Barr v. USA
Filing
46
ORDER dismissing case. The Court FINDS in favor of plaintiff Michelle A. Barr, as administrator of the Estate of Donald L. Barr, deceased, and against the defendant, United States of America. The Court AWARDS to plaintiff $1,082,782.00 for los t wages; $1,500,000.00 for conscious pain and suffering; $1,500,000.00 for loss of society to Michelle Barr; and $1,000,000.00 for loss of society to Morgan Barr. The Court DIRECTS the Clerk of the Court to enter judgment reflecting the same. Signed by Judge David R. Herndon on 10/4/2018. (ceh)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
MICHELLE A. BARR, as
Administrator of the Estate
of DONALD L. BARR, deceased,
Plaintiff,
v.
No. 3:15-cv-01329-DRH-PMF
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
HERNDON, District Judge:
I. INTRODUCTION
This dispute between the estate of Donald Barr and the United States was
submitted to the Court for a decision through live testimony, exhibits by consent,
and depositions.
The Court has carefully and thoroughly examined and
considered all of this evidence, assessed the credibility of same, and now makes
findings of fact upon which it draws reasonable inferences and conclusions to
make the ultimate decisions in this case finding in favor of the plaintiff as follows.
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
a. Treating Facilities
Donald Barr came into Building 8 of the Veteran’s Administration Hospital
in Marion, Illinois (“Marion VA”) asking to talk to someone.
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He was seen by
Collette Smith, LCSW, clinical care coordinator, who concluded Barr was at high
risk for suicide. She made transportation arrangements for him to go to the ER.
While waiting, Michele Barr, Donald’s wife, arrived and a heated discussion
ensued between husband and wife. Donald Barr was informing his wife, for the
first time, that he had been caught looking at pornography on his work computer.
Donald told his wife he was concerned about the status of his job after this
incident plus he needed the help of the VA psychiatric staff.
Mrs. Barr then
learned that care coordinator Smith was about to drive her husband the short
distance to the Marion VA ER and asked if she could do that instead. Of course,
Collette Smith, who had assessed Mr. Barr as a high risk for suicide, which
neither of the Barrs knew, was not about to let her patient out of her sight and
would not allow that. Mr. Barr, participating in the conversation and observing
all of the consternation, vacillated on whether he would go at that moment. Care
Coordinator Smith then pursued the role of a mental health professional that saw
the need to persuade her patient to do what was necessary at the moment. Smith
did persuade Mr. Barr and he ultimately agreed to go with her to the ER.
Upon arrival at the Marion VA ER, psychiatrist Dr. Daniel Holly evaluated
Mr. Barr. Dr. Holly wrote in his Psychiatry Consult note:
“The veteran reports that over the past year he has been frequently
viewing pornographic images on his work computer, during work
hours. Late last Friday he learned (not officially, but though (sic) the
grapevine) that his supervisor had taken his work computer and found
the pornography on the hard drive. The veteran indicates that this is
the 2nd time this has occurred. The last time was about 7 years ago.
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[H]e was caught, but was given a second chance. He knows that he is in
grave danger of losing his job.”
“He kept this information from his wife over the weekend. Over the
weekend he began to have active thoughts of suicide. He told Ms. Smith
that he thought about driving away from home in his truck and taking
one of his 10 firearms and shooting himself. He told me he had also
thought of driving away from home, taking one of his sharp tools and
cutting himself such that he would bleed to death. He would not do this
at home because he would not want his 17 y.o. daughter to find his
body.” 1
The note, quoted above and dictated by Dr. Holly, recognizes Barr’s past
history of mental health treatment and diagnosis to include Generalized Anxiety
Disorder, Depression, and PTSD.
Barr’s primary treatment had always been
psychopharmacological as Barr never voluntarily stayed with psychotherapy. Dr.
Holly diagnosed Barr was Adjustment Disorder with Mixed Emotional and
Behavioral Features in a Veteran with a past history of Generalized Anxiety
Disorder, Depression and PTSD.
To treat his suicidal ideation, Mr. Barr accepted transfer to Jefferson
Barracks VA Medical Center or another similar treatment facility. Arrangements
were made by telephone between non-treating staff physicians at Marion VA and
the Veteran’s Administration Hospital at Jefferson Barracks (“Jefferson Barracks
VA”) for the latter facility to accept Donald Barr for inpatient mental health
treatment, since the former did not have the accommodations for such. Barr was
conveyed to the south St. Louis medical unit by ambulance at 3:00 PM on May 6,
1
It is appropriate for the Court to note as a pertinent aside based on the evidence to be adduced,
that much significance is placed on Barr’s verbalization of both a specific suicidal plan and the
actual verbalization of it in the first instance. The Court also notes this is the first, but not only,
time he expresses a desire to isolate himself during the planned suicide.
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2013.
As Mr. Barr waited for word about his potential transfer to Jefferson
Barracks and then for the arrival of his transportation, Michele Barr sat with him,
conversed easily, and assisted with obtaining water for him. The two shared a
couple of affectionate moments, particularly as he was about to leave, all without
signs of immediate distress between them.
Mrs. Barr testified that she was
worried about her husband and supportive of his desire to seek psychiatric
treatment, inferences that can clearly be drawn from CNA Newbolds’ note as she
described in detail the time spent waiting on the decision to transfer and then the
transfer itself.
