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Verdicts & Settlements
  • $15.0 million involving man who was left a ventilator dependant quadriplegic as result of broken neck during intubation

  • $12.5 million involving a suicide

  • $10.75 million settlement with physicians and hospital in case involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries at birth

  • $8.1 million wrongful death verdict in case involving an outpatient suicide, highest verdict in the United States in a suicide case

  • $7.1 million verdict represented the first medical malpractice verdict ever in Guilford County, highest medical malpractice verdict in North Carolina at the time, the second highest punitive damages verdict in the state

  • $7 million awarded by jury in medmal verdict

  • $4.5 million involving a child who suffered significant brain injury as result of medical treatment received for heart condition

  • $3.5 million verdict involving infant who suffered permanent brain injuries

  • $3.25 million for the wrongful death of husband and father of 4 children who died due to a failure to see and appreciate a brain aneurysm by a radiologist performing an MRA (Magnetic Resonance Angiogram)

  • Confidential settlement in 2002: $2.3 million for the wrongful death of a 38 year-old, wife and mother of 2 children who died following a routine thyroidectomy

  • Cumberland County: $1.5 million settlement in a car accident involving a 31 year-old wife and mother of 2 children which resulted in a closed-head injury and permanent brain damage

  • Macon County: $800,000 wrongful death verdict in case involving throat cancer

  • TEEN'S SUICIDE / N.C. COURT DISPUTES MALPRACTICE AWARD

    Greensboro News & Record

    Copyright 1995

    Wednesday, January 11, 1995

    TRIAD/STATE

    TEEN'S SUICIDE / N.C. COURT DISPUTES MALPRACTICE AWARD

    JERI ROWE Staff Writer

    The state appeals court has agreed with a Guilford County
    jury's verdict but disagreed with their $7.03 million settlement in
    a medical-malpractice case.

    Robin Miles still remembers those two days in a third-floor
    jury room right before Christmas 1991.

    She and 11 other jurors decided that Charter Hospital of
    Winston-Salem and its parent company owed the family of a suicidal
    Greensboro teenager more than $7 million, one of the state's
    largest medical-malpractice awards.

    Jurors found that Charter Hospital was guilty of willful
    negligence following the suicide of Delbert Joseph Muse, a Page
    High School sophomore. He committed suicide after being discharged
    in 1986 from Charter because his insurance had run out - not
    because he had gotten better - jurors ruled.

    Last week, the state appeals court agreed with Miles and the
    other jurors.

    "I feel like I've been exonerated," Miles said Tuesday. "If I
    had my druthers, I wouldn't have been on the jury. It was thrust on
    us, and we did the best we could, and in good conscious, we made
    the only decision I could live with."

    The N.C. Court of Appeals upheld the jury's ruling against
    Charter Hospital and its parent company, Charter Medical Corp., the
    nation's largest chain of private psychiatric hospitals with 113
    hospitals across the country.

    But the three-judge panel found fault with the jury award. The
    appeals court ordered the case back to Guilford Superior Court to
    decide new - and possibly smaller - punitive damages because they
    don't believe two separate awards can be ordered when case law
    considers both the company and the hospital "one and the same
    person."

    Following a six-week trial, the jury ordered Charter to pay $2
    million and Charter Medical Corporation to pay $4 million. Joe and
    Jane Muse, Delbert's parents, received compensatory damages of
    $1.03 million.

    But because one of the three appeals-court judges disagreed
    with the jury's ruling, Charter Hospital and Charter Medical Corp.
    have the right to appeal their entire case - not just punitive
    damages - to the state Supreme Court.

    The company has yet to make a decision, spokesman Robert Mead
    said Tuesday.

    "Certain aspects of the court's decision are encouraging," Mead
    said. "Our position from the beginning was that our processes in
    place at the time were appropriately adhered to."

    Delbert Muse, who was known as "Joe," entered Winston-Salem's
    Charter Hospital in 1986 because he had made a plan to kill
    himself. After 32 days - two days after his insurance ran out - his
    doctor sent him home with anti-psychotic and anti-depressant
    medicine.

    About two weeks later, Muse killed himself by taking an
    overdose of that medication.

    "I think the family views this case as having nothing to do
    with money," said Wade Byrd, a Fayetteville lawyer who represented
    the Muses. "They viewed the case as doing something for other
    children and the parents of those children who might find
    themselves in this position."

    A day doesn't go by, Miles said, when she doesn't think about
    the case. And when she does, she thinks about her two children.

    "How can you replace a child?" Miles asked. "There's nothing in
    the world to bring him back. I guess, as a parent, I look back and
    say, 'Thank God,' because I'm very fortunate. But there's nothing
    to say that it couldn't have been any one of us. You never know."