Court Opinion

ID: 4646895
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-12-25 15:05:54.373359+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:01:01.995598
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: DECEMBER 23, 2020; 10:00 A.M.
                   NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

            Commonwealth of Kentucky
                   Court of Appeals

                      NO. 2018-CA-0986-MR

MILLS, SHERMAN, GILLIAM & GOODWIN, P.S.C.;
AND DIANNA HULL PERAZZO, M.D.                     APPELLANTS

             APPEAL FROM KENTON CIRCUIT COURT
v.          HONORABLE PATRICIA M. SUMME, JUDGE
                    ACTION NO. 11-CI-02391

MELANIE ROBBINS,
BY AND THROUGH HER GUARDIAN
AND FATHER, LARRY ROBBINS; AND
TYLER WILLIAM MICHAEL BULMER, A
MINOR, BY AND THROUGH HIS NEXT FRIEND
AND NATURAL FATHER AND PARENT, TODD
WILLIAM BULMER                                        APPELLEES

                           OPINION
                          AFFIRMING

                         ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE; GOODWINE AND MCNEILL,
JUDGES.
CLAYTON, CHIEF JUDGE: Dr. Dianna Hull Perazzo appeals from a judgment

of the Kenton Circuit Court following a trial wherein the jury returned a verdict in

favor of Melanie Robbins and against Dr. Perazzo for over $4 million dollars. Dr.

Perazzo alleges that the trial court abused its discretion regarding certain

evidentiary rulings it made both before and during the trial and contends that the

trial court improperly limited certain expert witness testimony, abused its

discretion in excluding evidence of drug and alcohol use, and committed

cumulative error. Upon review of the record and applicable caselaw, we affirm.

                                  BACKGROUND

             On September 15, 2010, Melanie Robbins – at that time, 35 years of

age – went to the St. Elizabeth Medical Center (“SEMC”) emergency room (the

“ER”) with complaints of a headache and congestion. Robbins indicated that her

headache was a “10 out of 10” on the pain scale and “the worst headache of her

life.” Robbins further told the ER workers that the headache began a few days to a

week prior and was particularly bad when she coughed or bent over. Robbins also

described having nausea, vomiting, and light and sound sensitivity.

             Robbins was assessed by Dr. Perazzo, an ER physician, who ordered a

CT head scan. The radiologist reading the x-ray from such head scan, Dr. Kirk

Doerger, found no hemorrhage or other abnormality and mistakenly concluded that

the x-ray was normal. In fact, the x-ray indicated that Robbins was experiencing a

                                          -2-
“warning bleed” or a “sentinel bleed” signaling an imminent hemorrhagic stroke.

Dr. Perazzo did not order any further tests, including a lumbar puncture (“LP”),

which is a test for the existence of red blood cells in the spinal fluid and is

indicative of a brain bleed that a CT scan is at times not sensitive enough to reveal.

Robbins remained at the ER until midnight, at which time she indicated that her

headache had improved. Dr. Perazzo discharged Robbins with a short period of

pain medication and a request to schedule a follow-up appointment.

             On September 27, 2010, Robbins returned to the ER after an

aneurysm – or a flaw in the wall of a blood vessel in her brain – ruptured and she

suffered a stroke. A subsequent CT scan showed “an extensive subarachnoid

hemorrhage [(“SAH”)],” which translates to bleeding in the area between the brain

and the tissue covering the brain. The CT scan further showed a “dissecting

aneurysm,” a type of aneurysm that presents in only three to five percent of all

brain aneurysms. Specifically, a “dissecting” aneurysm describes a situation where

blood penetrates the first of three layers contained in the blood vessel wall and

goes into the second layer, ultimately separating or tearing the vessel wall.

Robbins’ dissecting SAH was in the middle cerebral artery (“MCA”), one of three

major arteries channeling fresh blood to the brain.