The only indication in the record of the events from the time of Barr’s
admission at Jefferson Barracks VA on May 6th until his first full mental health
evaluation at 8:00 AM on May 7th, comes through the attending doctor’s testimony
wherein he stated the nurse to whom Barr spoke told him that Barr had told her
he had “suicidal thoughts.”
Barr’s evaluation the first thing on the 7th was
performed by nurse practitioner (NP), Dorothy Corrigan, Ph.D. (unrelated field),
wherein she elicited critical information from Donald Barr that goes to the heart
of the principle issue of standard of care in this case.
During her thorough
history and physical, NP Corrigan inquired about Barr’s suicidal ideations almost 24 hours after he presented to Marion VA saying he planned to take his
truck and a gun or a machete and drive away from the house somewhere and kill
himself.
NP Corrigan’s note is as follows:
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“THOUGHT CONTENT:
“SUICIDAL THOUGHTS/BEHAVIOR: Present
“Comment: ‘I do. But I can’t do it here. No I don’t really, I have [sic] my
daughter and grandchildren to think about.’”
Based on the entire record in this case, the Court finds this statement to be one
demonstrating expression of a suicidal ideation. Just as important, perhaps, the
Court finds this statement to express a plan to carry out the act of suicide some
place other than the hospital.
Within three or four hours from this initial evaluation, Barr was evaluated
through an interview with the attending physician, the treating psychiatrist for Mr.
Barr, Dr. Peter Fahnestock.
Contrary to the Court’s finding, Dr. Fahnestock
testified that he viewed the above statement to NP Corrigan as ambivalent. He
further testified that Donald Barr took the opportunity to rethink things in the
interval of time between the two interviews and that when he talked with him he
was clearly not suicidal; a conclusion supported, in Fahnestock’s view, by the
assertion by Barr that he would not want to do such a thing to his daughter. Dr.
Fahnestock found this statement to be a strong protective barrier against suicide.
In the medical record describing the initial interview with the patient, Dr.
Fahnestock notes that Mr. Barr does not have SI (suicidal ideation) at the time of
the interview but later notes that Barr says “I need help,” in the context of a
discussion about taking or not taking specific pharmaceuticals.
The Court finds that, from a factual standpoint, there were ample reasons
for Dr. Fahnestock to question the resolve of Donald Barr to avoid suicide based
on his statement to avoid such action for the sake of the interests of his daughter
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and grandchildren (note he never mentioned his wife which no one pursued to
test that resolve).
Furthermore, there was insufficient basis to conclude that
Donald Barr was not suicidal as of May 7, 2013. There is nothing in the record to
support a conclusion that from his admission on May 6th until his discharge midafternoon on May 8th Donald Barr received any psychiatric treatment other than
medication which would not reach a therapeutic level in his system until after his
suicide on May 10, 2013. Mr. Barr did not receive talk therapy. He did not
receive group therapy. He talked to his treating psychiatrist twice, once for an
initial interview and once for a discharge interview.
Therefore, the next and final interview with Dr. Fahnestock came the
following midday, May 8, 2013. Not yet forty eight hours after being admitted and
telling the admitting nurse he wants to kill himself and a mere forty eight hours
after telling the referring professionals in Marion not only that he wanted to kill
himself but exactly how he was planning to do it, Donald Barr was telling Dr.
Fahnestock that he is fine and that he will not harm himself regardless of what
happens with his job. Barr expressed he is no longer hopeless about the future
and requests discharge. Unlike Collette Smith, the clinical care coordinator in
Marion, who actively advocated for the trip to the ER when Donald Barr was
expressing a desire to leave, Dr. Fahnestock allowed Barr’s expression of a desire
to go home to prevail without any attempt to discuss alternatives or express a
professional opinion about the better of the clearly obvious alternatives.
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Dr. Fahnestock made the decision to send Donald Barr home without
discussing the merits or value of the decision with anyone who would be sharing
the environment with Barr. Instead, the doctor talked with Michele Barr about
whether she could pick her husband up or whether he should be sent by shuttle
to the Marion VA and if all firearms and sharp instruments had been removed
from the home. Dr. Fahnestock did not ask if she acquiesced in the decision or if
she thought she could provide a safe environment for Donald Barr or even what to
do or not do once he was home. Neither did the doctor have a conversation with
the Barr’s daughter who shared the home as well. The only post-discharge safety
planning that was pursued was specific instructions given to Donald Barr himself.
b. The Suicide and Resulting Injuries
Two days after the discharge on May 10, 2013, Donald Barr used a yellow
nylon rope to hang himself in his garage. He left the side door to the garage open
so that his daughter, acting out of curiosity, was the first to find her father’s
lifeless body. The day started with Barr giving no one a clue of his plan, seeing
his daughter off to school and giving his wife a kiss as she left for work. Even the
fact that Michele did not get an answer when she tried to call a couple of times did
not suggest something was amiss as that was not out of the ordinary. However,
the day ended for Donald Barr when he took his own life.
Apparently, no one witnessed the suicide so there is no first hand
description of it. There are, however, bits of information that help this fact finder
reasonably infer what happened. This is not an exercise in gruesome story telling
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but a compilation of the evidence in order to determine how much, if any, pain
Mr. Barr felt before his demise.
The final diagnosis of the autopsy report
advances these relevant factors: The deceased was mortally injured and suffered a
rope ligature on his neck and committed the act of suicide by standing on a
bucket, then eliminating the support it provided and dropping a distance that
could not have been greater than the height of the bucket; there was a superficial
cervical spine laceration in the C4-C5 interspace secondary to a ligature drop
injury; and he suffered abrasions on his left knee, legs and feet, consistent with
bucket abrasions.
