Opinion
No. 21 MAP 2021
12-22-2021
Matthew Walker Rappleye, Robert A. Graci, Jennifer Susan Snyder, Lawrence F. Stengel, Saxton & Stump LLC, Lancaster, PA, for Appellants Joseph M. Melillo, Navitsky Olson & Wisneski LLP, Harrisburg, PA, for Appellee Barbara Axelrod, The Beasley Firm, LLC, Philadelphia, PA, for Amicus Curiae Pennsylvania Association for Justice Maureen Murphy McBride, Lamb Mcerlane PC, James C. Sargent, Jr., West Chester, PA, for Amici Curiae The American Medical Association, The Pennsylvania Medical Society Clifford Alan Rieders, Rieders, Travis, Humphrey, Waters & Dohrmann, Williamsport, PA, for Amicus Curiae North Central Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association
Matthew Walker Rappleye, Robert A. Graci, Jennifer Susan Snyder, Lawrence F. Stengel, Saxton & Stump LLC, Lancaster, PA, for Appellants
Joseph M. Melillo, Navitsky Olson & Wisneski LLP, Harrisburg, PA, for Appellee
Barbara Axelrod, The Beasley Firm, LLC, Philadelphia, PA, for Amicus Curiae Pennsylvania Association for Justice
Maureen Murphy McBride, Lamb Mcerlane PC, James C. Sargent, Jr., West Chester, PA, for Amici Curiae The American Medical Association, The Pennsylvania Medical Society
Clifford Alan Rieders, Rieders, Travis, Humphrey, Waters & Dohrmann, Williamsport, PA, for Amicus Curiae North Central Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association
BAER, C.J., SAYLOR, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.
OPINION
JUSTICE WECHT "The plaintiff was walking in a public street past the defendant's shop when a barrel of flour fell upon him from a window above the shop, and seriously injured him." So begins a case familiar to virtually any lawyer who didn't sleep through first-year torts. Neither any of the several witnesses nor the plaintiff could attest to the events immediately preceding the barrel's fall. The defendant argued that there was no evidence of negligence to support a jury verdict, indeed no evidence that the defendant or his agents were present at the time of the event, and an Assessor agreed, dismissing the case.
Byrne v. Boadle , 159 Eng. Rep. 299, 299 (Exchequer 1863), available at http://www.commonlii.org/uk/cases/EngR/1863/1012.pdf (last visited Dec. 1, 2021).
But a panel of judges of the Court of Exchequer felt otherwise. Acknowledging the dearth of "affirmative evidence" that the defendant or his agents were directly responsible for losing control of the barrel, the court observed that courts previously had held "that the mere fact of the accident having occurred is evidence of negligence, as, for instance," when two trains managed by the same company collide. In such a case, the accident alone establishes negligence; responsibility presumably lies only with the company that controlled both trains.
Id. at 300.
The court concluded that the plaintiff should have prevailed by virtue of "presumptive negligence," what we call a rebuttable presumption, shifting the burden to the defendant to produce exculpatory evidence. While the court emphasized that there are accidents from which no presumption of negligence should arise, it concluded that, for want of contrary defense evidence, the barrel could not have rolled out of the barn but for negligence, and it would be unjust to deny relief due to a lack of specific proof.
Id.
The case is famous because it contains the earliest reference to the phrase "res ipsa loquitur " in this connection, which we now use in our law to describe a similar doctrine. The literal translation is "the thing itself speaks ," but it is more commonly rendered in American law as "the thing speaks for itself ."
Id . ("There are certain cases of which it may be said res ipsa loquitur , and this seems one of them."). For convenience, we sometimes refer to res ipsa loquitur as "the Doctrine" and the attendant res ipsa loquitur jury instruction as "the Instruction."
See, e.g. , Pepin v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. , 542 F. Supp.2d 107, 112 (D. Me. 2008). Maine also offers "the accident spells negligence." Pratt v. Freese's, Inc. , --- Me. ––––, 438 A.2d 901, 903 (1981). In Toogood v. Owen J. Rogal, D.D.S., P.C. , we called this a novel "coinage" by the Byrne Court. 573 Pa. 245, 824 A.2d 1140, 1145 (2003) (plurality). But in fact, the phrase was used decades earlier by this Court (and surely others), albeit in a case having nothing to do with negligence. See , e.g. , Porter v. Turner , 3 Serg. & Rawle 108, 115 (Pa. 1817).
In Pennsylvania, we have described res ipsa loquitur as a discrete category of "circumstantial evidence," which may suffice to establish negligence where more specific evidence of the events surrounding the injury eludes even diligent investigation. And while the historical underpinnings of the Doctrine just entailed events that a lay person without assistance might conclude by an exercise of common sense could not occur absent negligence—the barrel rolling out of a barn, two trains colliding on a track managed by the same company—Pennsylvania now recognizes its application in contexts that exceed the unassisted grasp of lay jurors, cases involving complex facts and theories of liability. Among these we find medical malpractice cases, to which we extended the doctrine forty years ago.
See Gilbert v. Korvette, Inc. , 457 Pa. 602, 327 A.2d 94, 99 (1974) ("Res ipsa loquitur is neither a rule of procedure nor one of substantive tort law. It is only a shorthand expression for circumstantial proof of negligence—a rule of evidence.").
See Quinby v. Plumsteadville Family Practice, Inc. , 589 Pa. 183, 907 A.2d 1061, 1072 (2006) (noting our first approval of res ipsa loquitur in a medical malpractice case in Jones v. Harrisburg Polyclinic Hospital , 496 Pa. 465, 437 A.2d 1134, 1137 (1981) ).
The application of the Doctrine to medical malpractice cases by now is settled. We granted review in this case to clarify whether resort to the Doctrine is precluded when the plaintiff has introduced enough "direct" evidence that the Doctrine is not the only avenue to a finding of liability—whether, in short, the two approaches to satisfying the plaintiff's evidentiary burden are mutually exclusive. As it has in several earlier cases, the Superior Court held that they are not exclusive. We affirm.
I. The Surgery, the Trial Evidence, and the Jury Charge.
On May 17, 2012, Plaintiff-Appellee H. Elizabeth Lageman presented at Defendant-Appellant York Hospital with abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting. Lageman had a small bowel obstruction secondary to a large ventral hernia. Two days later, a general surgeon performed an emergency exploratory laparotomy. Defendant-Appellant John Zepp, IV, D.O., was the attending anesthesiologist.
Unless indicated otherwise, what follows draws exclusively from Zepp's testimony.
As a corollary of their responsibility for administering anesthesia and ensuring that the patient remains in the intended physical state, anesthesiologists carefully monitor the patient's vital signs. Anesthesiologists have at their disposal various methods of monitoring the relevant parameters, and a limited ability to manipulate certain indicators.
Such indicators include heart rate, blood pressure, respiration rate, and hydration.
To monitor Lageman's condition, Zepp employed a central venous pressure line ("CVP"), which he attempted to insert into the internal jugular vein, located near the internal (or "common") carotid artery. From his insertion point, the carotid lay directly behind Lageman's jugular.
The arrangement of jugular vein and carotid artery varies from patient to patient, with Lageman's anatomy reflecting that of a minority of patients.
Zepp's general practice in placing such a line involves the following steps. First, he inserts a small needle, monitoring its movement with dynamic, cross-axis ultrasound, which provides a two-dimensional, longitudinal view of the vein and the artery and can visualize the inserted needle. Once he confirms by ultrasound (to the extent possible) the needle's placement in the vein, Zepp uses the needle to thread a small catheter to "pull up" blood from the insertion site. This is another confirmatory step: if the needle has been placed in the vein, the level of the blood visible in the tube will stabilize. But if it has been mistakenly placed in the artery, the pressurization in that vessel will cause the blood in the tube to fluctuate and rise significantly. The blood from each vessel also differs in color, arterial blood a brighter red than venous blood, which appears darker. This method is referred to as manometry. Once placement is confirmed, Zepp threads a dilator into the vein, which makes the hole at the insertion site wider to accommodate the CVP, which he then inserts into the vein.
Zepp acknowledged that "[t]here are inherent problems with the use of the ultrasound sometimes making it challenging to view the tip of the needle." Notes of Testimony, 1/3-8/2018, at 174. The notes of testimony, spanning five days of trial, are continuously paginated. Moving forward, we cite the transcript as "N.T."
Zepp's expert Mark E. Hudson, M.D., testified that "[m]anometry is probably the most important step in terms of confirming that that catheter is in the vein." Id . at 508.
In this case, the placement failed. Zepp testified that he completed the above steps and confirmed to his satisfaction that he had placed the catheter into the vein, as intended. But when he inserted the CVP, he passed it through the far wall of the vein and into the right common carotid artery behind. The catheter ultimately penetrated approximately eighteen centimeters into the artery, against the pressurized arterial blood flow en route to Lageman's brain, perhaps as deep as the aortic arch, a structure attached to the top of the heart. Zepp did not realize his error at first and secured the placement by sewing the CVP into place.
Id . at 235 ("If you put a catheter from here 7 inches down into somebody's neck, it goes into the aortic arch or actually into the heart ....").
With the CVP secured, Zepp conducted another test to determine the waveform of the pressure in the vessel, "a final confirmation" of placement. The reading indicated arterial rather than venous placement. Alerted to his error, Zepp called for a vascular surgeon to address the misplacement and repair any damage. He also asked the general surgeon to place a catheter in a vein in Lageman's groin to enable proper monitoring, and the surgery continued.
Id . at 182.
After the procedure, Lageman had little or no movement in her left-side extremities. She was diagnosed with one or more strokes in the distribution of the right internal carotid artery to the right middle cerebral artery.
Zepp acknowledged that arterial cannulation has been associated with stroke, because of the potential penetration of air, fluids, or medications entering the artery, or due to the creation of a blood clot or the dislodgment of arterial plaque which then travels to the brain. But he also testified that, "if it's managed appropriately, we should be able to hopefully avoid those complications." He said that if such were to occur in the right internal carotid artery, any associated strokes would occur in the right distribution to the right middle cerebral artery, as in this case.
