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J. A05011/00
2000 PA Super 205
KATHLEEN BORING,
:
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
:
PENNSYLVANIA
Appellant
::
v.
::
CONEMAUGH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL,
::
Appellee
:
No. 1110 WDA 1999
Appeal from the Judgment entered June 15, 1999
in the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County,
Civil, No. 1995-1519.
BEFORE: DEL SOLE, EAKIN and TODD, JJ.
***Petition for Reargument Filed 8/8/2000***
OPINION BY DEL SOLE, J.:
Filed: July 25, 2000
***Petition for Reargument Denied 10/5/2000***
¶1
This is an appeal from a judgment entered in favor of defendant,
Conemaugh Memorial Hospital (the Hospital), after a jury returned a verdict
finding the Hospital was negligent, but that its negligence was not a
substantial factor in bringing about Appellant's harm. Appellant filed post-
trial motions seeking a new trial, which were denied. This appeal followed.
We affirm.
¶2
This action was initiated by Appellant seeking recovery for a facial
nerve injury she suffered following a surgery on her left ear at the Hospital.
Appellant alleged that the surgeon performing the procedure encountered
uncontrollable bleeding causing him to abort the procedure. Appellant's
expert at trial testified that the excessive bleeding was caused by Appellant's
use of the drug Naprosyn within days before surgery and this bleeding put
Appellant at an increased risk for a facial nerve injury during surgery.

J. A05011/00
Appellant offered evidence indicating that the nursing staff did not inform
the surgeon his patient had used this drug within 72 hours of surgery, and
that the nurses failed to utilize the "Chain of Command" procedure of the
Hospital to stop the surgery.
¶3
Appellant claims, as she did in her post-trial motions, that the court
erred in failing to charge the jury on corporate negligence. The theory of
corporate negligence was first recognized by our Supreme Court in
Thompson v. Nason Hospital, 591 A.2d 703 (Pa. 1991). Therein it was
found that a hospital owes some non-delegable duties directly to its patients,
without requiring an injured party to establish the negligence of a third
party. Id. at 707. Under this doctrine, a hospital is liable if it fails to uphold
the proper standard of care owed to its patient. The plaintiff must show that
the hospital had actual or constructive knowledge of the defect or
procedures which created the harm and that the hospital's negligence was a
substantial factor in bringing about the harm. Id. at 708.
¶4
In explaining its decision rejecting Appellant's request for points for
charge on corporate negligence, the trial court noted that the hospital did
have a policy in effect to override a surgeon's decision to operate. The trial
court remarked:
The actual claim presented by Plaintiff was that the nurses failed
to activate the policy in this instance. However, the Plaintiff
presented no evidence that the Defendant Hospital had actual or
constructive notice that the nurses had not followed the Chain of
Command policy in this instance. Therefore, there can be no
- 2 -

J. A05011/00
corporate negligence claim for failure to adopt or enforce
adequate policies.
Trial court opinion at 6.
¶5
From our review the trial court correctly summarized Appellant's
theory of the case. In her post-trial motions Appellant states:
Plaintiff's theory was basically that Defendant was liable to
Plaintiff because its nurses had failed to bring to the surgeon's
attention that he was performing elective surgery in violation of
his own policy on a patient who had taken Naprosyn within 72
hours of surgery and that if the surgeon did not voluntarily
postpone the operation that Conemaugh's supervisors and
administrators, acting through its chain of command policy,
should have prevented the surgery from going forward.
¶6
We agree with the trial court that this claim is one which, under the
facts of this case, does not support a charge on corporate negligence.
Appellant is not asserting that the Hospital did not have a chain of command
policy, rather the claim is one that the nursing staff negligently failed to
follow the instituted chain of command procedure. Appellant did not offer
any evidence suggesting that the policy in place was deficient and that the
Hospital knew or should have known of its deficiencies. It was not suggested
that nurses were routinely failing to institute the chain of command
procedure. The claim is simply that the nurses failed to act appropriately in
this case. The Hospital's liability in this situation would be based solely on
the negligent actions of its staff. The jury was charged on vicarious liability.
¶7
On appeal Appellant suggests that there was "systematic" negligence
in this case. She maintains the Hospital did not have a specific policy
- 3 -

