W.Va. 335, 315 S.E.2d 593 (1983),
cert. denied, 469 U.S. 981, 105 S.Ct. 384, 83 L.Ed.2d 319 (1984),
this Court analyzed the circumstances which a trial court should
analyze in determining whether there is sufficient evidence to
support a jury's verdict. The Court summarized its conclusions in
syllabus point 5, as follows:
In determining whether there is sufficient
evidence to support a jury verdict the court
should: (1) consider the evidence most
favorable to the prevailing party; (2) assume
that all conflicts in the evidence were
resolved by the jury in favor of the
prevailing party; (3) assume as proved all
facts which the prevailing party's evidence
tends to prove; and (4) give to the prevailing
party the benefit of all favorable inferences
which reasonably may be drawn from the facts
proved.
See also, McClung v. Marion County Commission, 178 W.Va. 444, 360
S.E.2d 221 (1987).
In the present case, the defendant, Dr. Shanmugham, in
his own defense called as an expert witness Dr. Jonathan Jarrow,
who was a board certified urologist and an assistant professor of
medicine at Bowman-Gray School of Medicine in Winston-Salem, North
Carolina. Dr. Jarrow essentially explained that the transurethral
procedure was designed to prevent damage to the patient's external
sphincter. He, however, further indicated that in the average
individual the external sphincter lay very close to the prostate
where the resection occurred and that in a percentage of
individuals the internal anatomy was such that internal organs were
not precisely in the same position as in the average individual.
Such a variation in internal anatomy was potentially not detectable
in the type of procedure that Mr. Hager underwent.
Dr. Jarrow further stated that if there was a variation
in anatomy of Mr. Hager, Dr. Shanmugham might have injured his
external sphincter even though he performed the transurethral
resection procedure routinely, that is in a non-negligent manner.
He indicated that because injury could occur to the sphincter even
though the physician performed the surgery in the normal,
recognized, and non-negligent way, damage to the sphincter was a
medically recognized possible complication of the procedure. He
said:
We all try to avoid that complication but it's
not always possible, and that's why we warn
patients that that's a possibility that the
sphincter could be damaged, that they could be
incontinent after the procedure. It's rare,
it's uncommon, it only happens about one
percent of the time, but it does happen...
Dr. Jarrow further testified that he had reviewed Mr.
Hager's records that he believed that Dr. Shanmugham had performed
the transurethral procedure on Mr. Hager appropriately.See footnote 3 He also
testified that a sphincter injury could occur without the physician
being negligent and that he believed that that had occurred in Mr.
Hager's case.See footnote 4
As indicated in syllabus point 5 of Orr v. Crowder, supra, in determining where there was sufficient evidence to support the jury's verdict it was incumbent upon the trial court, as it is on this Court, to consider the evidence in the light most favorable to Dr. Shanmugham, the prevailing party, and to assume as proved all facts which Dr. Shanmugham's evidence tends to prove.
Also he must be given the benefit of all favorable inferences which
may reasonably be drawn from the facts proved.
Rather clearly Dr. Jarrow's testimony tended to show that
because of individual variations in patient anatomy it was possible
that a physician who performed a transurethral resection of the
prostate could injure the patient's external sphincter and cause
incontinence even though he performed the procedure according to
generally accepted procedures and even though he was not negligent.
Dr. Jarrow also testified that he had reviewed the records relating
to Mr. Hager's procedure and that he had concluded that Dr.
Shanmugham had performed the procedure appropriately.
In this Court's view, the evidence when considered in the
light most favorable to Dr. Shanmugham suggests that Dr. Shanmugham
did perform the procedure appropriately and that there were
plausible reasons why Mr. Hager could have suffered injury to his
external sphincter without Dr. Shanmugham being negligent.
While the testimony of Dr. Duncan, to a large extent, as
well as that of Dr. Kyle, tended to contradict that of Dr. Jarrow,
it is properly within the purview of the jury to resolve conflicts
in the testimony, and, as indicated in syllabus point 5 of Orr v.
Crowder, supra, in determining whether there was sufficient
evidence to support the jury's verdict it is incumbent upon this
Court to consider the evidence most favorable to the prevailing
party and to assume that all conflicts were resolved by the jury in
favor of the prevailing party.
The Court notes that the appellants vigorously assert
that at trial Dr. Shanmugham admitted that he violated the
applicable standard of care.
A fair reading of the evidence shows that Dr. Shanmugham
did admit that he cut Mr. Hager's external sphincter and that that
should not be done in a transurethral resection procedure. He also
admitted that cutting the sphincter was almost certainly the cause
of Mr. Hager's incontinence. He also admitted that a physician
should not resect beyond the verumontanum and that he likely did
that.
