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Laws-info.com » Cases » Florida » Florida First District Court » 2009 » 08-4468 LANA A. HARRIS, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Richard E. Harris, Deceased, for and on behalf of said Estate and survivors thereof, v. WALTER H. SOHA, JR., M.D. and NORTH FLORIDA
08-4468 LANA A. HARRIS, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Richard E. Harris, Deceased, for and on behalf of said Estate and survivors thereof, v. WALTER H. SOHA, JR., M.D. and NORTH FLORIDA
State: Florida
Court: Florida First District Court
Docket No: 08-4468
Case Date: 07/16/2009
Preview:IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA LANA A. HARRIS, as Personal Representative of the Estate of Richard E. Harris, Deceased, for and on behalf of said Estate and the survivors thereof, Appellant, v. WALTER H. SOHA, JR., M.D. and NORTH FLORIDA ANESTHESIA CONSULTANTS, P.A., Appellees. _____________________________/ Opinion filed July 16, 2009. An appeal from the Circuit Court for Duval County. Aaron K. Bowden, Judge. Stephen J. Pajcic, III and Seth Pajcic of Pajcic & Pajcic, P.A., Jacksonville; and William A. Bald of Dale, Bald, Showalter, Mercier & Green, P.A., Jacksonville, for Appellant. Gary A. Shipman, William E. Whitney, and Rebecca F. S. Drube of Dunlap & Shipman, P.A., Santa Rosa Beach, for Appellees. WOLF, J. Appellant, Lana Harris, raises a number of issues concerning the propriety of the trial court's order granting appellees' motion for directed verdict. We find no NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED

CASE NO. 1D08-4468

merit in the appeal. However, two issues raised by appellant warrant discussion. Ms. Harris argues that the trial court erred in finding that section 768.13(2)(c)(1), Florida Statutes (2004), was applicable because (1) Dr. Soha was not visiting a patient of his practice when he responded to her husband, and (2) his response was not voluntary. Ms. Harris brings this action as a personal representative of the estate of her husband, Richard Harris. Mr. Harris was taken to the emergency room at St. Vincent's Medical Center suffering from a reaction to a medication which caused his throat and tongue to swell. The attending emergency room physician requested the assistance of an anesthesiologist. Witness testimony established that anesthesia did not provide on-call services to the emergency room, although occasionally anesthesiologists on call for other areas of the hospital voluntarily provided assistance in the emergency room upon request, if they were available. Appellee, Dr. Soha, was the anesthesiologist on call for the obstetric suite and had been called in to provide an epidural for a patient in labor around the time that Mr. Harris was admitted. Dr. Soha responded to the emergency room physician's request for assistance. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Harris died from complications. Ms. Harris subsequently filed suit, alleging that Dr. Soha failed to take actions which may have prevented her husband's death.

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The trial court found that the Good Samaritan Act, section 768.13(2)(c)(1), Florida Statutes (2004), was applicable, which provides that: Any health care practitioner as defined in s. 456.001(4) who is in a hospital attending to a patient of his or her practice or for business or personal reasons unrelated to direct patient care, and who voluntarily responds to provide care or treatment to a patient with whom at that time the practitioner does not have a then-existing health care patientpractitioner relationship, and when such care or treatment is necessitated by a sudden or unexpected situation or by an occurrence that demands immediate medical attention, shall not be held liable for any civil damages as a result of any act or omission relative to that care or treatment, unless that care or treatment is proven to amount to conduct that is willful and wanton and would likely result in injury so as to affect the life or health of another. (Emphasis added). Following the close of Ms. Harris' case, the trial court found that there was insufficient evidence and granted appellees' motion for directed verdict. We review the trial court's directed verdict de novo. See Rosa v. Dep't of Children & Families, 915 So. 2d 210, 211 (Fla. 1st DCA 2005). First, Ms. Harris argues that section 768.13(2)(c)(1), Florida Statutes, was inapplicable because Dr. Soha was not at the hospital "attending to a patient of his or her practice or for business or personal reasons" when he responded to the emergency room. Ms. Harris acknowledges that Dr. Soha was at the hospital attending to his patient, but argues that the patient in the obstetric suite was not a patient of his "practice." She reasons that anesthesiologists are not physicians who have patients of their own practices because they offer their services to any patient in the hospital who needs a doctor of their specialty. Thus, she asserts that this 3

section of the Good Samaritan Act is inapplicable for anesthesiologists in general if they are at the hospital attending to a patient. However, she acknowledges that the Good Samaritan Act would be applicable if an anesthesiologist or any other type of physician were in the hospital "for business or personal reasons."
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