A cannula is "[a] hollow tube with a sharp, retractable inner core that can be inserted into a vein, an artery, or another body cavity." Cannula , WebMD , available at http://medicinenet.com/cannula /definition.htm (last visited Oct. 29, 2021). Cannulation is the insertion of a cannula. It is not to be mistaken for a mere "needle stick" to the vessel, which typically does not bring the same elevated risk of complications that cannulation does. N.T. at 526-28.
N.T. at 185.
The jury weighed Zepp's testimony against that of his expert witness, anesthesiologist Mark E. Hudson, M.D., and of Lageman's expert, anesthesiologist James M. Pepple, M.D.
Pepple opined to a reasonable degree of medical certainty that Zepp's actions fell below the applicable standard of care. Asked "[i]f the standard of care has been properly observed, that all the steps have not only been taken, but they were taken correctly and things were seen and evaluated correctly, is it possible that this artery would have been cannulated to this degree," he answered "No."
Id . at 238.
Pepple further testified that Zepp's reliance upon a short-axis ultrasound method of monitoring the needle's placement, or at least the manner in which he used it, was inconsistent with the standard of care because it did not enable him to visualize the tip of the needle, leaving him blind to the fact that the needle passed through the vein and entered the artery. Pepple also questioned Zepp's assertion that he relied upon manometry to confirm the needle's placement because Zepp made no note to that effect in the chart. In Pepple's view, the difference in what manometry would show between venous and arterial placement would be too striking to miss. This reinforced his opinion by suggesting that whether manometry was performed or not, either its non-performance or the poor quality of its performance fell below the standard of care.
Zepp did not clearly attest to performing manometry in locating Lageman's CVP, testifying rather that it was his standard practice to do so. He also indicated that he "document[s] by exception," implying that manometry is among standard operating procedures from which he would only document a departure. Id . at 177; see also id. at 312 (Zepp testifying that there is not "ever a time that [he doesn't] follow each and every one of the steps that [his testimony has] outlined").
Zepp's attorney questioned Pepple about guidelines provided by the American Society of Anesthesiologists ("ASA"). Pepple noted that the ASA guidelines' "use cannot guarantee any specific outcome," a proposition Zepp argues should be treated as a self-defeating concession that arterial cannulation can happen in the absence of negligence. Lageman's attorney asked Pepple to situate the putative admission in its proper context, a prefatory caveat that appears in the Guidelines: "[P]ractice guidelines developed by [the ASA] are not intended as standards or absolute requirements, and their use cannot guarantee any specific outcome. ... Practice guidelines are subject to revision as warranted by evolution of medical knowledge, technology, and practice. They provide basic recommendations ...."
Id . at 282; see id . at 293, 531 (same).
Id . at 282 (reading the Guidelines). Even taken at face value, such a concession was compatible with such events rising from negligence. See id . at 241 (Lageman's attorney at side bar: "The problem is, when you talk about a known complication, it doesn't tell you whether it's negligently caused or not negligently caused, which means that you can't just say, hey, there are known complications and this happens.").
Pepple testified to the problems associated with arterial placement of a catheter:
A. [I]f you put a large catheter in the artery, you can get a hematoma, which would be just ... blood leaking out and being in that area. You could potentially get an infection from that.
But you could also get some much more serious complications .... [Y]ou can get embolic phenomenon [sic ] or obstructive phenomenon [sic ] which can cause a stroke. ...
Q. Can you explain what an embolic phenomenon is?
A. So when—whenever you put a foreign body in somebody, the body's response to it is generally to try to get rid of it, or if you are in a blood vessel, to start clotting off, okay, so ... if you put a catheter in a vein, you can get what you might have heard of as thrombophlebitis.
* * * *
And what happens is if you do it in the neck, particularly into the common carotid ... the carotid blood vessel feeds the brain, and the internal carotid vessel goes to what's called your middle cerebral artery, and that covers the mid-part of your brain, ... and it can cause a stroke ....
Id . at 222-23.
Pepple testified that cannulating the artery increased the risk of stroke "exponentially," and, taken collectively, there was no evidence of another cause in this case. To the contrary, he described how a needle inserted deeply into "a great vessel" could create turbulence causing the formation of "small clots," and that the formation of such clots would be consistent with the "little tiny strokes" that Lageman suffered "in different areas." Pepple further testified that the neurologists investigating the cause of Lageman's strokes considered another possible explanation for the stroke to ensure that she did not suffer from a condition that might lead to a recurrence. Specifically, they searched the left atrium of the heart for blood clots and found "no suggestion of embolic phenomena from the heart."
Id . at 232.
Id . at 235-36.
Id . at 236-37.
Hudson told a different story. Right at the top, Hudson testified to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty that Zepp's performance of the CVP placement satisfied the standard of care and was not negligent. Relatedly, he testified that the correct use of dynamic cross-axis ultrasound in needle placement is the state of the art but does not eliminate the risk of arterial cannulation.
Id . at 502-03; see id . at 512-13 ("In my opinion, based on Dr. Zepp's description of his techniques for placement of central venous catheters, he took the recommended steps to limit the risk of inadvertent arterial cannulation, and his technique is consistent with the standard of care.").
Id . at 504.
Hudson also testified that Pepple overstated the relative value of long-axis ultrasound over short-axis ultrasound to direct needle placement, noting that "there's really no compelling medical evidence that suggests that one is better than the other to ... prevent[ ] carotid artery cannulation," adding that the "vast majority" of practitioners favor short-axis ultrasound. Moreover, the ASA Guidelines make reference only to short-axis ultrasound.
Id . at 511.
Hudson also was questioned about the ASA guidelines. From those guidelines, Lageman's attorney excerpted, and inquired as to, the following observation:
Q. ... The consultants and ASA members strongly agree that before insertion of a dilator or large bore catheter—and that would be the triple lumen catheter in this case, correct?"
A. Yes.
Q. Large bore catheter over a wire, venous access should be confirmed for the catheter or thin wall needle that accesses the vein. The Task Force believes that blood color or absence of pulsatile flow [i.e. , as determined by manometry] should not be relied on to confirm venous access.
Would you agree with that?
A. I agree.
Id . at 535.
Hudson then acknowledged that Zepp did not confirm the presence of the wire in the vein by ultrasound.
See id. at 538-39 (reviewing Hudson's quotation of another article that "[u]ltrasound guidance and pressure measurement is best seen as complementary"; the article also noted that "[b]ecause of the possible difficulty with reliably imaging the tip of the needle in the vein, imaging the guidewire in the vein with ultrasound before placing a large bored catheter has been recommended").
Once the parties had introduced their evidence and their closing arguments, the court charged the jury. Our focus is upon the court's determination that Lageman was not entitled to a jury charge on res ipsa loquitur . Because the trial court declined, there is no instruction to review. But the court did charge the jury on the distinction between direct and circumstantial evidence, and on the jury's prerogative to base its verdict in whole or in part on the latter:
[E]vidence can be what we call direct evidence, and direct evidence is something that a witness generally saw or did that they can testify to themselves.
Evidence can also be circumstantial evidence. Circumstantial evidence is evidence of facts from which you can infer the existence of other facts.
* * * *
Circumstantial evidence ... is just as valid as any other type of evidence that can be presented during the course of the trial. It is something for you to consider when you consider the evidence and when you go back to deliberate on a verdict.
Id . at 621-23.
So charged, the jury retired. The jury then returned a defense verdict, answering "no" to whether Zepp's conduct "fell below the applicable standards of medical care." Lageman appealed.
Id . at 649.
II. Pennsylvania's Res Ipsa Loquitur Doctrine.
A. This Court's Cases.
As best we can tell, the phrase "res ipsa loquitur " first appeared in this Court's jurisprudence in our 1817 decision in Porter , supra , but there it was invoked in an estate case. Then, we described "res ipsa loquitur " as "the most unerring species of evidence," characterizing it as "internal evidence," and counterposing it against "external evidence," which we described as "positive proof" and now call "direct evidence."
Porter , 3 Serg. & Rawle at 115.
It appears that "res ipsa loquitur " first appeared in a Pennsylvania tort case in Shafer v. Lacock . There, echoing Byrne , we noted that "[t]here are cases in which a fair presumption or inference of negligence arises from the circumstances under which the injury occurred." The facts also resembled Byrne 's in a sense: roofers were sued after sparks from a firepot they were using ignited a roof fire.
168 Pa. 497, 32 A. 44 (1895).
Id . at 46.
Pennsylvania courts' application of the doctrine initially was limited, but early reservations and strictures gave way over time to broader application. By now, the scope of the Doctrine's application has evolved with modern life and tort law, itself, advancing in step with (if, in the law's way, a step behind) legal, technological, and social developments.
We extended the Doctrine to medical malpractice claims in 1981, in Jones , supra . There, the plaintiff underwent several gynecological surgeries performed consecutively by two surgeons. Each surgery required the plaintiff to lie in a different position. Throughout, one of the plaintiff's arms remained on a board to facilitate an IV line. When the plaintiff awoke, she felt severe pain in her neck, shoulder, and arm, symptoms of what later was diagnosed as suprascapular nerve palsy caused by her positioning during the surgery.
The plaintiff filed a malpractice claim against the first surgeon based upon a res ipsa loquitur theory. The jury returned a plaintiff's verdict. The Superior Court found res ipsa loquitur inapt, reversed, and granted a new trial. The plaintiff then asked this Court to review whether the Doctrine could apply in a medical malpractice action.
We held that it could. We noted that, in adopting Section 328D of the Restatement (Second) of Torts in Gilbert , we cast aside the earlier tripartite account of the doctrine, "which combined substantive and procedural concerns with the evidentiary question of the propriety of inferring negligence from the particular circumstances." In keeping with the Restatement, the Jones Court held that the Doctrine implicates only evidentiary concerns.