J. A05011/00
concerning the use of this drug and that there was no policy in place to
inform the staff about an individual surgeon's policy regarding the use of this
drug prior to surgery. While such claim may support a theory of corporate
negligence on behalf of the Hospital, the record presented to us on appeal
fails to show that Appellant presented such a claim at trial. Further her
post-trial motion indicates that this was not the theory she offered at trial.
An appellant can not present one theory of relief in the trial court and pursue
a different theory on appeal. Samuel Rappaport Family Partnership v.
Meridian Bank, 657 A.2d 17 (Pa. Super. 1995).
¶8
Appellant did offer evidence from the nursing staff which indicated that
they were not told of any policy with regard to the use of this drug and that
they were unaware of the surgeon's policy. Expert testimony was also
presented opining that the use of Naprosyn was the likely cause of bleeding
in this case. However, there is nothing in the record on appeal suggesting
that the failure to have a policy regarding a patient's drug usage was
substandard and that the hospital knew or should have known of its need to
formulate a policy. No expert testimony is included in the record identifying
standard procedures employed by hospitals regarding drug policies.
Likewise, there is no evidence suggesting that this hospital failed to have a
policy that other hospitals routinely employ or that it should have
independently recognized a need for a specific drug policy.
- 4 -

J. A05011/00
¶9
In Edwards v. Brandywine, 652 A.2d 1382 (Pa. Super. 1995) this
court considered a claim regarding the deficiencies of the defendant-
hospital's laboratory notification procedures. The court found that the
hospital did have a notification procedure in place and that the plaintiff failed
to provide any evidence "that a reasonable hospital" would require a
different notification procedure. Similarly, in this case a chain of command
procedure existed. The staff failed to follow that procedure. Appellant failed
to offer evidence that "a reasonable hospital" would have had additional
procedures regarding specific drug usage prior to surgery. While we may
well imagine that it would be prudent or necessary for a hospital to have
such a system in place, there is nothing in the record to suggest that the
jury was so advised at trial. Appellant's theory at trial focused solely on
failure to implement the chain of command theory and these facts did not
warrant a corporate liability charge.
¶10 Judgment affirmed.
¶11 Judge Todd files a dissenting opinion.
- 5 -

J. A05011/00
2000 PA Super 205
KATHLEEN BORING,
:
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
Appellant
:
PENNSYLVANIA
v.
:
:
CONEMAUGH MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
:
Appellee
:
No. 1110 WDA 1999
Appeal from the Judgment entered June 15, 1999,
in the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County,
Civil Division, No. 1995-1519
BEFORE: DEL SOLE, EAKIN, and TODD, JJ.
DISSENT BY TODD, J.:
¶1
Because I believe that under Welsh v. Bulgar, 548 Pa. 504, 698 A.2d
581 (1997), an instruction on the issue of corporate negligence was
appropriate in this case, I respectfully dissent.
¶2
In Welsh v. Bulgar, an infant later died as the result of injuries
negligently inflicted during delivery. Monitoring equipment indicated that
the fetus was not receiving sufficient blood flow because the umbilical cord
was compressed. Despite the indications that a cesarean section should be
performed, the baby was delivered vaginally and suffered permanent injury.
An expert report provided by the plaintiff indicated that the nurses should
have known about the child's deteriorating condition and that their failure to
notify hospital authorities resulted in the child's injuries.
¶3
Our Supreme Court held that, based on this report, the plaintiff had
made a prima facie claim against the hospital for corporate negligence under

J. A05011/00
Thompson v. Nason Hosp., 527 Pa. 330, 591 A.2d 703 (1991). The Court
said:
In support of her claims for corporate negligence, [plaintiff]
relies on the expert report of Dr. Warner. She first claims this
report establishes that the hospital was corporately negligent for
the failure to monitor and report the child's condition, which is a
violation of the duty to oversee all persons who practice
medicine within its walls as to patient care, the third duty under
Thompson. Read in the light most favorable to [plaintiff] as the
nonmoving party, the report shows that Dr. Warner opined that
the nurses breached the standard of care because they must
have known that there was a problem with the delivery but failed
to act on that knowledge. Dr. Warner concluded that this breach
was a substantial factor in bringing about the harm to the
deceased when he concluded that if the nurses had notified the
hospital of the need for a cesarean section, then the injury would
not have occurred. Thus, Dr. Warner's report is sufficient to
support a prima facie claim of corporate negligence for Nason
Hospital's failure to oversee all persons who practice medicine
within its walls as to patient care.
Welsh, 548 Pa. at 514-15, 698 A.2d at 586 (footnote omitted). Thus, in
Welsh, the breach by the nurses of the duty to monitor and report was
alone sufficient to support a claim of corporate negligence.
¶4
In the instant case, the evidence at trial showed that the nursing staff
failed to inform the surgeon that the patient recently had taken Naprosyn.
Under Welsh, this breach of the standard of care by the staff (the failure to
report the patient's condition to the surgeon) supported a claim that the
hospital violated its duty to oversee all persons who practice medicine within
its walls as to patient care. The duty to oversee is one of the duties under
Thompson, the breach of which supports a claim of corporate negligence.
- 7 -

J. A05011/00
Welsh, 548 Pa. at 512-13, 698 A.2d at 585. Thus, I believe a corporate
negligence instruction was appropriate on this basis.
¶5
Because the trial court erroneously failed to give a corporate
negligence instruction, I would reverse and remand for a new trial.
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
- 8 -

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