I am happy to report that this blog has reached the 750-post milestone. The blog began in February, 2005 and has grown to appoximately 500 unique vistors per business day (only a couple hundred on weekends).

The experience has been a very positive one. It takes me back to the time I started the Tennessee Tort Law Letter over a decade ago. At the time I thought I had a good grasp on tort law, but after I started reading every tort decision released in Tennessee I began to realize what I didn’t know. Now I make more of an effort to keep up with tort law developments nationally so that I can share what I learn on this blog – and once again find out how much there is to know.

The goal of this blog has always been to help lawyers keep up-to-date with developments in tort law in Tennessee and across the nation. In the coming months I am going to make an effort to add to the Blue Chippers List – people seem to like this feature. If there is other information you would like me to seek out and share please let me know.

The Supreme Court of Tennessee issued an important ruling on the “foreign object” exception to the medical malpractice statute of repose and statute of limitations. The case is Chambers v. Semmer, M.D., and deals with what exactly constitutes a foreign object. The plaintiff’s theory in the case is that a hemoclip was negligently placed on her ureter during a surgery and left there, later causing her left kidney to fail. The defendants countered that they did not leave any hemoclip on the plaintiff’s ureter, but that “hemoclips are used intentionally and are intended to remain permanently,” so they could not be foreign objects. The Supreme Court rejected the defendants’ argument, ruling “that a hemoclip that is intentionally used but negligently placed and negligently left in a patient’s body following surgery may be a “foreign object” under Tennessee Code Annotated section 29-26-116(a)4) that establishes an exception to the one-year statute of limitations and the three-year statute of repose.”

Read more about the opinion at our firm’s Tennessee Medical Malpractice Blog.

I apologize for the lack of a post Friday and Saturday. Friday morning I was in North Carolina and did not have access to a computer. By the time I made it to the office I had back-to-back conference calls or appointments until 4:15 and just decided to wait until Saturday morning to blog.

Friday night Joy and I went to the cabin. I got up early Saturday morning but for reasons I do not understand I could not get access to the Internet. I spent several hours riding my early birthday present (a Sea Doo RXT) and messing around in the water.

I got up early again this morning and, surprise, the Internet connection is working. So, I decided to bang out this post before Joy and I meet our friend Buzz at 8:00 a.m. to get in some water skiing before the water gets rough

Some of you know that we represented two boys who were sexually abused by a (former) Roman Catholic priest who served in the Diocese of Nashville. I came to learn most than I wanted to know (and more that the confidentiality order will allow me to share) about the Church’s response to misconduct of priests.

Here is a clip from CNN that describes a tell-all documentary from a priest in California.

An excerpt from the article:

The Supreme Court just issued its opinion in Alsip et al v. Johnson City Medical Center et al. More information on the opinion, holding that defense counsel may not participate in ex parte communications with a plaintiff’s non–party treating physicians, is available over at our firm’s medical malpractice blog. I am on the road right now, so commentary will follow later.

The Tennessean has reported that a E. coli 0157:H7 outbreak has sent four toddlers to Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Six other children also became infected with the potentially deadly organism.

The children became infected at Paulette’s Group Day Care Home. The paper reports that the day care center has been cleared of wrongdoing.

We just settled a case where we represented a teenager who became infected with E. coli 0157:H7 in a treatment center in East Tennessee. She became horribly ill, was hospitalized for weeks and received permanent kidney damage. We worked on the case with Bill Marler’s firm out of Washington State; he has a great blog on E. coli 0157:H7 and his firm has more knowledge about this subject than any law firm in the country, if not the world.

Dr. Gary Lustgarten testified the for the plaintiff as an expert in a medical negligence trial in North Carolina. Lustgarten testified that in his medical opinion that certain notes made by one of the defendant’s, Jauffman, were inaccurate. After the case settled, one of the defendants filed a complaint about Lustgarten with the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, which yanked Lustgarten’s membership. One of the defendants also complained to the State Medical Board, which pulled Lustgarten’s license.

Lustgarten appealed the ruling to the Wake County Superior Court, which affirmed. The North Carolina Court of Appeals reversed, saying “we conclude that the superior court erroneously affirmed the board’s determination, as the substantial record evidence does not permit an inference that Dr. Lustgarten made an entirely unfounded statement concerning Dr. Jauffman’s notes.”

This excerpt from the decision tells the story:

I remember years ago trying a case against a well-known lawyer in Nashville (who is still practicing, by the way.) I moved in limine to prevent certain testimony from being introduced into evidence; my motion was granted.

Later that day I saw the witness in the hallway who would have been in the position to offer the excluded testimony. I asked the witness if he had been informed about the ruling. He said that he had been told by my opponent that he (the lawyer) could not ask him (the witness) a question about the matter that was excluded but he (the witness) could volunteer it.

Here is a case from Florida that explains is simple terms the obligation of a lawyer who knows that a witness has testimony that has been ruled inadmissible.

Moe Levine wrote and let me know that a link to the article that formed the based of my post about admissibility of electronic records was broken. He is right – and now I cannot find the article. I will keep looking.

Sorry about that.

However, if you go to the cases cited in the post you will find the substance of the article.

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