Section 328D of the Restatement provides as follows:
(1) It may be inferred that harm suffered by the plaintiff is caused by negligence of the defendant when:
(a) the event is of a kind which ordinarily does not occur in the absence of negligence;
(b) other responsible causes, including the conduct of the plaintiff and third persons, are sufficiently eliminated by the evidence; and
(c) the indicated negligence is within the scope of the defendant's duty to the plaintiff.
(2) It is the function of the court to determine whether the inference may reasonably be drawn by the jury, or whether it must necessarily be drawn.
(3) It is the function of the jury to determine whether the inference is to be drawn in any case where different conclusions may reasonably be reached.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D.
Jones , 437 A.2d at 1137 (citing Gilbert , 327 A.2d at 99 ). The Gilbert Court explained that, before the Restatement's unitary, circumstantial-evidence account of res ipsa loquitur , what stood in its place was a mélange of three companion doctrines—"res ipsa loquitur , exclusive control, and an untitled evidentiary rule of simple circumstantial evidence"—which collectively "obscured ‘a simple matter of circumstantial evidence.’ " Gilbert , 327 A.2d at 98 & n. 19 (quoting W. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts § 40, at 231 (1971)).
Section 328D is fashioned to reach all instances where negligence may properly be inferred and its applicability is not necessarily precluded because the negligence relates to a medical procedure. The section establishes criteria for determining circumstances wherein the evidentiary rule of res ipsa loquitur may become operative in providing the inference of negligence. It is premised on a recognition that certain factual situations demand such an inference.
* * * *
[S]ection 328D provides two avenues to avoid the production of direct medical evidence of the facts establishing liability: one being the reliance upon common lay knowledge that the event would not have occurred without negligence, and the second, the reliance upon medical knowledge that the event would not have occurred without negligence.
Jones , 437 A.2d at 1138.
Eschewing courts' past reluctance to allow "circumstantial proof in medical malpractice cases where the nature of the evidence provides the requisite reliability of the inference sought to be drawn," the Court concluded that, "[w]hen common[-]law knowledge or medical evidence can be established that the event would not ordinarily occur without negligence, there is no basis for refusing to permit a jury to draw such an inference."
Id .
Next came Hightower-Warren v. Silk. There, a routine medical examination of the plaintiff revealed an enlarged thyroid lobe. During a thyroidectomy, the laryngeal nerve, which is critical to the vocal cords, must be protected. During (or after) her procedure, plaintiff suffered a paralyzed vocal cord and sued the physician. The trial court rejected the videotaped testimony of the plaintiff's expert on the basis that it was too speculative as to both the standard of care and causation, entered a non-suit, and denied the plaintiff's post-trial motion seeking to proceed to a jury on res ipsa loquitur . The Superior Court affirmed, concluded that the Doctrine was not available to the plaintiff because the expert's testimony "failed to indicate that [her] injury would not have occurred absent negligence or that other responsible causes had been eliminated."
548 Pa. 459, 698 A.2d 52 (1997).
Id . at 54 ; see Restatement (Second) of Torts §§ 328D(1)(a), (b).
This Court reversed. We discussed favorably and at length the Superior Court's contrary decision in Sedlitsky v. Pareso , another case involving thyroid surgery gone awry in much the same way. There, the Superior Court found the expert testimony sufficient to support instructing the jury on res ipsa loquitur , identifying aspects of the plaintiff's expert's testimony that enabled a jury to infer the presence of the two relevant factors.
400 Pa.Super. 1, 582 A.2d 1314 (1990).
The plaintiff's expert in Hightower-Warren conceded that the injury can occur without negligence, but only under dissimilar circumstances. The expert also opined that all other possible causes could be excluded. This Court concluded that the expert testimony was sufficient to support the Instruction. Subsequent cases both reinforced and muddled Jones and Hightower-Warren . In Toogood , for example, this Court failed to achieve a substantive consensus, although a majority supported the result. There, the trial court refused to allow the plaintiff's expert to participate in the trial due to timeliness issues. And of the individuals present during the procedure only the plaintiff remained; the nurse anesthetist and treating physician died before trial. Res ipsa loquitur was plaintiff's only recourse. The trial court allowed the plaintiff to proceed under the Doctrine. The jury returned a plaintiff's verdict, and the Superior Court affirmed.
See 573 Pa. 245, 824 A.2d 1140. The lead opinion had the full support of only three of six participating Justices. Justices Castille and Saylor concurred in the result. Justice Nigro dissented. Chief Justice Zappala did not participate.
This Court reversed. First, a plurality of the Court reaffirmed that res ipsa loquitur is nothing more than a rule of circumstantial evidence.
The gist of res ipsa loquitur is the inference, or process of reasoning by which the conclusion is reached. This must be based upon the evidence given, together with a sufficient background of human experience to justify the conclusion. ... This theory relieves the plaintiff of having to prove causation directly.
Id . at 1146 (cleaned up).
The plurality also noted a limiting consideration: "medicine is not an exact science, ... the human body is not susceptible to precise understanding, ... the care required of a medical professional is the degree of learning and skill common in his profession, and ... even with the greatest of care, untoward results do occur in medical and surgical procedures." Courts long have taken caution lest they grant so much latitude to plaintiffs that doctors became guarantors of their treatments.
Id . at 1146-47.
See generally Donaldson v. Maffucci , 397 Pa. 548, 156 A.2d 835, 838 (1959) ("[A] physician or surgeon is neither a warrantor of a cure nor a guarantor of the result of his treatment.").
Critically to this dispute, the plurality also observed that, "[o]riginally, a plaintiff could not employ a res ipsa loquitur instruction if the plaintiff had evidence regarding the cause of the accident ." Instead, the doctrine "was reserved for obvious cases in which lay jurors could apply their own knowledge and common sense to establish the cause of the injury and deduce an inference of negligence."
Toogood , 824 A.2d at 1147 (emphasis added).
Id .
Moreover, in Jones we embraced Comment (d) to Section 328D:
In the usual case the basis of past experience from which this conclusion may be drawn is common to the community, and is a matter of general knowledge .... It may, however, be supplied by the evidence of the parties; and expert testimony that such an event usually does not occur without negligence may afford a sufficient basis for the inference. Such testimony may be essential to the plaintiff's case where, as for example in some actions for medical malpractice, there is no fund of common knowledge which may permit laymen reasonably to draw the conclusion. On the other hand there are other kinds of medical malpractice, as where a sponge is left in the plaintiff's abdomen after an operation, where no expert is needed to tell the jury that such events do not usually
occur in the absence of negligence.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D, cmt. d.
The plurality deemed res ipsa loquitur "especially obvious in the situation where a patient submits himself or herself to the care and custody of doctors and nurses, is rendered unconscious, and receives some injury from instrumentalities used or procedures employed in his or her treatment." But the plurality added case-specific caveats—that the plaintiff had presented standard-of-care evidence, and res ipsa loquitur was required only as to causation.
Toogood , 824 A.2d at 1148 (quoting Jones , 437 A.2d at 1139 ).
This highlights a question as to what res ipsa loquitur encompasses, one complicated by the fact that we, like the Restatement, persistently refer to the doctrine as entitling the jury to infer negligence . We acknowledged this difficulty later in Quinby :
[I]t is apparent that res ipsa loquitur provides no assistance to a plaintiff's obligation to demonstrate a defendant's duty, that a breach of that duty was a substantial factor in causing plaintiff harm, or that such harm resulted in actual damages. However, res ipsa loquitur does aid a plaintiff in proving a breach of duty. While res ipsa loquitur is useful in this limited regard, case law universally refers to res ipsa loquitur as raising an inference of "negligence" rather than an inference of "breach of duty."
Quinby , 907 A.2d at 1071 n.15. With due respect to our comment in Quinby , it is plain from the case law—now including this case—that proof of causation, too, may benefit from the Doctrine, just as suggested in Toogood and exemplified in numerous other cases.
Our subsequent decision in Quinby completed the loose quartet that began with Jones . In Quinby , a quadriplegic fell from an examination table while unattended after surgery and later died, allegedly of injuries sustained in the fall. The decedent, who died before trial, testified that he did not know why he fell, merely that he felt his body roll toward and over the edge of the table. Neither the defendants nor anyone else witnessed the fall, and the parties disputed the position in which the defendant had been left on the table.
Decedent testified in a discovery deposition and in a de bene esse deposition, which is taken when a witness is not expected to be available at trial. See Quinby , 907 A.2d at 1067 & n.7.
The plaintiff presented an expert witness who testified "that he was unaware of how, absent extrinsic forces not present in this situation, a quadriplegic could fall from an examination table without there being a breach of the requisite standard of care." He testified that the decedent should not have been left unattended and/or should have been secured with straps or side rails. He further opined that how the decedent had been left positioned did not affect his opinion. Conversely, the defendants' expert testified that leaving a quadriplegic patient on his back in the center of the table—as the defendants maintained they did—was consistent with the standard of care.
Id . at 1067.
The plaintiff asked the court to instruct the jury on res ipsa loquitur , and the court refused, finding that the plaintiff's evidence did not establish that the decedent's fall was something that typically does not occur without negligence and failed wholly to exclude other possible causes, including the decedent's own actions. The jury rendered a defense verdict. The Superior Court reversed, rejecting the trial court's assessment of the evidence. It also granted the plaintiff judgment of negligence notwithstanding the verdict and remanded for a trial on damages. Defendants appealed.