On the other hand he testified that he did the procedure
the way he was taught to do it and that he did not believe that he
was negligent in any way.See footnote 5
While in this Court's view, portions of Dr. Shanmugham's
testimony, when taken out of context, suggest that he admitted that
he violated the applicable standard of care, a full reading of his
specific words in the context of his overall testimony as well as
the testimony of his expert, Dr. Jarrow, suggests that he was
really saying that it was undesirable for a physician to cut a
patient's external sphincter, and certainly the resection procedure
was designed to avoid cutting the sphincter. However, such cutting
could occur, even if the operation was perfectly performed and even
if there was no negligence. In effect, it was an unavoidable
complication that occasionally occurred, and as explained by Dr.
Jarrow, it occurred because of the undetectable variations in the
internal anatomy of a few individuals.
On appeal the appellants also claim that the circuit
court erred in allowing Dr. Shanmugham's counsel to attempt to
cross-examine their expert witness, Dr. Duncan, through the use of
learned treatises. They argue that because Dr. Duncan did not rely
upon learned treatises and refused to acknowledge that they were
authoritative in his field, the trial court improperly allowed Dr.
Shanmugham's counsel to cross-examine him on statements found
within them.
Throughout cross-examination Dr. Duncan refused to admit
that certain treatises and articles which the defense wished to use
for impeachment were authoritative. When defense counsel pressed
the point, the plaintiffs' counsel objected and requested a bench
conference. At the bench conference plaintiffs' counsel stated:
Judge, we object. Under the West Virginia
Rules of Evidence, the only treatises the
experts can testify about is what they believe
is authoritative, and this witness has already
testified that he doesn't consider any of the
medical treatises authoritative, and therefore
I object to this continuing line of
questioning because this Doctor said they're
not authoritative, and he's stated that, and
it's over with and he can't ask him about it,
and therefore it's objectionable.
Defense counsel, in response, took the position that a treatise
could be used for cross-examination even if the cross-examined
witness refused to recognize its authoritativeness if another
expert witness testified that it was authoritative. He further
indicated that he was he was going to introduce expert testimony
indicating that the material which he wanted to use for cross-
examination was authoritative. The trial judge ruled that he could
take judicial notice that the material was recognized medical
material and that the defense was going to introduce expert medical
opinion on its character. In effect, he ruled that the cross-
examination was allowable.
Rule 803(18) of the West Virginia Rules of Evidence
establishes the parameters for cross-examination of experts by the
use of learned treatises. That Rule states:
Learned Treatises - To the extent called to
the attention of an expert witness upon cross-
examination or relied upon the expert witness
in direct examination, statements contained in
published treatises, periodicals, or pamphlets
on the subject of history, medicine or other
science or art, established as a reliable
authority by the testimony or admission of the
witness or by expert testimony or by judicial
notice. If admitted, the statements may be
read into evidence but may not be received as
exhibits.
In Thornton v. CAMC, Etc., 172 W.Va. 360, 305 S.E.2d 316
(1983), this Court discussed at some length the use of learned
treatises to impeach an expert witness. In that case, the Court
recognized that there are two circumstances under which a party
may, consistent with Rule 803(18) of the Rules of Evidence, use
learned treatises to impeach an expert witness. The first
circumstance arises if the witness himself recognizes that the
treatise is authoritative. The Court summarized this rule in
syllabus point 3 of the Thornton decision as follows:
Where a treatise is recognized by a medical
expert witness as authoritative, then he can
be asked about its statements for purposes of
impeachment during cross-examination.
Additionally, the Court indicated:
We also agree with those courts that hold that
if a medical expert witness refuses to
recognize a medical treatise as authoritative,
the cross-examining party may prove the
authoritativeness of the medical treatise,
either through judicial notice or through the
testimony of another medical expert witness.
Once the trial court has concluded that the
authoritativeness of the medical treatise has
been established, then the expert may be
cross-examined on it.
Thornton v. CAMC, Etc., supra at 365, 305 S.E.2d at 322.
The Court restated its conclusion relating to use of treatises when
a cross-examined expert refuses to recognize them in syllabus point
4 of Thornton, as follows:
If a medical expert witness refuses to
recognize a medical treatise as authoritative,
the cross-examining party may prove the
authoritativeness of the medical treatise,
either through judicial notice or through the
testimony of another medical expert witness.
Once the trial court has concluded that the
authoritativeness of the medical treatise has
been established, then the expert may be
cross-examined on it.
In examining the record in the present case this Court
finds that Dr. Duncan consistently denied that the learned articles
and materials mentioned by defense counsel during cross-examination
were authoritative. When plaintiffs' counsel objected to a
continuation of the cross-examination, the trial court ruled that
the fact that the Dr. Duncan refused to accepted the
authoritativeness of the material did not preclude its use by
defense counsel. The court, in essence, noted that
authoritativeness could be established by judicial notice or by
another expert and ruled, "I can take judicial notice that it's a
piece of literature that's a book, and it's a recognized medical
book." The court also noted that defense counsel had said that he
would introduce expert evidence indicating that the material was
authoritative. The court, therefore, allowed its use.
Dr. Shanmugham later testified that the literature used
for the cross-examination of Dr. Duncan was authoritative. Dr.