             Robbins was thereafter transferred to University of Cincinnati

Hospital where neurosurgeon Dr. Andrew Ringer performed surgery to reconstruct

                                          -3-
the blood vessel. At the beginning of the surgery, Dr. Ringer placed a “temporary

clip” across the MCA in order to “shut off all the blood flow to the right side of the

brain for a period of time.” After working to rebuild the vessel, when Dr. Ringer

removed the temporary clip, the aneurysm began to bleed. Dr. Ringer identified

one part of the MCA, the M1 segment, and placed a temporary clip on such

segment as well as “a straight clip across the base of the aneurysm incorporating

the superior division, leaving the distal clip in place.” Such action stopped the

bleeding, and Dr. Ringer concluded the surgery.

             Robbins subsequently underwent a second surgery on September 30,

2010, as her brain began swelling with bleeding into the temporal lobe.

Ultimately, Robbins suffered from almost total paralysis, and requires 24-hour-a-

day, 7-day-per-week care.

             Robbins sued SEMC, Dr. Perazzo and her clinic, and Dr. Doerger and

his clinic. Robbins settled with SEMC before trial and, after approximately six

years of litigation, her case against Dr. Perazzo and Dr. Doerger was tried over

fifteen days in March of 2017. Specifically, Robbins argued that the symptoms

that she was presenting on her September 15, 2010 ER visit were signs of an SAH

and that Dr. Perazzo should have ordered an LP despite receiving a normal report

from Dr. Doerger. On the other hand, Dr. Perazzo argued that Robbins did not

have a traditional presentation of SAH because Robbins did not have a

                                         -4-
“thunderclap” headache, but rather indicated that her headache had been going on

for approximately a week.

             The jury ultimately awarded Robbins $1,268,621.67 for medical

expenses, $6 million dollars for future care and treatment, and $1 million dollars

for pain and suffering. The jury apportioned fault 50% to Dr. Perazzo and 50% to

Dr. Doerger. A judgment was entered accordingly.

             Dr. Perazzo and Dr. Doerger filed motions for a new trial and

judgment notwithstanding the verdict, both of which the trial court denied. Dr.

Doerger paid his portion of the judgment, while Dr. Perazzo appealed to this court

as a matter of right.

             Further facts will be discussed as they become relevant in the course

of this opinion.

                                       ISSUES

             Dr. Perazzo argues that the trial court erred in limiting the testimony

of an expert witness, Dr. Patrick McCormick, to those opinions the trial court

found to have been disclosed in his Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR)

26.02(4) expert witness disclosure. Dr. Perazzo further argues that the trial court

erroneously excluded evidence of Robbins’ alleged alcohol and cocaine use.

Finally, Dr. Perazzo argues that the cumulative error doctrine requires a new trial

based on the trial court’s allegedly unfair evidentiary rulings.

                                          -5-
                                     ANALYSIS

             a. Standard of Review

             An appellate court utilizes the abuse of discretion standard when

reviewing a trial court’s decision regarding the admissibility of evidence.

Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. v. Thompson, 11 S.W.3d 575, 577-78 (Ky. 2000).

The same abuse of discretion standard applies to discovery matters. Manus, Inc. v.

Terry Maxedon Hauling, Inc., 191 S.W.3d 4, 8 (Ky. App. 2006). “The test for

abuse of discretion is whether the trial judge’s decision was arbitrary,

unreasonable, unfair, or unsupported by sound legal principles.” Thompson, 11
S.W.3d at 581.

             b. The Trial Court’s Exclusion of Portions of Dr. McCormick’s

                 Testimony

             Dr. Perazzo first argues that the trial court abused its discretion when

it limited Dr. McCormick to those opinions that the trial court found had been

disclosed in Dr. McCormick’s CR 26.02 expert witness disclosure. In this case,

the trial court also specifically prohibited “any expert opinion not disclosed in the

filed disclosures or during discovery of the expert witness.” CR 26.02(4)(a)(i)

states as follows:

             Discovery of facts known and opinions held by experts,
             . . . acquired or developed in anticipation of litigation or
             for trial, may be obtained only as follows: . . . A party
             may through interrogatories require any other party to

                                          -6-
             identify each person whom the other party expects to call
             as an expert witness at trial, to state the subject matter on
             which the expert is expected to testify, and to state the
             substance of the facts and opinions to which the expert is
             expected to testify and a summary of the grounds for
             each opinion.