With regard to the suitability of the Instruction, we agreed with the Superior Court that the plaintiff had introduced a prima facie case as to each of the Restatement's three factors. As to the first, we observed that the defendants were obligated to secure the plaintiff on the table in a way that would ensure he did not fall. Regardless of whether he was positioned on his side or his back, we opined, "there is no factual issue or possible dispute that Decedent's fall resulted from something other than Defendants' negligence. ... [I]n the absence of negligence, a quadriplegic patient ... could not fall off an examination table." As to other responsible causes, we deemed it "undisputed that there is no explanation for Decedent's fall beyond Defendants' negligence. No one else entered the examination room; the table did not break; nothing fell on or near it; there was no seismic disturbance in the area, etc." Accordingly, the plaintiff had been entitled to the Instruction.
Id . at 1072.
Id . at 1073.
B. The Superior Court's "Grey Zone."
Superior Court case law also has accreted over time. In paying respect to this Court's earlier limitations while granting the Instruction in tort cases similar to the case before us, the Superior Court has alluded to a "grey zone"—circumstances in which the plaintiff has adduced less than overwhelming direct evidence, but enough to submit to a jury nonetheless—while creating a body of circumstantial evidence warranting the Instruction. Notably, this Court's cases have yet to address the circumstance squarely, save for suggestions and broadly-stated principles.
The term "grey zone" first appeared in this connection in Smith v. City of Chester . In Smith , the plaintiff was injured when a drainage grate collapsed beneath him. Critical to the case was whether the plaintiff's employer's agents had damaged the grate by rolling over it with a pavement roller. While there was testimony that the roller may have come into contact with the side of the grate opposite where it failed, a plaintiff's expert testified that, because the grate sat in a depression, it could not have been contacted by the roller at all, and two operators of the roller testified that it had not done so. The defendant's expert testified that the grate had been weakened by hairline fractures caused by vehicle impacts with the grate.
515 A.2d 303 (Pa. Super. 1986).
The Superior Court concluded that this evidence situated this case in "the grey zone" such that "the jury could reasonably conclude that the accident was more probably than not caused by the negligence of" the defendant. The court explained:
Id . at 306 (internal quotation marks omitted).
While it is true that a res ipsa loquitur instruction is not warranted in the face of clear and indubitable proof of negligence, it is also true that a res ipsa loquitur charge is appropriate where the facts of a case lie somewhere in a grey zone "between the case in which the plaintiff brings no evidence of specific acts of negligence, and therefore must rely on the res ipsa loquitur inference alone, and the case in which the defendant's negligence ‘can be clearly and indubitably ascertained’ from the plaintiff's evidence, Farley v. Phila. Traction Co. , 132 Pa. 58, 18 A. 1090 (1890) [(per curiam )], and therefore the plaintiff need not rely on the res ipsa loquitur inference at all." Hollywood Shop, Inc. v. Pa. Gas & Water Co. , 270 Pa.Super. 245, 411 A.2d 509, 513 (1979).
Id . (citations modified). It is incorrect to ascribe the Farley quotation to our ruling in that case, which said no such thing. Rather, the quoted language appears in the Court of Common Pleas decision this Court affirmed in Farley . See Farley v. Phila. Traction Co. , 6 Pa.C.C. 347, 1889 WL 2977 (Phila. Cty. Feb. 5, 1889). Although we have cited Farley in a handful of cases, most recently (before this case) in 1923, we have never quoted or embraced the "clearly and indubitably ascertained" language that has been attributed to this Court by the Superior Court for decades.
In our affirming opinion, our analysis in its entirety read:
There is nothing in the plaintiff's evidence that would have warranted the jury in rendering a verdict in his favor, and hence there was no error in entering judgment of nonsuit, and refusing to take it off. Without some evidence, tending to prove that the injury complained of resulted from the defendant company's negligence, the plaintiff had no right to ask that his case should be submitted to the jury.
Farley , 18 A. at 1090. That said, we cannot deny that its frequent quotation by the Superior Court has at least given it the imprimatur of that court's authority. In the discussion that follows, we have made adjustments to rectify the misattributions.
Thus, the plaintiff was entitled to the Instruction.
In D'Ardenne v. Strawbridge & Clothier, Inc. , another grey-zone case, the Superior Court approved the Instruction. There, a child's shoe was caught in a department store escalator and he suffered serious injuries. The parents sued the department store and an elevator company for negligent maintenance and strict liability. The trial court refused to give the Instruction because "the [p]laintiffs had clearly sought to prove that the accident was caused by a particular defect in the escalator," as attested to by the plaintiffs' expert witness. The expert identified specific defects in the escalator and explained how they could cause the accident in question. But he also conceded that, because his investigation followed the accident, he could not say with certainty that any of those defects was present at the time of injury.
712 A.2d 318 (Pa. Super. 1998).
Id . at 321 (quoting the trial court opinion).
The Superior Court then examined the difficult question of what quantum of direct evidence will preclude the Instruction:
Courts have experienced many difficulties in determining when a plaintiff has introduced so much specific evidence of negligence that "the precise cause of injury" is "clearly established." Annotation, 33 A.L.R.2d 791, 793. The following illustration ... is helpful in unraveling the difficulty:
Plaintiff is of course bound by his own evidence, but proof of some specific facts does not necessarily exclude inferences of others. When the plaintiff shows that the railway car in which he was a passenger was derailed, there is an inference that the defendant railroad has somehow been negligent. When the plaintiff goes further and shows that the derailment was caused by an open switch, the plaintiff destroys any inference of other causes; but the inference that the defendant has not used proper care in looking after its switches is not destroyed, but considerably strengthened. If the plaintiff goes further still and shows that the switch was left open by a drunken switchman on duty, there is nothing left to infer; and if the plaintiff shows that the switch was thrown by an escaped convict with a grudge against the railroad, the plaintiff has proven himself out of court.
W. Page Keeton, PROSSER & KEETON ON THE LAW OF TORTS § 40, at 260 (5th ed. 1984) (footnotes omitted). Scenario one is the pure res ipsa case; scenario three is the case in which the plaintiff "clearly and indubitably" establishes the specific acts of defendant's negligence; and scenario
four establishes the intentional tort of a third party, thereby removing defendant's alleged negligence from the case. It is scenario two in which the courts most often find themselves.
Id . at 322 (citations modified)
The court rejected the view that the plaintiff who has evidence sufficient to proceed both directly and by circumstantial inference must choose which he prefers. As the Superior Court recognized in Hollywood Shop , where the evidence can sustain a plaintiff's verdict based either upon the Doctrine or upon direct proof, the answer is not to make the plaintiff choose between the two, but to allow him to present a jury with both options. Thus, in Hollywood Shop , the court embraced this comment of the Third Circuit Court of Appeals: "We have before us not only a res ipsa claim but one capable of some specific proof regarding the railroad's alleged negligence. In these peculiar circumstances to force the plaintiff to abandon one of his theories is not only illogical but unfair."
Id . at 512 (quoting Weigand v. Pa. R.R. Co. , 267 F.2d 281, 284 (3d Cir. 1959) ).
To similar effect, the Hollywood Shop court quoted a California Supreme Court case:
If, because of the circumstances of the case and the probabilities, an inference of negligence is raised, the [D]octrine should be applied, it is difficult to see why its application should be denied merely because plaintiff proves specific acts of negligence. There is no reason why such proof should wholly dispel the inference any more than it would in any other case. The plaintiff is penalized for going forward and making as specific a case of negligence as possible. If he endeavors to make such a case he runs the risk of losing the benefits of the [D]octrine to which the circumstances entitle him. Rather than place him in such a position he should be encouraged to prove as much as possible. The end result is not injurious to the defendant.
Id . at 512-13 (quoting Leet v. Union Pac. R.R. Co. , 25 Cal.2d 605, 155 P.2d 42, 51 (1944) ).
The D'Ardenne court noted that an apparent majority of commentators and courts has "accepted the rule that an unsuccessful attempt to prove specific negligence on the defendant's part, or the introduction of evidence of specific negligence not clearly establishing the precise cause of injury, will not deprive the plaintiff of the benefits otherwise available under the [Doctrine]." This is the grey zone; the evidence in D'Ardenne occupied it, and the court determined that the Instruction was warranted despite expert testimony suggesting precise causes, but less than conclusively.
D'Ardenne , 712 A.2d at 324 (quoting Annotation, 33 A.L.R.2d § 2, at 793).
III. The Trial Court Declines to Give a Res Ipsa Loquitur Instruction.
Based upon the duty Zepp undisputedly owed Lageman; Pepple's testimony that, "accepting Zepp's version of how he performed the procedure, ... arterial cannulation [ ] would not ordinarily occur in the absence of negligence"; and Pepple's further testimony that no other plausible causes were present, Lageman contended that she made out a prima facie case under Section 328D and was entitled to the Instruction. The trial court disagreed.
Lageman , 237 A.3d at 1103.
In its opinion pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a), the court distinguished Quinby and Hightower-Warren . With respect to the former case, the court reviewed the evidence we cited to support our determination that the plaintiff had made a threshold res ipsa loquitur showing with respect to his fall from the examination table. Then the court did much the same with Hightower-Warren , noting expert testimony that such injuries do not typically occur without negligence, and no cause but the thyroid procedure could be identified for the vocal cord injury.
The court noted in passing that Quinby was a no-expert-testimony-required case, and distinguishable on that basis. However, as noted above, the parties in Quinby elected to produce and rely upon expert testimony.
The court then reviewed the evidence, highlighting Pepple's alleged equivocations and Hudson's contradictory testimony. In these, the court discerned disputes concerning whether short- or long-axis ultrasound was the state of the art for needle placement, the degree to which Lageman's less common blood vessel arrangement complicated the catheterization, and whether, e.g. , "the use of ultrasound does or does not totally eliminate the risk that a doctor could still puncture or cannulate the artery rather than the vein."
Tr. Ct. Op., 8/1/2018, at 18.
The court concluded:
[T]he evidence in this case did not establish that more likely than not that Plaintiff's injuries were caused by Defendant Zepp's negligence. We find that the experts shared different views on the use of ultrasound to find the vein and artery. Based on these conclusions, we found that the possibilities were evenly divided between negligence and its absence. As a result, we found that Plaintiff did not meet her burden of proof of drawing a permissible conclusion that an arterial cannulation does not ordinarily happen unless someone is negligent.