The detailed examination of the body provides a bit more detail. External
examination of the neck and the separately provided and examined ligature
provide some facts to help recreate what took place.
The ligature was a two
strand yellow nylon rope that’s diameter averaged 3 cm or ¾ inch (by the medical
examiner’s calculation while using a standard measurement converter suggests
that 3 cm is actually a little over one inch). The portion of the rope that was at the
front of the neck was not 3 cm and instead .8 cm. The rope was twenty feet long.
A knot is present that measured 11x8 cm or 4 1/3 inches by just over 3 inches (by
the Court’s calculation). The furrow caused by the rope ranged from .6 cm to 3.5
cm going around the neck completely. The abrasions mentioned in the final
diagnosis include a 3x2 cm red-brown dried wound on the left knee. The left shin
reveals an 8x2 cm dried red brown abrasion; the right shin a bright red 15x3 cm
longitudinal abrasion. Numerous abrasions were found on both legs and feet.
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The soil on the deceased leg matched that of the soil on the bucket. Internally,
Mr. Barr’s spinal cord was not “involved” and there was a small trauma induced
laceration in the disc between the C4 and C5 vertebrae.
c. Decedent’s Pain
There was no testimony on the implications of what the physical findings
above had on the type of pain Barr suffered before he lost consciousness and then
ensuing death. There need not be such direct evidence as common sense and
knowledge prevails and the Court may make reasonable inferences from the
evidence contained in the written exhibit. Consequently, by inference the Court
finds the following facts to be proven by the evidence.
The decedent was subject to pain for some period of time because his
spinal cord was not severed by the dropping of a short distance from his starting
point on top of the bucket found at the scene. The depth of the furrows in Barr’s
neck demonstrates a great deal of pressure to be able to thin the rope
substantially and dig that far into the skin on his neck. Moreover, the medical
examiner’s notes on the autopsy diagram indicate that the furrows in the deceased
neck were yellow brown. The Court makes the only reasonable inference that it
can to find that the rope color was pressed into Mr. Barr’s skin on his neck at the
point where the rope was located.
Therefore, the Court finds Barr suffered
extreme pain for a period of minutes prior to his unconsciousness and death.
The physical evidence helps determine and analyze the conscious pain and
suffering and that it was the hanging by ligature that caused the deceased’s death
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and not some other cause. Further, based on general knowledge of the amount of
time it takes one to suffocate before losing consciousness, the evidence suggests
that unconsciousness came before death and was present within minutes not
hours.
It is not speculation to know that the knee, leg, and foot wounds, minor as
they were and determined by the medical examiner to be related to contact with
the bucket rather than some other unrelated episode, resulted from some degree
of flailing. It is beyond comprehension that stepping off the bucket to achieve the
required dropping motion would cause such abrasions.
The unanswered
question is whether the flailing that caused contact with the bucket and the
resultant abrasions was the result of an involuntary reaction to the pain and
inability to breath associated with hanging by the rope or whether it represented a
failed attempt to change course when the deceased’s thoughts turned from
wanting to hang himself to knowing that such a decision was a serious mistake
and the abrasions occurred when attempting to get the bucket back to a place of
support. What is clear is that nothing would suggest that the abrasions, which the
examiner opined to be caused by the bucket, came at any time before the fatal
event. One can, and the Court does, infer that in addition to the physical pain and
suffering that was obvious, the decedent suffered emotionally to some degree and
for the same period of time he could surmise pain before being rendered
unconscious. Pain and suffering, physically and emotionally, can be inferred from
all the evidence to have occurred over a period of a few minutes. The analysis of
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the monetary value associated with the pain and suffering is hereafter determined
in the conclusion section.
d. Effects on the Barr Family
The devastation on this small, close knit family is clear. The family unit
consisted of Donald Barr, clearly the center of the family nucleus, Michele the wife
and mother, and a daughter, Morgan.
The daughter was, without dispute, a
“daddy’s girl.” Regarding Michele, there was significant testimony and evidence
concerning the differences in her between before and after the death of Donald
Barr. But shockingly, demonstrative evidence that no one had to call attention to
came in the form of the physical appearance of Michele as seen in the pictures of
her with her husband and her as she looks today (even accounting for the passage
of four and a half years). The woman presented in the photographs is that of a
robust woman who looks no more than her age, or less, to the woman in the
courtroom too many pounds less, with a drawn, troubled, and distressed face
who looks older than her actual age. 2
Mrs. Barr testified, credibly, that her husband was her life. She summed it
up by saying she and her husband did everything together. They worked different
shifts, but she made sure she was up to fix - or fixed in advance - his lunch so that
he would not have to be troubled with it. They enjoyed each other’s company
when he came home from work and they talked. Even more so, they enjoyed
2
Mrs. Barr testified that when she turns 65, her husband, had he lived, would have been a little
more than 70 years old. Therefore, the inference drawn is that Mrs. Barr was a little more than 5
years younger than her husband. At the time of this trial, she would have been 55 or 56 years of
age. Tragically, she looks to be ten years older than that.
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riding his motorcycle together. They rode with a couple of different groups of
other cycle enthusiasts who, one can infer, constituted their only social groups.
