Traffanstedt v. Humana Medical Corp.
Traffanstedt v. Humana Medical Corp.
Opinion
Humana Medical Corporation, doing business as Humana Hospital Shoals ("Humana"), petitions for a writ of mandamus directed to the Honorable Inge Johnson of the Colbert Circuit Court ordering her not to conduct the trial against it before conducting the trial of a previous co-defendant, the estate of Dr. Thomas G. Holmes.
In an appeal from the circuit court lawsuit that gives rise to this mandamus proceeding, we held that the jury's verdicts in favor of Dr. Holmes's estate and against Humana were inconsistent, and we reversed the judgment based on those verdicts. We held that by an opinion dated August 9, 1991. After our decision in that appeal, Humana moved for a severance of the claims against it and Dr. Holmes's estate, and Judge Johnson granted its motion for severance. Thereafter, Judge Johnson scheduled the case against Humana for trial first; in response, Humana filed this mandamus petition.
On the date of this present opinion, we have also, ex meromotu, withdrawn the *Page 671
August 9, 1991, opinion issued on appeal from the circuit court's original judgment in this case, and we have this date issued a new opinion in that case. See Humana Medical Corp. ofAlabama v. Traffanstedt,
Humana argues that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering that the trial against it precede the trial against Dr. Holmes's estate, because, it argues, such a ruling is not "conducive to expedition and economy." Rule 42(b), A.R.Civ.P. It is well established that mandamus is a "drastic" and "extraordinary" remedy that will be granted only upon a showing that the petitioner has a clear right to it. Ex parte W.Y., [Ms. 1901895, January 3, 1992], 1992 WL 210 (Ala. 1992). The trial court has wide discretion in ordering separate trials and in severing claims, and the trial court's decision in that regard will be reversed only if it abused that discretion. Exparte R.B. Ethridge Associates, Inc.,
Even though a verdict against Humana necessitates a preliminary finding by the same jury that Dr. Holmes negligently performed Traffanstedt's surgery, a separate jury deciding the issue whether Dr. Holmes was negligent could properly reach a contrary result, i.e., that he was not negligent. The verdicts in the previous trial of these issues — verdicts for Dr. Holmes's estate and against Humana — were inconsistent because they were rendered by the same jury;
however, opposite results by separate juries would not be inconsistent. As this Court explained in Lewis v. Moss,
"The analogy of a single jury's verdicts in consolidated primary and derivative actions with separate verdicts by two different juries is fallacious reasoning. This overlooks 'opposite results' which are permissible in the case of two juries viewing the same transaction and 'inconsistent verdicts' which are impermissible in the case of a single jury trying two claims in a consolidated action."
See, also, Barnes v. Oswalt,
It is, therefore, not necessary that the trial against Dr. Holmes's estate precede the trial against Humana. Without legal inconsistency, a first jury could find that Humana was negligent and/or wanton in monitoring and supervising Dr. Holmes and that Dr. Holmes was negligent when he operated on Traffanstedt and a second jury could find that Dr. Holmes did not act negligently. Judgments based on those verdicts would be independent of one another. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in scheduling the trial against Humana first. The petition is, therefore, denied.
WRIT DENIED.
MADDOX, SHORES, ADAMS, HOUSTON, KENNEDY and INGRAM, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ex Parte Humana Medical Corporation D/B/A Humana Hospital Shoals. (In Re Clakey v. Traffanstedt v. Humana Medical Corporation D/B/A Humana Hospital Shoals).
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published