Id . at 19. Taken at face value, this suggests that diametrically opposed testimony alone would always require a non-suit. This, plainly, is not the law. See Mader v. Duquesne Light Co. , --- Pa. ––––, 241 A.3d 600, 612 (2020) ("Jurors are free to believe all, part, or none of the evidence and to determine the credibility of the witnesses.") (cleaned up).
Notably, these comments conformed to Section 328D's commentary as to when the Instruction is available to a plaintiff.
The Restatement explains:
The plaintiff's burden of proof ... requires him to produce evidence which will permit the conclusion that it is more likely than not that his injuries were caused by the defendant's negligence. Where the probabilities are at best evenly divided between negligence and its absence, it becomes the duty of the court to direct the jury that there is no sufficient proof .
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D, cmt. e (emphasis added). Notably, the Restatement also qualifies this limitation:
The plaintiff need not, however, conclusively exclude all other possible explanations, and so prove his case beyond a reasonable doubt. ... It is enough that the facts proved reasonably permit the conclusion that negligence is the more probable explanation. This conclusion is not for the court to draw, or to refuse to draw, in any case where either conclusion is reasonable; and even though the court would not itself find negligence, it must still leave the question to the jury if reasonable men might do so.
Id . Both the caveat and its limitation jibe with the usual account of the burden of proof, and apply equally to any case reliant upon circumstantial evidence in whatever guise.
IV. The Superior Court Reverses.
Lageman sought a new trial on the basis that the trial court erroneously refused to charge the jury on res ipsa loquitur when she adduced prima facie evidence of all three factors of the Section 328D test. She argued that the quartet of our cases discussed above collectively establishes that the Instruction should be given when the plaintiff provides prima facie evidence of each element of the Restatement's formulation without regard to the presence or absence of "direct" evidence of negligence. As the Quinby Court explained, "In the ordinary case, where different conclusions may be reasonably reached, it is the function of the jury to determine whether the [res ipsa loquitur ] inference is to be drawn.
Quinby , 907 A.2d at 1076.
Two of three judges agreed.
[Pepple] opined ... that it was impossible to perform the [catheterization ] procedure as [Zepp] maintained that he did, execute the procedure properly, and still place the catheter seven inches into the artery. [Pepple] was asked, "if the standard of care has been properly observed, that all the steps have not only been taken, but they were taken correctly and things were seen and evaluated correctly, is it possible that this artery would have been cannulated to that degree?" He responded in the negative.
* * * *
Thus, [Lageman] produced testimony that cannulation of the artery did not usually occur in the absence of negligence. Such testimony was sufficient to meet the first element of res ipsa loquitur : that arterial cannulation as occurred herein does not ordinarily happen in the absence of negligence.
Lageman , 237 A.3d at 1107 (citations modified; footnote omitted).
With regard to the second element, Zepp himself ruled out other factors as contributing to or causing the harm. Lageman did not move during the procedure, no one bumped the table, there was no equipment malfunction, and the catheter kit was not defective. As to the causal connection between the cannulation and Lageman's stroke, Pepple testified that Lageman had no pre-existing conditions that predisposed her to stroke, and the post-operative MRI disclosed no other evidence of candidate alternative causes. Finally, Lageman's stroke occurred "directly upstream from the site of the arterial cannulation."
Id . at 1107.
Id . at 1108.
Zepp sought to distinguish Quinby and Jones and analogize this case to our plurality opinion in Toogood, maintaining that neither Quinby nor Jones , both of which approved the Instruction, involved complex factual disputes as to causation, as in this case. Conversely, in Toogood , the parties disputed causation, and the Court found the Instruction unwarranted.
The majority disagreed, opining that Toogood was driven in substantial part by the lack of expert testimony to establish that the injury would not occur but for negligence, not because causation was complex or disputed. Moreover, Zepp's and Hudson's testimony in this case as to alternative causes was far less substantial or persuasive than in Toogood .
As a plurality opinion, Toogood does not bind this or any Pennsylvania court. Commonwealth v. McClelland , --- Pa. ––––, 233 A.3d 717, 729 (2020).
Finally, the majority rejected Zepp's contention that Lageman precluded the Doctrine by making out a prima facie case of negligence by direct evidence. The majority opined that the Quinby Court "implicitly sanctioned the plaintiff's introduction of evidence of specific negligence and concomitant reliance on the inference of negligence under res ipsa ." But the court primarily relied upon its own grey-zone cases. Even if Lageman made out a prima facie case of negligence without recourse to the Doctrine, that did not preclude her entitlement to the Instruction if she established a prima facie case under the Section 328D rubric. Rather, she earned her right to both theories and shouldn't be forced for contrived reasons to choose one evidentiary approach to proving her claim to the exclusion of another. Accordingly, the Superior Court reversed, vacated the judgment in favor of Zepp, and remanded for a new trial.
Lageman , 237 A.3d at 1112.
Judge Stabile dissented. See id . at 1116. He primarily focused on historic language about a plaintiff's entitlement to the Instruction when, inter alia , he lacks "direct evidence of the elements of negligence." Id . at 1117 (quoting Toogood , 824 A.2d at 1146 ); see id . at 1117-18. While Judge Stabile's opinion is broad and thorough, it largely aligns with the trial court's reasoning and Zepp's arguments, which we take up and reject below.
V. The Trial Court Erred and Abused Its Discretion in Declining to Charge the Jury on Res Ipsa Loquitur .
We described the applicable scope and standard of our review in Quinby :
In examining jury instructions, our [standard] of review is limited to determining whether the trial court committed a clear abuse of discretion or error of law controlling the outcome of the case. Error in a charge is sufficient ground for a new trial if the charge as a whole is inadequate or not clear or has a tendency to mislead or confuse rather than clarify a material issue. A charge will be found adequate unless the issues are not made clear to the jury or the jury was palpably misled by what the trial judge said or unless there is an omission in the charge which amounts to a fundamental error. ... [T]his Court's review is plenary.
Quinby , 907 A.2d at 1069-70 (cleaned up). As well, "[i]t is hornbook law that instructions given to a jury must be confined to the issues raised in the pleadings and the facts developed by the evidence in support of such issues." Heymann v. Elec. Serv. Mfg. Co. , 412 Pa. 338, 194 A.2d 429, 432 (1963).
Stripped of its ornaments and caveats, res ipsa loquitur boils down to this: Under certain circumstances a plaintiff may turn to the jury and ask, "What else could this be but malpractice?" In the interests of justice, and given the philosophical underpinnings of tort law and the jury system generally, this grants the jury latitude to fulfill its function. Over time, this Court has expanded the Doctrine incrementally until it now reaches most areas of tort law, provided its threshold conditions are satisfied. Where it applies, the jury may conclude that "this," the cause of injury, could be nothing else but a breach of a duty of care resulting in harm.
Zepp challenges the grey-zone cases without challenging the grey-zone cases, laboring to distinguish them without quite committing to their rejection. As the above discussion makes clear, over time the Superior Court has embraced the view that prima facie evidence of one approach to proving negligence does not bar recourse to another. Notably, we have never called those cases into question directly or by implication, and Zepp does not expressly contend that any of them was wrongly decided. Rather, Zepp would have us bypass forty years of Superior Court case law—and to a lesser extent the substantive overtones of our own—and reaffirm the strictest account of language from the Common Pleas Court's decision in Farley , supra , that neither the Superior Court nor this one has applied so rigidly, at least not since we adopted Restatement Section 328D in Gilbert .
In Farley , the Common Pleas Court observed:
The presumption of negligence arises from the entire absence of proof, or the want of clear and indubitable proof, of
the cause of the accident. Where ... there is evidence from which the cause can be clearly and indubitably ascertained, the presumption [of negligence] ceases, and the question of negligence is to be determined from the evidence.
Farley , 1889 WL 2977, at *1.
In that case, the plaintiff tripped over a fixed design feature-cum -hazard on the floor of the streetcar from which he fell, with the only point at issue being whether it reflected negligence that the hazard existed. The trial court ruled that it did not. But in any event, there was no mystery whatsoever regarding how the hazard came to be there or whether or how it contributed to the plaintiff's injury, only whether its design or placement was blameworthy.
As noted above, this Court affirmed the trial court's ruling in Farley v. Phila. Traction Co. , 132 Pa. 58, 18 A. 1090 (1890).
But unlike in Farley , disputed but more than merely substantial evidence pointed toward arterial cannulation as the cause of Lageman's stroke. Whether Zepp breached his undisputed duty to Lageman also was contested, with competing testimony from qualified experts as to whether the injury ordinarily would occur absent negligence. Perhaps more importantly, though, when we affirmed the Common Pleas Court's ruling in Farley , even our first invocation of the phrase res ipsa loquitur in the tort context was years in the future and our adoption of the Restatement, along with its elaborately qualifying commentary plainly at odds with a rigid reading of Farley , was still more than a half-century away.
Courts may continue to pay Farley lip service, mistaking the oft-quoted language for this Court's commentary. But no modern case like this one, if any at all, has hinged upon its rationale, not least because none of the notable cases have had very similar facts. Indeed, of the modern cases, Farley most resembles Quinby , not as a "pure" res ipsa loquitur case, but as a case in which the full circumstances and outcomes were known, and the only question was whether a given act was negligent—in Quinby , allowing a quadriplegic to fall from a table, and in Farley the alleged design defect.