Additionally, CR 26.05(a) requires a party to “seasonably . . . supplement” his CR

26.02 expert witness disclosures.

             Dr. McCormick was initially disclosed as a witness for SEMC before

it settled with Robbins. The relevant portions of Dr. McCormick’s expert

disclosure stated as follows:

             Dr. McCormick will testify that he agrees with Dr.
             Samson’s description of the aneurysm. He agrees and
             will opine that it was a multi-lobed, partially-thrombosed,
             ruptured aneurysm with a complex origin at or near the
             right middle cerebral artery bifurcation.

             Dr. McCormick will testify that if the aneurysm suffered
             by Ms. Robbins was diagnosed as a Grade 1 on the Hunt
             Hess Scale at the time of the first presentation to
             [SEMC], because of the location and complexity of the
             aneurysm as described by Dr. Samson, even if it was
             diagnosed and treated on September 15, 2010, Ms.
             Robbins’ likely outcome would be similar to those
             patients presenting as a Grade 3 or Grade 4. He will also
             testify that he agrees with Dr. Samson that dissecting
             aneurysms of the cerebral arteries are notoriously fragile
             and unstable, even prior to rupture. He further agrees
             and will opine that dissecting aneurysms of the cerebral
             arteries such as the one suffered by Ms. Robbins are
             prone to bleed vigorously intra-operatively and, in order
             for the surgeon to effectively treat the condition,
             compromise or even closure of arterial branches
             potentially essential to the brain’s normal blood supply

                                          -7-
             may be necessary. In light of this fact, the risk to Ms.
             Robbins of neurological deficits, even if the aneurysm
             was identified prior to rupture, was significant. The risk
             of bleeding or stroke post-procedure resulting in
             permanent neurological deficits was also significant.

             Although Dr. McCormick’s deposition was never taken, Dr. Doerger

called Dr. McCormick as an expert witness to testify at trial on March 29, 2017.

At that point in the trial, Dr. Perazzo had already closed her proof and had rested

her case the previous day. As his testimony progressed, it became evident that Dr.

McCormick planned to testify that Robbins’ injuries were not caused by the

original hemorrhage that went undetected by Dr. Perazzo, but were caused by Dr.

Ringer having to “sacrifice” certain vessels to stop bleeding during the surgery.

Upon Robbins’ counsel’s objection, the trial court allowed Dr. McCormick to

testify by avowal, wherein he stated:

             [M]y opinion in this case has always been that the
             outcome that Melanie experienced is related to the type
             of aneurysm she had. If this aneurysm was diagnosed on
             September 15th or back in May, um, they would have
             been faced with treating this exact same problem, and it’s
             treating this problem that led to the outcome Melanie
             had. Even if it had never hemorrhaged, she, to a
             probability, would have the neurologic problems that she
             has now[.] What caused the problem was the fact that
             you had to treat this aneurysm, and in treating it, the only
             solution Dr. Ringer could come up with was to sacrifice
             that vessel, and in sacrificing that vessel there are
             consequences. And that’s what led to the stroke that she
             had, that’s what led to the emergency return to the
             operating room to remove a whole portion of the skull,
             which is a treatment for stroke, not a treatment for

                                         -8-
             aneurysm. They never anticipated that or they would
             have done it at the first surgery. That’s what caused all
             the problems here.

After Dr. McCormick testified by avowal, the following exchange occurred:

             Robbins’ Counsel: It’s not disclosed, your honor.