She even went camping with her husband and their daughter, which clearly
Donald and Morgan enjoyed much more than Mrs. Barr. They gardened together;
tomatoes, green onions, and hot peppers being the staples of their garden.
Donald loved hot peppers and tried to grow them as hot as he could.
Her
husband was handy with cars, mechanical things, but not so much carpentry.
They were also in a pool, as in billiards, league together. One of Donald Barr’s
favorite things was to sing karaoke and, in particular, sing “Ring of Fire” to
Michelle.
Since her husband’s death, she testified there isn’t a vegetable garden
anymore. Furthermore, there isn’t any more socialization with the motorcycle
groups except once a year when they “force” her out to an annual Christmas Party.
There isn’t any more playing in a billiards league or socializing with that group of
friends. In watching and listening to her testify, the clear inference is that she
doesn’t do those things anymore. As she went on to testify, her life now is her
family, consisting of her daughter and granddaughter, her son and her grandson.
In a very sadly touching moment during her testimony, Mrs. Barr described,
credibly, how she sits at night with an old wartime ammo box which contains a
portion of her husband’s ashes, his wallet and his motorcycle keys. She describes
the inability to sleep much, her thoughts consumed with the memories of Donald.
She described the feeling she has as if a part of her was gone. Typically she finds
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sleep when she is in her recliner and its early morning hours, not long before she
has to go to work.
Mrs. Barr testified, credibly, that her husband was the main wage earner,
with him working full time and her only working part time. They could afford
medical insurance when it was paid out of his earnings but with that eliminated,
she cannot afford medical insurance for herself and her family. She also testified,
credibly, that Donald Barr would have worked until his wife, Michelle, was sixtyfive, at which point in time he would have thirty years on the job as it was his goal
to work as long as possible in order to build up his retirement income as much as
possible.
Mr. David Gibson, a senior analyst with Vocational Economics, Inc, is well
qualified to provide evidence regarding the wage loss in this case and he did so
credibly.
He provided information that the decedent was fifty-six almost fifty-
seven years of age at the time of his death working through the federal
Department of Veteran’s affairs and was covered by a pension plan known
commonly as FERS, Federal Employees Retirement System. Utilizing a reliable
economic methodology, the economic expert explained that if Barr had lived and
retired at ages sixty, sixty-five, or sixty-seven (the social security age of full
retirement) he would have earned less in retirement than if he retired at age
seventy as testified to by his wife.
Based on the credible testimony of Mrs. Barr, the Court finds that Donald
Barr would have worked at least until age seventy and so it is that particular wage
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loss amount, as calculated by Mr. Gibson, that the Court will focus on. Once
again, with the reliable methodology utilized by the economic expert, Mr. Gibson
was able to provide the Court with the wage loss associated with the death of
Donald Barr to age seventy and net of his personal expenditures. Therefore, the
Court finds the wage loss in this case, proximately caused by the death of Mr.
Barr, to be one million, eighty one thousand, seven hundred and eighty two
dollars ($1,081,782.00).
Morgan Barr, Donald’s daughter, testified credibly about the devastation
finding her father’s body and his loss have been to her. Morgan was seventeen at
the time of her father’s death, according to the coroner’s report.
She testified
that her birthday was ten days before his death. The reasonable inference to be
drawn from this evidence is that Morgan’s birthdate was May 1, 1996.
Upon arriving home on May 10, 2013 with her mother who picked her up
from school, Morgan saw the garage door (it is inferred to be the door for people
to enter the garage on the side, rather than the much larger automobile door)
open and expected to find her dad at his work bench in line with the door. When
she didn’t see him there she looked to the right and saw her father hanging from
the ceiling. She immediately ran out screaming and crying that he was hanging
from the ceiling. Michelle Barr rushed past her daughter to enter the garage and
once there managed to get her husband down from his hanging position in an
effort to see if she could save him. In the meantime, Morgan was out in the front
yard where she fell to the ground in anguish and pain, screaming and crying loud
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enough to attract the attention of a neighbor who came immediately to her side.
Upon being told what Morgan saw, the neighbor called 9-1-1.
A high school student at the time, Morgan found herself crying all of the
time after finding her father’s body. She was unable to focus on anything other
than the image of her dad’s corpse and on all she was missing by not having her
“go-to person” around. She privately and openly asked the question “why” an
interminable number of times. She second guesses herself about why she did not
pay attention that morning when she was trying to get her dad to let her stay
home from school and he was insisting that she go. Even when she went back to
school, all she did was cry and was usually found in the rest room doing just that.
She felt as though she could not accomplish anything in school and dropped out
at a time when she was considered a junior. For an extended period, she had a
very difficult time sleeping because of focusing on her dad and repeatedly asking
the rhetorical question of herself – why it had to happen.
Morgan would always go to her father, during his life, when she needed
someone to talk to or when she was feeling physically ill. She felt closer to her
dad than her mom. She testified about what a great provider he was, making
sure she had whatever she needed, within reason - which did not include buying
her the pony she wanted. Morgan loved camping and fishing with her dad, even
deep sea fishing off the coast of North Carolina where they successfully caught
many Spanish mackerel. She fondly remembers watching old movies on TV with
her dad, swimming, making bonfires, and cooking something called “Pizza
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Mountain Pies.” They would go to a Chinese restaurant when the money allowed
for it and usually took one annual vacation.
Often the vacation took them to
Pennsylvania to visit her dad’s relatives.
Morgan continues to mourn the loss of her father. The Court can confirm
this by her demeanor while testifying and her reaction to some of the questions.