Shanmugham's supporting expert, Dr. Jarrow, also testified to the
authoritativeness of the material.
In this Court's view, the authoritativeness of the
material used for cross-examination was adequately established.
Plaintiffs' counsel essentially took the position that learned
materials could be used for the cross-examination of Dr. Duncan
only if Dr. Duncan himself recognized their authoritativeness. The
trial court correctly recognized, in line with the rules set forth
in Thornton v. CAMC, Etc., Id., that the materials could be used if
he took judicial notice of their authoritativeness or if another
expert indicated that they were authoritative.
A careful reading of Thornton indicates that if other
expert testimony is the basis for the finding of authoritativeness
the other expert testimony properly should be introduced before the
court makes its rule, and that was not done in this case. However,
since the expert evidence of authoritativeness was later
introduced, this Court finds that the any error in ruling before
the evidence was introduced was cured by the later introduction.
Having concluded that there is no reversible error in
this case, this Court concludes that the judgment of the Circuit
Court of Kanawha County should be affirmed.
Footnote: 1Dr. Jarrow's precise testimony proceeded as follows:
This is the part I said a moment ago this is a little bit over-simplified in that the prostate doesn't normally sit squarely on the sphincter like so, and in actuality, in many people the sphincter runs more at an angle like so, where the top portion of the prostate is actually much shorter than the posterior portion, and in some men, the verumontanum would be located about here and the posterior part of the prostate actually extends well beyond the verumontanum, and in some cases, not according to this case, but in some instances, one would have to resect
beyond the verumontanum to resect some of
that tissue posteriorly or towards the
rectum. But this is where a complication
such as an injury to the sphincter can
occur.
Number one, the resectoscope sheath has
an angled beak on it, which you can see
right here. It has an angled beak on it.
Q: It is hard plastic, is that what that is?
A: This is hard plastic. And as you pass
this through the urethra into the
bladder, it is possible to damage the
sphincter at the top part exactly where
it was described by Dr. Fort in his
cystoscopy note with the tip of this
scope. That's one possibility.
Another possibility is that as you're
doing your resection, you're looking
through a lens and the lens does not
provide a clear panoramic view as you
have right now, looking around this
room. It provides a focused view where
you're working, and that view is tilted
down about 30 degrees. We normally do
this with a 30 degree lens. And so when
you're doing your resection
posteriorally, you're looking down and
you have this verumontanum, that marks
the distal mark of your resection, the
furthest out you're supposed to go
toward the sphincter, and you have this
in view as you're resecting the prostate
gland and you can sit there and look at
it, have it in front of you and resect
right up to that all the time.
Then when you go to resect this anterior tissue, the this tissue above here, you have to swivel the scope. And what you would normally do in doing a TURP, the way I do it, is you go out to the verumontanum, stop, swivel the scope and then you resect to that point. While you're resecting at this time, you do not see the verumontanum, and so you would take a couple of bites that way,
go back, reconfirm where you're at and
then swivel it back up and keep on
resecting. That's assuming the prostate
anteriorally is ending right where the
verumontanum is located, and that's the
way it is most of the time. One way the
sphincter could be injured is that you
wander too far out during that swivel.
The other way that the sphincter could be injured is that the patient's anatomy is just a little bit differed from what we routinely see, and rather than the prostate extending to the verumontanum anteriorally, it stops there and the sphincter mechanism is lying like this, so that where you're sitting at this verumontanum, swivel your scope and do your resection like you normally would, you're actually resecting the sphincter without even being aware of it.
Footnote: 2The testimony proceeded as follows:
Q: . . . Isn't it correct, Doctor, that
even though there was no medical reason
to cut below the verumontanum, even
though you're not supposed to cut below
the verumontanum, in this instance, not
intentionally, but in this instance, you
did cut his external sphincter, isn't
that correct?
A: Going by the other physician's report,
there has been damage to the sphincter,
yes, sir.
Q: And you did it?
A: Yes, I accept that, yes.
Footnote: 3The actual testimony proceeded as follows:
Q: Now Doctor, from a review of that information, do you have an opinion as to whether Dr. Shanmugham performed
the TURP procedure appropriately?
A: I do.
Q: What is that opinion, sir?
A: My opinion is that it was performed appropriately.
Footnote: 4Dr. Jarrow's testimony was:
Q: And sphincter injury can occur without
there being negligence, true?
A: That is correct.
Q: And do you believe that's what
happened in this case?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Did the surgical technique of Dr.
Shanmugham as dictated in his
operative note and as described by him
in his deposition, did that appear to
be done appropriately?
A: Yes, it did.
Footnote: 5Dr. Shanmugham testified:
Q: Do you believe you were negligent in the way you
performed this surgery?
A: No, sir. I took all precautions that I'm supposed to
take and did the way I was taught to do this
procedure. I did not see any problem during the
surgery and I didn't see problems suspected after the
surgery.
Q: And this, in your opinion, is a generally recognized
complication of TURP?
A: Generally recognized complication.