             Trial Court: How come I don’t have a clear disclosure of
             this? I mean, no offense intended, cause I don’t care
             what the medicine says, but I do care about how
             everybody gets to deal with the medicine in front of the
             jury.

Ultimately, the trial court limited Dr. McCormick’s testimony to the information

contained in his expert disclosure.

             As a preliminary matter, Robbins first argues that this issue was not

adequately preserved at the trial court level, as Dr. Perazzo had already rested her

case when Dr. Doerger called Dr. McCormick to testify and requested that Dr.

McCormick’s opinion be admitted at trial. However, because in her pretrial list of

experts Dr. Perazzo expressly adopted the experts of the other defendants and

reserved the right to call them at trial, and because “the substance of the evidence

was made known to the court by offer” via Dr. McCormick’s avowal testimony,

we believe the argument was sufficiently preserved for our review. See Kentucky

Rule of Evidence (KRE) 103(a)(2).

             Therefore, we are left with the task of determining whether the trial

court abused its discretion when it limited Dr. McCormick’s testimony to the

                                         -9-
specific opinions expressed in his expert witness disclosure. Again, “questions

concerning the scope of evidence are left to the discretion of the trial court to

determine whether to admit and exclude evidence.” Baptist Healthcare Systems,

Inc. v. Miller, 177 S.W.3d 676, 684 (Ky. 2005) (citation omitted).

             We agree with the trial court that the opinion offered by Dr.

McCormick at trial is significantly broader than that described in his expert

disclosure. The disclosure’s language discussed Dr. McCormick’s opinion in

terms of “risks” and “likely outcomes” of the surgery to treat the aneurysm,

whereas Dr. McCormick’s avowal testimony was that the treatment of the

aneurysm directly led to the outcome that Melanie experienced and was the actual,

rather than likely, outcome. Instead of limiting Dr. McCormick to testimony

regarding significant “risks,” Dr. Doerger’s counsel attempted to introduce a new

causation opinion from Dr. McCormick at trial. The variance between the

substance and level of certainty in Dr. McCormick’s expert disclosure opinion and

his avowal testimony at trial was significant. Indeed, “[a] generalized statement

outlining a broad subject matter about which an expert may testify does not

sufficiently apprise the other party of the information needed to prepare for trial as

contemplated and mandated by the notice requirements of CR 26.02(4)(a).”

Clephas v. Garlock, Inc., 168 S.W.3d 389, 393-94 (Ky. App. 2004).

                                         -10-
             While Dr. Perazzo cites us to the case Oliphant v. Ries, 568 S.W.3d
336 (Ky. 2019), we do not find such case to be applicable to the one sub judice. In

Oliphant, the applicable expert had been extensively deposed twice, at which time

his opinion had been revealed. Id. at 343-44. The Court stated:

             Simply put, requiring a party to supplement an expert
             witness disclosure every time an expert is deposed in
             discovery would be a waste of the party’s time and
             resources. Depositions serve the same function as CR
             26.02 and 26.05 — to reveal evidence, information and
             opinions that may be used at trial and they are universally
             recognized as the most effective, detailed method of
             obtaining an understanding of an opponent’s proof.
Id. at 345. The foregoing situation is not present in this case.

             As a result, although one may have read and interpreted the expert

disclosure in a different or more expansive manner, we cannot say that the trial

court’s interpretation was arbitrary or unreasonable. Because Dr. Perazzo failed to

fully supplement Dr. McCormick’s prior expert disclosures, the trial court acted

within its discretion in excluding the evidence. See Kemper v. Gordon, 272
S.W.3d 146, 155 (Ky. 2008).

             Further, even if we found that Dr. McCormick’s expert disclosure was

adequate, the Kentucky Supreme Court has held that “the person requesting

exclusion of testimony must show prejudice.” Equitania Ins. Co. v. Slone &

Garrett, P.S.C., 191 S.W.3d 552, 556 (Ky. 2006). We can find no prejudice here,

as Dr. Perazzo provided her own causation expert, Dr. Close. The jury heard Dr.