She still lives with her mom and vows that if she ever moved out it would be a
move (after her dad’s loss) in with a man that understands her desire to keep the
family name, such that he would change his last name to “Barr” when they
married.
She married such a young man but has not yet moved out of her
mother’s home. This young Barr couple have a daughter and another child on the
way as of the time of the trial. Morgan has shown her daughter pictures of the
deceased and talks about him to try and pass on some memories.
III. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
a. Standard
This case is brought pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”).
The FTCA makes “the United States liable in tort in the same manner and to the
same extent as a private individual in like circumstances. 28 U.S.C. § 2674.”
McKinnis v United States, 2008 WL 5220504, *4 (N.D. Ill. Dec. 10, 2008). An
FTCA case is governed by the law of the place where the act or omission occurred,
here, Illinois. Id; 28 U.S.C. § 1346. Plaintiff seeks wrongful death (Count I) and
survivorship damages (Count II).
Under Illinois law, a wrongful death action is brought to compensate the
surviving spouse or next of kin of a decedent for pecuniary loss sustained as a
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result of the decedent’s death. See e.g. Patch v. Glover, 248 Ill.App.3d 562, 573
(1993).
“To state a cause of action under the Wrongful Death Act (740 ILCS
180/0.01 et seq. (West 2006)), the plaintiff must show that: (1) defendant owed a
duty to the deceased; (2) defendant breached that duty; (3) the breach of duty was
the proximate cause of the deceased's death; and (4) monetary damages resulted
to persons designated under the Act.” Bovan v. Am. Family Life Ins. Co., 386 Ill.
App. 3d 933, 938 (2008).
The Illinois survival statute allows a representative of the decedent to
maintain statutory and common-law actions that had accrued to the decedent
before death.
Myers v. Heritages Enters., Inc., 332 Ill.App.3d 514, 516
(Ill.App.2002); 755 Ill. Comp. Stat. Ann. 5/27-6.
Put differently, the statute
permits the representatives of the estate to prosecute a claim for personal injury
that the decedent could have brought had he lived. Glover, 248 Ill.App.3d at 573.
In determining that a survival action may be had concurrently with a wrongful
death action, courts have noted the need to preserve causes of action relating to
substantial loss of earnings, medical expenses, and prolonged pain and suffering.
See Ellig v. Delnor Cmty. Hosp., 237 Ill. App. 3d 396, 401 (1992). Regarding
pain and suffering in a survival action, courts have required that plaintiff prove
the victims to “have been conscious of their pain and suffering before succumbing
to the injuries.” Id.
b. Liability
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The plaintiff’s retained expert, Dr. Scott Freeman, was very helpful to the
Court. First of all, based on education and professional experience, each of which
is very impressive, Dr. Freeman is well suited to provide opinions to the Court
regarding the issues in this case as the standard of care in the community is the
key to the answers underlying this matter. Dr. Freeman does not at any time
throughout his testimony reach into the absurd for theories of liability, instead
choosing to explain his opinions in the nature of what should be done for
treatment protocols in this case in a very understandable manner. The testimony
given by Dr. Freeman, in his expert capacity, was credible and testimony which
the Court relied upon on key issues.
Dr. Freeman described for the Court the protocol required by the standard
of care when a patient presents with severe suicidal thoughts – in other words –
going beyond thoughts of death to having a specific plan of action. When such is
the situation, as it was with Donald Barr, a one-day stay in the hospital is
insufficient. A longer period is required in order to evaluate the patient’s safety
and to treat the patient to the point where the doctor finds that the patient has
changed his way of thinking and how he feels enough that the risk of suicide is
lowered sufficiently to cause the treating physician to believe the patient is out of
immediate danger.
In commenting on the decedent’s statement, “I do [have suicidal ideations],
but I can’t do it here,” the expert witness opined that the statement was important
from the standpoint that it demonstrates that the patient is actively considering
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suicide, so much so, that he is actively thinking about whether he would be able to
commit suicide right in the hospital. So suicide was imminently on Donald Barr’s
mind and he was trying to determine if he could, in fact, carry out a suicidal plan.
Freeman found that the statement was a marker of the severity of Barr’s suicidal
thinking.
The expert witness’ opinion regarding what Dr. Fahnestock should have
done, as Donald Barr’s attending psychiatrist, to exercise the standard of care for
the treatment of suicidal ideation, was to give Donald advice to stay in the hospital
longer than asking to leave after only one full day in treatment. As an indicator
that Barr would have followed the doctor’s advice was the history that he had
voluntarily come to the hospital, further indicating at least ambivalence about
getting help. Freeman further opined that when a doctor strongly recommends
additional days in the hospital, patients will usually follow that course and
remain.
The expert witness then described the usual procedure, which the Court
finds simple and even consistent with common sense, as follows. When a patient
voluntarily signs himself into the hospital for psychiatric care, he is asked to also
sign a three day notice requirement. So, logistically, the psychiatrist is given three
days from the patient’s declaration of a desire to leave to investigate thoroughly
whether it is safe for the patient to leave. In that way, a patient’s voluntarily act of
seeking in-patient care is a conditional voluntary effort for evaluation and
treatment based on the safety of the patient to leave.
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In the three days that comprise the conditional voluntary discharge, the
treating in-patient has time to check with the patient’s outpatient psychiatrist, (if
he has one and Barr did not) and the patient’s family members and others who
might have knowledge to learn whether the patient’s behavior generally is
consistent with the patient actually being safe and stable as opposed to just
disingenuously telling the in-patient doctor and staff that he is safe. Here, Dr.