This aspect of similarity also suggests why Farley is of little moment to this case even if stare decisis bound us to it on its own terms. If anything, read literally, it suggests that the Superior Court ruled correctly in this case, at least in its determination that Lageman was entitled to the Instruction. The evidence of causation being somewhat disputed and necessarily inferential in nature—certainly more so than in Farley —makes it a stretch to suggest that the cause can be "clearly and indubitably ascertained" from whatever passes for "direct" evidence in this case. And arguably, Farley requires too much for medical malpractice cases as they are tried in the real world anyway. The vast majority of such cases hinge upon expert testimony, which, by its very nature, typically is based upon educated inference rather than comprising truly "direct" evidence. The one Superior Court case that Zepp would have us embrace—again on a questionable reading—is MacNutt v. Temple University Hospital , which quoted our decision in Fredericks v. Atlantic Refining Co. , as observing that "if there is any other cause to which with equal fairness the injury may be attributed ... an inference of negligence will not be permitted to be drawn against the defendant." In that case, a patient undergoing surgery for thoracic outlet syndrome suffered a chemical burn. The trial court declined to give a res ipsa loquitur instruction and denied the plaintiff's post-trial motion for a new trial. A three-judge Superior Court panel affirmed, and the Superior Court granted en banc review.
What direct evidence can there be, for example, of how an internal biophysical process unfolded? As Pepple acknowledged, and as was surely true of Hudson as well, the experts in this case, as in most cases, were not present for any of the relevant events. See , e.g. , N.T. at 243 (Pepple agreeing with the assertion that, "from a factual perspective, [he was] not present for any of the events that transpired regarding this case," and that he never treated or even met Lageman); id . at 523 (Hudson agreeing that he has "made certain assumptions in giving" his "opinion because [he wasn't] there at the time"). To count this as "direct" evidence both stretches the definition of "direct" to the breaking point and underscores the difficulty of fashioning a bold, straight line between the two categories of evidence. Cf. D'Ardenne , 712 A.2d at 321 (expert witness testifying that he could not be certain as to the state of the escalator at the time of the accident because he investigated after the fact).
932 A.2d 980 (Pa. Super. 2007) (en banc ).
Id . at 987 (quoting Fredericks v. Atl. Refining Co. , 282 Pa. 8, 127 A. 615, 617 (1925) ); cf. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D, cmt. e ("Where the probabilities are at best evenly divided between negligence and its absence, it becomes the duty of the court to direct the jury that there is no sufficient proof.").
In affirming its three-judge panel's affirmance, the unanimous en banc panel quoted comment o to Restatement Section 328D, which we have not yet mentioned:
The inference arising from a res ipsa loquitur case may ... be destroyed by sufficiently conclusive evidence that it is not in reality a res ipsa loquitur case. If the defendant produces evidence which is so conclusive as to leave no doubt that the event was caused by some outside agency for which he was not responsible, or that it was of a kind which commonly occurs without negligence on the part of anyone and could not be avoided by the exercise of all reasonable care, he may be entitled to a directed verdict.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D, cmt. o; see MacNutt , 932 A.2d at 987.
The parties experts' had disputed the very nature of the plaintiff's injury, the court noted, disagreeing as to whether the burn had resulted from lying in a pool of Betadine solution or the injury was an outbreak of herpes zoster or shingles. "Because the nature of the injury was itself in dispute," the court concluded, "the [trial] court correctly determined the injury could have occurred without negligence." The case involved robust, competing views of what caused the injury, undermining the conclusion that plaintiff had furnished sufficient evidence to reach a jury as to the exclusion-of-other-causes factor of the Section 328D test. But perhaps more significantly as a practical matter, the court eventually concluded that the defense's evidence that the injury was in fact a symptom of herpes rather than a betadine burn, itself, eliminated all other responsible causes, rendering the case a directed-verdict case of the sort described in comment o. The defense hadn't merely provided evidence contradicting plaintiff's account. It had proved its account to the court's satisfaction, which no one maintains occurred in this case.
MacNutt , 932 A.2d at 990.
See id . at 989-991.
Id . at 991.
We underscore what burden comment o assigns and to whom. In point of fact, the burden reflects what happens after the plaintiff establishes a prima facie case under the three Section 328D factors. As we have noted since its inception, the Doctrine, once satisfied, creates a rebuttable presumption; comment o merely describes a rebuttal strong enough that it bypasses the necessity of a jury determination entirely. Here, even Zepp does not assert that his evidence met comment o's high standard. MacNutt , while apparently consistent with our case law and that of the grey-zone cases, is entirely distinguishable from the instant case because, as noted above, it hinged upon the conclusiveness of the defense's proofs. Moreover, precisely in setting the standard so high, and in constituting the last comment to Section 328D, comment o only underscores the flexibility intentionally baked into Section 328D by the Restatement reporters, as well as its implicit preference that a jury determine the presence or absence of the Section 328D factors.
Were Section 328D read more parsimoniously it might be penny-wise in its simplicity, but it would be pound-foolish in its consequences for the administration of justice. A plaintiff in Lageman's position would be forced either not to adduce the Instruction-disqualifying "direct" evidence in question in service of going to a jury under the Doctrine, or to abandon the Doctrine entirely in favor of "direct" proof, allowing also for circumstantial evidence—except circumstantial evidence with a whiff of res ipsa loquitur about it, an especially challenging task with a surfeit of expert testimony, which, as we noted above, is inherently inferential. In either scenario, the court, and more importantly the jury, will receive a lesser quantum of evidence to assess whether, how, and to what extent the defendant is liable for the plaintiff's harm.
Here, a bedrock principle largely unobserved by the parties and courts surfaces. It has long been the law of Pennsylvania that a plaintiff has no obligation to choose one theory of liability to the exclusion of another. We spoke of this concern in broad enough terms to encompass the present case in Schreiber v. Republic Intermodal Corp. : "[ Pa.R.C.P. 1020 ] reflect[s] the general principle that plaintiffs should not be forced to elect a particular theory in pursuing a claim and avoids the attendant possibility that meritorious claims will fail because the wrong legal theory was chosen. " While Rule 1020 speaks to pleadings, and to the prospect of discrete causes of action rather than merely discrete means of proving a single cause of action, i.e. , negligence, this only highlights how little it asks to allow a plaintiff to pursue a unitary claim of malpractice, by any means of proof that may apply. In a case like this, where the evidence available to the plaintiff is equivocal and less than conclusive on the elements of negligence, asking the plaintiff to choose which evidentiary approach to pursue is manifestly unfair.
473 Pa. 614, 375 A.2d 1285, 1291 (1977).
Schreiber cited Rules 1020(a) ("The plaintiff may state in the complaint more than one cause of action cognizable in a civil action against the same defendant. ...") and 1020(c) ("Causes of action and defenses may be pleaded in the alternative."). See Schreiber , 375 A.2d at 1291 (emphasis added). Rule 1020(d) provides, inter alia , "If a transaction or occurrence gives rise to more than one cause of action heretofore asserted in assumpsit and trespass, against the same person, including causes of action in the alternative, they shall be joined in separate counts in the action against any such person."
While a plaintiff may assert claims and theories of the case in the alternative, see Schreiber , supra ; PennDOT v. Manor Mines, Inc. , 523 Pa. 112, 565 A.2d 428, 431 (1989) (noting that, while the pleading must inform the defendant of the cause of action asserted, "this rule cannot be applied to limit a plaintiff from choosing to prove only one of two alternate theories of liability if the defendant has sufficient notice of both"), under the doctrine of election of remedies, the plaintiff may not seek inconsistent relief . Umbelina v. Adams , 34 A.3d 151 (Pa. Super. 2011) ; see Wedgewood Diner, Inc. v. Good , 368 Pa.Super. 480, 534 A.2d 537, 538 (1987) (quoting Annotation, 40 A.L.R.4th 627, 630-31 ("[T]he adoption, by an unequivocal act, of one of two or more inconsistent remedial rights has the effect of precluding a resort to the others." .. "[A] party cannot, in the assertion or prosecution of his rights, maintain inconsistent positions ....")).
The Dissent argues that "[t]he majority ... adopt[s] an expansive mandate for instructions authorizing jurors to infer negligence without specific proof, while sometimes referring to the inference as an alternate ‘theory of liability.’ " Diss. Op. at 2. But, as the foregoing sentences make clear, we refer to "theories of liability" only to establish "evidentiary approaches to a unitary theory of liability" as an a fortiori case: if courts must entertain disparate theories of liability, surely nothing prevents them from accepting alternate proofs in furtherance of a unitary theory of liability. Moreover, even if res ipsa loquitur was transformed into a discrete theory of liability, under Rule 1020 the plaintiff would not be precluded from pursuing it on that basis alone.
This is not analogous to submitting two incompatible claims to a jury. Lageman has stated one straightforward claim and has submitted evidence in an effort to meet her burden of proof. The evidence that does not establish a basis for the Instruction cannot simply cancel out the evidence that does. Nor should plaintiff's presentation of conflicting categories of evidence—not evidence that is inconsistent, but merely qualitatively different —force her to abandon any evidentiary approach to proving her claim as to which she has made out a prima facie case.
In an ideal world, the jury receives as much probative evidence as there is and no plaintiff is punished for successfully providing prima facie evidence sufficient to establish a basis for a finding of liability under the res ipsa loquitur doctrine. As with any other showing, if it satisfies the bare minimum requirements to support a given instruction, that instruction should be given. If there is first-hand evidence to support a negligence claim, the jury should be so charged. If there is indirect, circumstantial evidence to cover gaps in the (more) direct evidence, and that evidence constitutes a prima facie showing under Section 328D, the jury should be so charged. This will only disadvantage a defendant as to whom the claim becomes more facially meritorious as more competent evidence emerges—as, perhaps, it should.
See Heymann , 194 A.2d at 432.
The Dissent makes much of the lack of "empirical" evidence of how juries respond to res ipsa loquitur instructions. See Diss. Op. at 3. At the same time, also without any such evidence, the Dissent simply adopts and treats as a verity the supposed phenomenon of juries biased in favor of plaintiffs merely by the giving of the charge itself. This assertion itself lacks any "empirical" support, resting as it does on nothing more than the conjectures of Zepp's amici curiae . See Diss. Op. at 3 (citing Brief for Amici Curiae Am. Med. Ass'n & Pa. Med. Soc. At 16-18), 4 n.3 (quoting Brief for Amici Curiae Am. Med. Soc. & Pa. Med. Soc. At 4).