                                         -11-
Close opine that Robbins would have undergone the exact same procedure had she

been diagnosed by Dr. Perazzo on September 15, 2010 that she ultimately

underwent. Dr. Close further opined that, even if Dr. Perazzo had diagnosed

Robbins on September 15, 2010, the risk of death or permanent disability resulting

from the surgery would be “above fifty percent.” Dr. Close also testified that at the

time of the surgery on September 27, 2010, the risk of neurological disability from

such surgery was “well above fifty percent, one could argue it’s a hundred

percent.” Therefore, the jury heard causation expert testimony beneficial to Dr.

Perazzo’s position, and we find no prejudice.

             c. The Trial Court’s Exclusion of Evidence of Drug and Alcohol

                Use

             Dr. Perazzo next argues that the trial court erred when it excluded

certain evidence of Robbins’ alleged drug and alcohol use. Dr. Perazzo argues that

evidence of drug and alcohol abuse went to the causation of Robbins’ injuries, as

cocaine adversely affected SAH treatment and recovery. Dr. Perazzo also

contends that such evidence could also affect the applicable standard of care in

terms of the diagnostic approach. On the other hand, Robbins argues that the

evidence was irrelevant under the definition provided by KRE 401 and therefore

inadmissible under KRE 402.

                                        -12-
             KRE 401 defines “relevant evidence” as “evidence having any

tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the

determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be

without the evidence.” KRE 402 states that “[e]vidence which is not relevant is

not admissible.” Further, “[a]lthough relevant, evidence may be excluded if its

probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of undue prejudice,

confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue

delay, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” KRE 403.

             Dr. Perazzo offered as evidence of Robbins’ alleged drug and alcohol

use a positive test for cocaine on a 2007 drug screen at St. Luke Hospital for acute

alcohol intoxication. Further, Dr. Perazzo offered arrest records from the summer

of 2010 after police found cocaine at Robbins’ boyfriend’s home. The resulting

charges were ultimately dismissed against Robbins, however, as there was no

evidence that Robbins had any connection to the substances. Dr. Perazzo also

shared a Facebook message in the month prior to Robbins’ aneurysm in which her

father tells Robbins to “get your life together,” get out of that “drug den,” that

Robbins “doesn’t have to do drugs to be accepted,” and does not “need this

scumbag for drugs.” Dr. Perazzo also offered post-surgery hospital forms noting

Robbins’ cocaine and alcohol abuse history and one record stating that Robbins

                                         -13-
only quit using marijuana and cocaine on September 27, 2010, the day of her first

surgery.

             Alternatively, Dr. Perazzo produced no physical evidence that

Robbins was under the influence of drugs or alcohol at the time of, or anytime

near, her initial trip to the ER on September 15, 2010. It is also undisputed that

twelve days later, on September 27, 2010, when Robbins was re-admitted for

surgery, a toxicology screen confirmed that she did not have drugs or metabolites

in her system.

             The trial court entered a series of orders that excluded all evidence

regarding Robbins’ drug or alcohol abuse. The trial court stated the following:

             The court does not find any evidence suggesting
             profound, chronic, prolonged use of illegal substances by
             plaintiff in or near September 2010. Nor does the court
             see any expert testimony supporting any relevance of the
             use of unspecified substances to plaintiff’s damages; Dr.
             Janiak’s statement that the use of cocaine and
             methamphetamine is a risk factor for subarachnoid
             hemorrhage, even if it could be supported by evidence of
             plaintiff using such substances, only goes to the cause of
             plaintiff’s condition and not the treatment thereof which
             is the issue before the court. Dr. Perazzo’s own
             testimony that knowing the patient had risk factors, or
             even a known aneurysm, would not have changed her
             diagnosis given the clinical presentation, seems to limit
             the relevance of evidence of drug use.