Fahnestock and Mrs. Barr testified that the only discussion the former had with
the latter was to verify she was coming to the hospital and could drive Mr. Barr
home rather than having him wait for the shuttle which could take him to the
Marion VA. Their conversation also included Dr. Fahnestock asking Mrs. Barr if
she had removed potential weapons of self-destruction, like firearms and knives,
from their residential property.
It did not include an interactive discussion
between the two regarding the wife’s thoughts about whether she felt her husband
was safe from self-harm or even about any other precautions Mrs. Barr should
take such as making sure her husband was not alone.
Dr. Freeman also opined that Dr. Fahnestock had a standard of care
responsibility to attempt to learn the severity of any possible job action facing
Donald Barr, which was in the expert witness’ view, the crucial trigger which led
to Barr’s suicidal ideation.
To contradict this standard of care opinion by
Freeman, Dr. Fahnestock asserted that to call the employer in this case, or any
employer, would be counterproductive as it might provoke job action where none
was intended due to a psychiatric concern with the employee at issue. Contrary to
Page 20 of 30
that suggestion, Dr. Freeman testified that in his work with social workers, it is
common for those staff members to call employers to learn the risk the patient
was in of losing his or her job. Furthermore, Fahnestock theorized, based on his
“knowledge” of how the Veteran’s Administration works, that calling to inquire
would not render useful information as it was too soon.
In so testifying, Dr.
Fahnestock failed to take into account the general policy of the VA regarding
employment discipline.
Two persons testified in plaintiff’s case in chief regarding the policy and
practice of the Veteran’s Administration relative to employment discipline
generally and as it relates to Donald Barr’s investigation. The person whose job
responsibilities included discipline and union related matters, Tim Hartwell,
testified that the progression for discipline is a five step process. The first step is
admonishment, which could stay in a person’s employment file for up to two
years. The second step is reprimand, which could stay in the employment file for
up to three years. The third step is disciplinary action suspension, which can last
for a number of days no greater than fourteen. The fourth step is an adverse
action suspension, which can be for a number of days no less than fifteen but
could be more. The fifth and final step is termination. Mr. Hartwell surmised,
reasonably and credibly, that Donald Barr would not have been terminated and
would have received at most an admonishment.
Barr’s previous employment
issue was too remote in time to be considered and so as far as the VA policy was
concerned, he was a first time offender.
Page 21 of 30
Moreover, Hartwell testified that in his time at the VA the only person to be
terminated was an employee who had received child pornography - illegal to
peruse - as opposed to adult pornography which is legal, who also went to prison
for that crime. No one who had gone to an adult porn site on the government’s
computers had ever been terminated and there were approximately fifteen such
instances. In addition, Terry Taylor, an information security officer charged with
monitoring computer security, stated that the investigation involving Barr was in
its earliest stages and no one was supposed to know it was being undertaken. He
agreed that only the one person who committed a crime in viewing pornography
had been terminated for viewing pornography.
It is more than abundantly clear that if Dr. Fahnestock had been interested
in meeting the standard for medical care in the situation at issue, coming to some
aid and comfort of Donald Barr about the very trigger that both Fahnestock and
Freeman agree was the precipitating factor of Barr’s suicidal ideations, he would
have at least investigated with Tim Hartwell, or a similarly situated labor relations
officer if more than Hartwell was so employed, the policy generally of employment
discipline at the Veteran’s Administration.
If Fahnestock felt a direct inquiry
about a specific patient was highly improper as he testified, his inquiry could have
more easily been a general inquiry, without the need to identify Donald Barr or
that the inquiry was coming from a psychiatrist.
Dr. Fahnestock did not
investigate or even prepare the decedent’s family for his return home or
investigate whether his patient’s greatest fear, and precipitating cause of his
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suicidal plans, was rationally based. While there is some degree of speculation
whether someone in Mr. Barr’s position would have ended his suicide plans had
he known he did not face termination, Dr. Freeman opined, reasonably, that the
risk of suicide would have been significantly diminished had he known and his
belief was that Barr would not have carried out a suicidal act. Barr still would
have had to face some degree of embarrassment but, logically, that seems the
lesser stressor of the two issues.
Dr. Fahnestock failed Donald Barr in the discharge of the standard of care,
to which Barr as a medical patient was entitled to expect and receive, in two
significant respects, and these failures were the proximate cause of Barr’s death
by suicide.
The government in its defense of this case presented an expert witness on
the subject of suicide.
Ronald W. Marsh, Ph.D., was of no help to the Court
because of unreliable methodology and lack of credibility. In his testimony, the
counsel for plaintiff was able to cast substantial doubt on Marsh’s stated
qualifications, in particular his claim to be a “Board Certified Suicidologist.”
Marsh conceded that the “board” certification came not from the American Board
of Professional Psychology, or the American Medical Association, but from the
American Association of Suicidology in Washington, D.C.
The witness at first
testifies that in order to qualify for board certification one must have earned
either a medical doctor degree or Ph.D. in psychology. However, he eventually
admits to plaintiffs’ counsel that one could qualify as a member of the American
Page 23 of 30
Association of Suicidology having survived a suicide attempt, or be a family
member of someone who had attempted suicide or been successful in the
endeavor to commit suicide.