The Dissent champions the role of the General Assembly in "making difficult social policy decisions." Id . at 2 n.1. But the Legislature already made such decisions with its 2002 enactment of the all-encompassing Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error Act, Act of March 20, 2002, P.L. 154, No.13, codified as amended at 40 P.S. §§ 1303.101, et seq ., an Act designed to address alleged excesses in the arena of medical malpractice litigation. See generally 40 P.S. § 1303.102 ("Declaration of policy"). By the time that MCARE was enacted, our approval in Jones of the res ipsa loquitur doctrine in malpractice actions was already approximately twenty years old; we had reaffirmed the Doctrine's viability five years earlier in Hightower-Warren ; and the Superior Court had applied it in a host of decisions, including Hollywood Shop , Smith , Sedlitsky , and D'Ardenne , with which this decision is largely consistent, and none of which the Dissent engages. Had the Legislature agreed with the Dissent that "the medical malpractice field is a particularly inapt one in which to judicially mandate jury instructions ... that alleviate the obligation to prove negligence to support liability," Diss. Op. at 6, it could have restricted or eliminated the Doctrine's application in medical malpractice litigation. It did neither of these things. Cf. Fonner v. Shandon, Inc. , 555 Pa. 370, 724 A.2d 903, 906 (1999) ("The failure of the General Assembly to change the law which has been interpreted by the courts creates a presumption that the interpretation was in accordance with the legislative intent; otherwise the General Assembly would have changed the law in a subsequent amendment.").
We assume only one thing about juries: that they will follow judicial instructions faithfully. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. McCrae , 574 Pa. 594, 832 A.2d 1026, 1034 (2003) ("It is an almost invariable assumption of the law that jurors follow their instructions." (cleaned up)); Dauphin Deposit Trust Co. v. Standard Oil Co. of Pa. , 312 Pa. 229, 167 A. 287, 288 (1933) (same). Getting an Instruction to the jury is only half the battle for a litigant. There is no more reason to think a jury will reflexively grant judgment for a plaintiff in, for example, the Dissent's hypothetical 60/40 case, see Diss. Op. at 5, than there is to think a jury will award damages for fraud based upon circumstantial evidence that a plaintiff lost money in a transaction with a defendant. Lageman must convince the jury that the Restatement elements have been satisfied—that, in fact, arterial cannulation does not happen absent negligence, and that, in fact, all potential non-cannulation causes of Lageman's harm have been eliminated. Whether she can or will succeed is not our concern.
That leaves us only with the question whether Lageman made out a prima facie case to support a res ipsa loquitur instruction. Like the Superior Court, we conclude that she did. Pepple, a qualified and credible expert, testified in no uncertain terms that this event ordinarily cannot happen without negligence on the part of the provider. Thus, Pepple's testimony by itself comprises prima facie evidence as to that proposition.
Causation makes out a closer question, but notwithstanding the credible cardiac-event counternarrative advanced by Hudson, whether that theory was more credible than Lageman's stroke-by-cannulation theory is a jury question. In arguing otherwise, Zepp seems to want the trial court to assess the exclusion of other causes before going to a jury. But it is plain that the trial court must yield to the jury as soon as the plaintiff makes a threshold showing. With both experts acknowledging the association between arterial cannulation and stroke, there can be no serious question that Lageman succeeded, entitling her to a jury determination.
Hightower-Warren is similar. There, too, the defense did not fail to propose alternate explanations for the harm. A defense expert suggested that the "recurrent laryngeal nerve was somehow strangled or entrapped by subsequent scar tissue build-up"—that it occurred as an inevitable patient-specific consequence of the surgical procedure which, itself, was performed without fault. We did not find this testimony alone sufficient to dispense with the Instruction. Instead, we noted deficiencies in the defense testimony, in particular the lack of corroborating evidence. Ultimately, we recognized it as a res ipsa loquitur jury question, and the correct approach is the same here.
Hightower-Warren , 698 A.2d at 55.
Lageman successfully made out a prima facie case in support of the two disputed factors of the Restatement Section 328D test. Thus, she was entitled to the Instruction.
VI. Conclusion.
There is nothing occult about the res ipsa loquitur doctrine; it is among the more accessible evidentiary doctrines, since it resembles the practical inferences people make in their own lives. The Restatement's own account describes the Doctrine more commonly:
Negligence and causation, like other facts, may of course be proved by circumstantial evidence. Without resort to Latin the jury may be permitted to infer, when a runaway horse is found in the street, that its owner has been negligent in looking after it; or when a driver runs down a visible pedestrian, that he has failed to keep a proper lookout. When the Latin phrase is used in such cases, nothing is added. A res ipsa loquitur case is ordinarily merely one kind of case of circumstantial evidence, in which the jury may reasonably infer both negligence and causation from the mere occurrence of the event and the defendant's relation to it.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 328D, cmt. b.
As such, creating a jury question as to the Section 328D factors should not require Herculean labors. The factors speak for themselves, as will the evidence in a given case as to whether it supports the Instruction.
We cannot fairly hold that res ipsa loquitur may be invoked in complex, medical malpractice cases requiring expert testimony, then subject the Doctrine to an oversimplified view of the interplay of direct and circumstantial evidence. Medical malpractice cases, in particular, are seldom he-said she-said battles of credibility among first-hand lay witnesses. They typically require the benefit of expert witnesses with specialized knowledge to contextualize events; speak to the complex processes that, for example, may connect an arterial cannulation involving penetration of the aortic chamber to a stroke in the brain ; and render opinions that, more often than not, are inferential.
The question that must drive when the Instruction is warranted hinges entirely upon whether the plaintiff has made out a prima facie showing as to the Section 328D factors, not whether the defense has a credible counternarrative or plaintiff also has made out a plausible basis for recovery without resort to that doctrine. In effect, the two run in parallel toward the same destination, and if either arrives, the plaintiff recovers. There is nothing more in this approach than the assurance that, with the sum of the available information, a jury of the parties' peers has rendered a just verdict.
For the foregoing reasons, the Superior Court correctly vacated the trial court's refusal to charge the jury on res ipsa loquitur and remanded for a new trial. We affirm.
Justices Todd, Donohue, Dougherty and Mundy join the opinion.
Chief Justice Baer files a concurring and dissenting opinion.
Justice Saylor files a dissenting opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE BAER, concurring and dissenting
I agree with the Majority to the extent that it holds that there are cases in which a res ipsa loquitur instruction is warranted notwithstanding a plaintiff presenting direct evidence of negligence. As ably explained by the Majority, "[i]t has long been the law of Pennsylvania that a plaintiff has no obligation to choose one theory of liability to the exclusion of another." Majority Opinion, at 36. See also id. at 38 (observing that permitting a plaintiff to present direct evidence while simultaneously invoking the res ipsa loquitur doctrine "will only disadvantage a defendant as to whom the claim becomes more facially meritorious as more competent evidence emerges— as perhaps, it should"). However, unlike the Majority, I conclude that Lageman failed to make out a prima facie case to support a res ipsa loquitur instruction. As this Court articulated in Quinby v. Plumsteadville Family Practice, Inc. , 589 Pa. 183, 907 A.2d 1061, 1071 (2006), res ipsa loquitur is "a rule that provides that a plaintiff may satisfy his burden of producing evidence of a defendant's negligence by proving that he has been injured by a casualty of a sort that normally would not have occurred in the absence of the defendant's negligence." See also REST. (SECOND) TORTS § 328D (providing that it may be inferred that harm suffered by the plaintiff is caused by negligence of the defendant when, inter alia , it is established that "the event is of a kind which ordinarily does not occur in the absence of negligence"). Classic examples of the proper invocation of res ipsa are the barrel rolling from the building, the sponge left inside the surgical patient's abdomen, or animal remains found inside a can of food. It should be readily acknowledged that none of these events ordinarily occur in the absence of negligence.
Here, there appears to be no real dispute that the stroke suffered by Lageman was the result of an arterial cannulation, which occurred when, in an attempt to monitor Lageman's condition during an emergency exploratory laparotomy, Dr. Zepp, an anesthesiologist, inserted a central venous pressure ("CVP") line into the carotid artery, as opposed to the internal jugular vein where it belonged. Critically, however, at trial, a dispute arose as to whether arterial cannulation is an event of the kind that ordinarily does not occur in the absence of negligence.
I recognize that while Dr. Zepp acknowledged that arterial cannulation has been associated with stroke, he did not concede that the stroke suffered by Lageman was caused by the arterial cannulation that occurred in this case. However, as the Majority noted, in this case, "more than merely substantial evidence pointed toward arterial cannulation as the cause of Lageman's stroke." Majority's Opinion, at 31. In any event, I believe the focus here is on whether the alleged cause of the injury, i.e. , arterial cannulation, is the type of incident that would happen absent negligence.
The Court has frequently recognized the superior tools and resources available to the Legislature in making difficult social policy decisions involving sharply-competing interests. See, e.g. , Seebold v. Prison Health Servs., Inc. , 618 Pa. 632, 653, 57 A.3d 1232, 1245 (2012).
More specifically, Lageman's expert, Dr. Pepple testified that defendant Dr. Zepp was negligent in his placement of the central line, see N.T., at 238 (when asked if "the standard of care has been properly observed, that all the steps have not only been taken, but they were taken correctly and things were seen and evaluated correctly, is it possible that this artery would have been cannulated to that degree[,]" Lageman's expert responded in the negative. In other words, there had to be negligence by defendant Dr. Zepp for arterial cannulation to occur). Conversely, defendant Dr. Zepp testified that arterial cannulation can occur even in the absence of negligence. Id. at 314. His expert, Dr. Hudson, offered a fairly similar opinion, testifying that Dr. Zepp's conduct met the applicable standard of care, he was not negligent, and he did not commit malpractice. Id. at 502-03.