             If there is expert testimony that would change the
             protocol or the standard of care for a patient with either
             remote or recent drug use, or that is relevant to the theory
             that such would have made treatment on September 15

                                         -14-
             riskier or affected plaintiff’s ultimate recovery, please
             point that out to me as soon as possible so that the court
             can review that in considering the motions.

The trial court ultimately prohibited Dr. Perazzo or Dr. Doerger from introducing

at trial “any comment, mention, suggestion, argument or statement regarding

Melanie Robbins’ past use of any form of drug or consumption of alcohol.”

             We do not believe the trial court abused its discretion in excluding

evidence of Robbins’ alleged drug and alcohol use. When looking at the standard

of care, Dr. Perazzo stated that knowledge of Robbins’ prior alcohol or drug abuse

would not have changed how she diagnosed or treated Robbins:

             The Court: To the extent that you’re able to say that
             [Robbins’] behavior would have caused this, which is the
             question to you.

             Dr. Perazzo: Okay, yes.

             The Court: Would that have made you react any
             differently?

             Dr. Perazzo: Not to this headache.

Further, a panel of this Court has stated that “[p]ersons providing medical

treatment . . . should expect to treat not only patients who fall ill or are injured

through no fault of their own, but also those whose own neglect or intentional

conduct has placed them in the precarious position of requiring medical treatment.”

Pauly v. Chang, 498 S.W.3d 394, 418 (Ky. App. 2015) (internal quotation marks

omitted).

                                          -15-
             As to whether the alleged drug and alcohol use provided a cause for

the ultimate injury, the trial court noted the experts produced by the defendants

were basing opinions on “ifs,” and that the only other evidence primarily consisted

of hearsay statements from Facebook messages, a dismissed criminal charge, and a

positive cocaine test three years prior. Moreover, all of Dr. Perazzo’s experts

concerning Robbins’ alleged drug and alcohol use qualified their opinions with the

following factual requirements in order for the standard of care to change, for the

evidence to be relevant as to causation, or for Robbins to have contributed to her

injuries: (1) that Robbins used cocaine within 48-72 hours before the onset of her

headache; (2) that after she suffered the headache she continued to use cocaine and

it worsened her headache; or (3) that she used cocaine weekly for six months or

more. The trial court determined that there was no relevant evidence of the

foregoing, and we find no abuse of its discretion.

             d. Cumulative Error

             Finally, Dr. Perazzo argues that the cumulative error doctrine warrants

a new trial based on four alleged trial errors. The doctrine protects a criminal

defendant’s right to a fair trial, and has been described by the Kentucky Supreme

Court as “the doctrine under which multiple errors, although harmless individually,

may be deemed reversible if their cumulative effect is to render the trial

fundamentally unfair.” Brown v. Commonwealth, 313 S.W.3d 577, 631 (Ky.

                                        -16-
2010). “We have found cumulative error only where the individual errors were

themselves substantial, bordering, at least, on the prejudicial.” Id. (citation

omitted).

             Dr. Perazzo provides a short recitation of four claimed errors at the

end of her brief, which does not provide us with enough substance to analyze such

alleged errors under the cumulative error doctrine. Further, as none of the

individual issues discussed above resulted in a finding of error by the trial court,

we do not find reversible cumulative error in this case.

                                   CONCLUSION

             For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Kenton Circuit Court.

             ALL CONCUR.

                                         -17-
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANTS:      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

Virginia Hamilton Snell     Jim Leventhal
Deborah H. Patterson        Benjamin Sachs
Sean G. Williamson          Denver, Colorado
Louisville, Kentucky
                            Robert E. Sanders
David C. Calderhead         Covington, Kentucky
Joshua F. DeBra
Loveland, Ohio              Delana S. Sanders
                            Crescent Springs, Kentucky

                            Kevin C. Burke
                            Jamie K. Neal
                            Louisville, Kentucky

                          -18-