He further said the “board certification” was an
effort to establish certain standards for professionals claiming to have an
expertise in suicide and who wished to testify in lawsuits. Marsh conceded that
he is not in the active practice of psychology and never was - as his work was
concentrated in “suicidology.”
There was a time when Marsh taught medical
students on the use of the psychological autopsy. At present, he guest lectures
from time to time.
In his report (Gov. Ex. 16), Marsh makes this curious statement, “As a
suicidologist I have investigated and treated thousands of suicides.” (Gov. Ex. 16
page 4; emphasis added.) He does not distinguish between the two as far as how
many were investigations following suicide and how many and whether “suicides”
means an attempt to treat a patient at risk for suicide but for whom his treatment
plan and execution failed.
It is quite clear to this Court that the weight and
credibility to be assigned to Ronald Marsh’s testimony is a great deal less than a
medical doctor who regularly treats patients who are at risk of suicide or even a
clinical psychologist who occupies himself in that manner as well.
The government’s expert witness concedes that the Barr case presented a
completely different set of facts than any other VA case on which he has worked.
Barr, he points out, was not a death resulting from a service-related mental health
matter, for example, suicide coinciding with PTSD from witnessing a peer battle
Page 24 of 30
ground killing, rather from something “he did
at work . . .” (Gov.
Ex. 16, page 6; highlighting in the original.) On the question of whether the VA
Marion and Jefferson Barracks properly assessed Barr for suicide risk, Marsh
used his own assessment tool - not a peer reviewed protocol - as far as his report
and testimony reveal, looking at fifteen separate risk factors. Of the fifteen, which
Marsh professes to be those with the most statistical significance for suicide
prediction, this witness found twelve to be present with Barr. The only ones not
present were prior suicide attempts, isolation, and familial history of suicide.
With eighty percent of the risk factors present in Barr, according to Marsh, he was
rated as a “high moderate” to “low high” suicide risk.
The VA used what is
commonly used in suicide prediction of low, moderate. and high.
The VA
assessed Barr as high. Marsh did not explain on his scale what the cutoff points
are for “low low”, “moderate low”, “high low”, “low moderate”, “moderate”, “high
moderate”, “low high”, “high”, and “high high”. Therefore, we don’t know how
Marsh came to the conclusion on his scale why Donald Barr was either “high
moderate” or “low high” and what other factors one could look to in order to solve
the differential. Despite the seeming discrepancy between his assessment and the
VA’s, he pronounces the VA assessment as correct. The methodology utilized by
Marsh is therefore suspect.
With an unreliable methodology regarding a potential suicide assessment, it
is hard to understand how Marsh arrived at the conclusion of miniscule risk.
Marsh cited statistics from the universe of suicide cases and then acknowledged
Page 25 of 30
that Donald Barr was in a narrower group of suicide victims, being those who are
hospitalized for the treatment of the condition precipitating suicide. Marsh failed
to account for the specific facts of this case which include the patient advising that
he did have suicidal ideations but then immediately offering that he could not do
such a thing in the hospital because of the impact on his family. That statement,
it is recalled, with an immediate suggestion by the patient that he was fine and no
longer had any suicide ideations. Marsh further fails to take into account the
complete lack of family and support group preparation for a patient so recently
assessed as a high risk of suicide.
Ronald Marsh’s insufficient basis and
methodology strike a fatal blow to his opinions rendering them without credibility.
c. Damages
When judges sit as the triers of fact, Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a)
requires that judges make “written findings in support of their conclusions.”
Jutzi-Johnson v. United States, 263 F. 3d 753, 758 (7th Cir. 2001).
“This
means, when the issue is the amount of damages, that the judge must indicate the
reasoning process that connect the evidence to the conclusion[.]” Id. The Seventh
Circuit has urged that when considering damages awards, trial courts study and
contemplate comparable damage awards in similar cases.
Id. at 759.
When
comparing relevant cases, courts may consider “the number of the decedent’s
children, whether they were minor or adults, and the closeness of the relationship
between the decedent and his spouse and children.” Arpin v. United States, 521
F.3d 769, 777 (7th Cir. 2008).
Page 26 of 30
That said, the obvious place to start is the wage loss amount, one million,
eighty one thousand, seven hundred and eighty two dollars ($1,081,782.00),
which the Court has found to be a fact in this case.
Further, the Court finds that the estate of Donald Barr is entitled to his
conscious pain and suffering, his wife and his daughter each to compensation
for their separate loss of society. In an exhaustive effort to find verdicts in cases
with some similarity as the Barr case, very little was uncovered. The vast majority
of the cases were fairly remote in time, presented large distinguishing fact
patterns and/or presented an inability to uncover enough pertinent facts to draw
necessary analogy. What follows is a brief compilation overview of the Court’s
findings.
McKinnis v United States, 2008 WL 5220504 (N.D. Ill. Dec. 10, 2008):
This case arose under the FTCA including wrongful death and survival
claims. Decedent died shortly after discharge from the VA from an overdose of
medication provided to him by the VA. Decedent died in the VA waiting room
after pleading to be re-admitted. At time of death, decedent had two adult
children. The total award entered in a bench trial on December 10, 2008 was
$900,000 with $600,000 for conscious pain and suffering and $150,000 to each
adult child.