Thus, this is not the case of the barrel, sponge, or animal remains, which seemingly cannot occur absent negligence. Rather, this is more akin to the classic, "red car/blue car,"— "he said/she said" — case where a jury listens to the two versions of the event and decides what, in fact, occurred. To that end, I agree with the dissenting opinion authored by Judge Stabile of the Superior Court that "Dr. Pepple's conclusion that Dr. Zepp was negligent does not equate to a conclusion that arterial cannulation does not ordinarily occur in the absence of negligence." Lageman by & Through Lageman v. Zepp, 237 A.3d 1098, 1128 (Pa. Super. 2020) (Stabile, J., dissenting). Rather, "it was enough to satisfy the requirements necessary to establish a prima facie [case] of negligence[,]" which then had to be weighed by a jury against Dr. Zepp's and Hudson's assertions that there was no deviation from the requisite standard of care, notwithstanding the unfortunate result for Lageman.
Simply said, this is not a res ipsa case, but rather a classic case where two versions of the same story were properly presented to the jury without presumptions, in favor or against, either party.
JUSTICE SAYLOR, dissenting
This Court recently explained, in the context of a medical professional liability case, that negligence "may not be inferred merely from the occurrence of a complication when such complication is known to occur without negligence." Mitchell v. Shikora , 653 Pa. 103, 124 n.11, 209 A.3d 307, 319 n.11 (2019).
There are very good reasons why this principle should be maintained in the common law, in the absence of legislative intervention and adjustment.1 As I previously have posited:
The medical malpractice arena is a unique area of litigation in which it is necessary to balance the interests of physicians and injured patients. On the one hand, physicians, by virtue of their occupation, are required to lay hands on patients, and medical decision-making may be complex and some procedures carry high risks. In their efforts to help others, physicians' personal assets are potentially at risk. Some patients who face an inevitable decline in their health, or who suffer setbacks after making informed choices, may nevertheless look for a source of blame. The phenomena of frivolous lawsuits and professional witnesses increase the cost and potential exposure for physicians and insurers. See, e.g. , Cooper v. Schoffstall, 588 Pa. 505, 522–25, 905 A.2d 482, 493–95 (2006). Although medical malpractice litigation may be steeped in science, physicians are exposed to a "more-likely-than-not" determination by five-sixth of twelve lay jurors who need not necessarily even agree on the ultimate question of liability. See Fritz v. Wright, 589 Pa. 219, 223, 907 A.2d 1083, 1085 (2006) (adopting the "any majority" rule governing jury verdicts).
On the other hand, injured patients also have substantial, constitutionally protected, interests. Medical negligence does occur, and where the requirements of tort law are met, injured patients are entitled to just compensation. See PA. CONST. art. I § 11 (embodying the right a remedy). Injured patients may face difficulties in obtaining expert witnesses, particularly in specialty areas, on account of a reluctance on the part of other practitioners to judge a peer negatively. In cases in which evidence of negligence is not readily available or where the amount of potential recovery is not substantial, injured patients may have difficulty obtaining representation and advancing a lawsuit. Litigation phenomena such as that of the professional witness work in both directions. See Cooper, 588 Pa. at 522–25, 905 A.2d at 493–95. More generally, plaintiffs face many of the same unavoidable uncertainties inherent in the justice system as do defendants.
In light of such important, conflicting interests, and the impact of malpractice litigation on access to and quality of medical care, it is very clear that the necessary regulation of the medical malpractice litigation arena requires difficult social policy judgments appropriate to the legislative branch.
Freed v. Geisinger Med. Ctr. , 607 Pa. 225, 249–51, 5 A.3d 212, 227–28 (2010) (Saylor, J., dissenting).
The majority, however, proceeds to employ its common-law power to adopt an expansive mandate for instructions authorizing jurors to infer negligence without specific proof, while sometimes referring to the inference as an alternate "theory of liability." Majority Opinion, slip op. at 35. The majority, however, doesn't ground its approach in any empirical information, for example, assessing the effects of such instructions on jury verdicts. Indeed, the concerns of the medical community that judicial authorization of the inference will foster confusion among jurors, unduly increase the cost of medical services, and serve to undermine the quality of health care in the Commonwealth, see, e.g. , Brief for Appellants at 31-32; Brief for Amici Am. Med. Ass'n & Pa. Med. Soc'y at 16-18, do not seem to me to have been assessed in any meaningful fashion. Rather, the majority relies largely on the abstract assertion that it would constitute "punishment" to require plaintiffs to be put to their proofs, where they have presented an expert to render an opinion simply about what is ordinary. See, e.g. , Majority Opinion, slip op. at 36.
I realize that the majority hasn't required the instruction to be given in all medical malpractice cases in which it is requested. But the threshold seems to be quite low, since all the plaintiff needs to do is to adduce expert testimony that an injury ordinarily does not occur in the absence of negligence (which addresses and excludes other causes), notwithstanding that such testimony may be sharply disputed. See Majority Opinion, slip op. at 37. I find resonance in the concern of Appellants and their amici that this sort of opinion testimony can be presented in a broad range of professional liability cases. See, e.g. , Brief for Appellants at 27; Brief for Amici Am. Med. Ass'n & Pa. Med. Soc'y at 17.
In this portrayal of punitiveness, I believe the majority overstates the ostensible unfairness involved. For example, according to the majority: "[R ]es ipsa loquitur boils down to this: Under certain circumstances a plaintiff may turn to the jury and ask, ‘What else could this be but malpractice?’ " Majority Opinion, slip op. at 29 (emphasis in original). I am aware of nothing in this case, however, that would have prevented the plaintiff from turning to the jury and asking precisely that question, grounded on the expert testimony she had presented.
What actually was foreclosed was a charge from the trial court specifically sanctioning an inference of negligence extrinsic to the discrete proof of negligence that Appellee had adduced onto the record. The concern maintained in the medical community -- which the majority has done little to dispel -- is that the court's imprimatur on such an inference tips the scales too far in one direction and will have deleterious collateral consequences in the larger scheme. See, e.g. , Brief for Amici Am. Med. Ass'n & Pa. Med. Soc'y at 4 ("Giving the jury license to infer, rather than carefully consider the proofs at trial, will significantly expand a plaintiff's ability to convince a jury of the defendant's negligence and unfairly lower the bar to liability for unsuccessful medical treatment, making physicians guarantors of a good outcome.").
But, as this Court has previously explained, the doctrine of res ipsa locuitur should maintain limited application, "because it is in derogation of the general principle underlying the law of negligence, to wit: that the negligence charged must be established by the evidence." Norris v. Phila. Elec. Co. , 334 Pa. 161, 163, 5 A.2d 114, 115 (1939). Consistent with the approach of several other jurisdictions and the plurality opinion in Toogood v. Rogal , 573 Pa. 245, 824 A.2d 1140 (2003), I agree with the position that this limitation should be accorded special force in medical malpractice cases. See id. at 264, 824 A.2d at 1151 ("Public policy reasons exist for ... limiting res ipsa loquitur inferences in medical cases[ ].").
Although Norris concerned the stronger form of res ipsa in the nature of a presumption, as opposed to the inference presently in issue, other jurisdictions have recognized that the potential strength that may be accorded by lay jurors to such an inference also is in derogation of the law of negligence. See, e.g. , Curtis v. Lein , 169 Wash.2d 884, 239 P.3d 1078, 1081 (2010) (explaining that the doctrine -- even in the weaker form in which it "provides nothing more than a permissive inference" -- is "ordinarily sparingly applied, in peculiar and exceptional cases, and only where the facts and the demands of justice make its application essential." (citations omitted)).
Accord, e.g. , Tappe v. Iowa Meth. Med. Ctr. , 477 N.W.2d 396, 399 (Iowa 1991) ("Because the doctrine [of res ipsa loquitur ] creates an inference of negligence without specific proof, it traditionally has been applied sparingly in medical malpractice cases."); Fleege v. Cimpl , 305 N.W.2d 409, 413 (S.D. 1981) (same); Gushlaw v. Roll , 290 A.D.2d 667, 735 N.Y.S.2d 667, 669–70 (2002) ("While the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur has been applied to medical malpractice cases, it has been done so sparingly in recognition of the fact that much of the medical treatment rendered to patients involves inherent risks which, even with adherence to the appropriate standard of care, cannot be eliminated.").
For example, in a hypothetical scenario in which it could be established that a particular adverse result occurs after negligence in 60 percent of cases and idiopathically (i.e. , without any known cause) in 40 percent of cases, a plaintiff's expert may readily testify that the result does not "ordinarily" occur in the absence of negligence. If jurors are overtly instructed that they are authorized to disregard the absence of any evidence of actual negligent conduct in such scenarios, there is a substantial -- if not high -- risk that defendant health-care providers would be held to account in many cases where there was, in fact, no negligence.
The degree of risk, of course, depends on how likely jurors will be to rely on the permissive inference of negligence. Again, no empirical data has been presented to the Court in this respect, but all parties appear to believe that a res ipsa charge could have altered the outcome in the present case.
It is precisely on account of the high social utility of medical treatment and the many uncertainties involved in the underlying science – including the prevalence of inherent risks, known complications, side-effects, idiosyncratic patient responses, and idiopathic results – that a substantial number of jurisdictions continue to carefully restrain the application of the res ipsa loquitur doctrine in the medical professional liability arena. See supra note 5.
In the present case, I believe that Appellee had a full and fair opportunity to make her case of medical negligence to the jury, supported by the creditable expert testimony that she offered. I do not see that she is any way being punished by the recognition that the medical malpractice field is a particularly inapt one in which to judicially mandate jury instructions, on an expansive basis, that alleviate the obligation to prove negligence to support liability.