In Estate of Farver v. Correctional Medical Service of IL Inc.,
2003 WL 23316373 (N.D. Ill. Feb. 1, 2003):
A male inmate committed suicide by hanging after his statements that he felt
suicidal were not heeded. Decedent left behind 7 beneficiaries. On February 21,
2003, a jury awarded a total $1,750,000 with $250,000 for decedent’s pain and
suffering and $1.5 million in punitive damages.
Zalesky v. Hanusa, M.D., 2014 WL 8726740 (Ill. Cir. Ct. Sep. 24,
2009):
Decedent committed suicide by hanging while under the psychiatric care and
treatment of a medical doctor where suicidal ideations were made known. Prior
Page 27 of 30
to death, decedent was being treated with prescription drugs and visits to the
psychiatrist’s office. A verdict was entered in favor of plaintiff in the amount of
$800,000 for compensatory past damages on December 16, 2014. Decedent was
survived by his wife and 4 minor children.
Muse v Charter Hosp. of Winston-Salem, Inc. 117 N.C. App. 468, aff’d,
342 N.C. 403 (1995):
Parents of child who committed suicide by drug overdose shortly after being
discharged from hospital where he had been admitted for treatment of severe
depression brought wrongful death action against medical providers. Parents
argued that defendants had a policy or practice which required physicians to
discharge patients when their insurance expired and that this policy interfered
with the exercise of sound medical judgment. In a December 1991 trial, jury
awarded parents $1,000,000 in compensatory damages. Jury also awarded a
total of $6,000,000 in punitive damages, which was later reversed and remanded.
Vasilik v Federbush, 327 N.J. Super 6 (App. Div. 1999):
Jury found for father of deceased son who committed suicide by jumping in front
of a dump truck shortly after visit to hospital crisis center while experiencing
withdrawal symptoms from heroin. Father alleged hospital and its employees
were negligent for failing to recommend voluntary hospitalization. Jury awarded
$425,000 to the father.
Banach v Chester Scott, LSW, 2004 WL 3999943 (Sep. 2004):
This Court could not resolve the manner of suicide in the above case, but it is
known that decedent committed suicide upon returning home after a diagnosis by
defendant social worker and codefendant psychiatrist. Decedent was survived by
his wife and numerous children. In her wrongful death action, plaintiff contended
defendants were negligent in failing to properly diagnose decedent and failing to
admit him to hospital. Tried in September 2004, the jury awarded $750,000 for
pain and suffering.
Molchon v. Tyler, 262 Va. 175 (2001):
Virginia wrongful death case resulting in jury award of $1,304,456 based on
claims alleging hospital’s discharge of decedent violated applicable standard of
care when decedent subsequently died as a result of gunshot wounds inflicted by
police officers in circumstances the court dubbed as “equivalent of suicide.”
Reward was later reduced to $875,000 due to medical malpractice caps in a final
court order dated May 19, 2000. Decedent was survived by an estranged ex-wife
and multiple children.
Page 28 of 30
Sheehan v. US, 2003 WL 21938610 (N.D.Ill. Aug.11, 2003):
The above is a non-suicide FTCA case where adult children brought wrongful
death claim after loss of their 62 year old father when he was fatally struck by a
postal truck. Decedent was survived by his wife and seven adult children. In a
bench trial, a Northern District of Illinois judge awarded plaintiff $2,468.000 on
August 8, 2003 for the wrongful death claim. Additionally, $8,000 was awarded
for conscious pain and suffering with $1,600,000 awarded for the wife’s loss of
society and $110,000 for the loss of society to each of decedent’s adult children.
The wife was also awarded $20,000 for her loss of consortium.
Christo v. Heilig Meyers Co., 99L-8771 (IL Cook), tried April 11,
2002:
Another non-suicide case, but used as a comparator in the Sheehan case above
on an FTCA wrongful death claim, Christo is a wrongful death action filed in Cook
County on behalf of the deceased’s estate. Decedent was driving was when he was
struck and hit by defendant’s moving van after van had run a stop sign. Decedent
was survived by his three adult children. The jury awarded $400,000 for
conscious pain and suffering and $2,070,000 for loss of society to the three adult
kids. No wage loss claim was made.
Carrasco v. Healthcare and Retirement Corporation of America, 02L7024 (IL Cook), tried August 11, 2006:
Similar to Christo, Carrasco was used a comparator in the Sheehan case. Here,
decedent suffocated while staying at a nursing home due to personnel’s failures to
clean and suction her trach tube which resulted in obstruction. The suffocation
led to a coma and eventually death. Defendants admitted liability and the case
was tried on August 11, 2006 for damages only. Ms. Carrasco left behind two
adult children who each were awarded $680,000 for loss of society. Additionally,
$1,360,000 was awarded on the wrongful death claim and $1,500,000 for the
Survival Act claim.
After thorough analysis of the preceding, the Court gleans very little useful
guidance from the prior cases due to their striking differences with the Barr case.
VI. CONCLUSION AND AWARD
Page 29 of 30
Considering all the preceding findings of fact, upon which this Court relies
for the conclusions herein, and conclusions of law, the Court makes the following
award of damages, including the wage loss which the Court heretofore ruled on:
Wage loss:
$1,082,782.00
Conscious pain and suffering:
$1,500,000.00
Loss of society – Michelle Barr:
$1,500,000.00
Loss of society – Morgan Barr:
$1,000,000.00
The Clerk of the Court is directed to enter judgment in Plaintiff’s
favor and against the defendant accordingly.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Judge Herndon
2018.10.04
16:08:33 -05'00'
United States District Judge
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