In the case of Bernavage v. Green Ridge Healthcare Group, LLC, No. 1576 MDA 2023 (Pa. Super. May 19, 2025 Bowes, J., Olson, J., and Stabile, J.)(Op. by Stabile, J.), the Pennsylvania Superior Court affirmed the entry of a compensatory damages award by a jury after a medical malpractice trial but vacated the jury's award of punitive damages after finding that the trial court erred by allowing the Plaintiff to amend the Complaint during the trial to add the claim for punitive damages.
According to the Opinion, the underlying case involved two (2) trials, one under compensatory damages aspect of the case and a second, later trial limited to consideration of whether punitive damages should be awarded against the Defendants.
It was noted that, during the course of the first trial, the Plaintiffs moved for a directed verdict on the issues of negligence and recklessness. At that time, the Plaintiff also made a request to file an Amended Complaint to conform the evidence elicited at trial to the pleadings. The request for a directed verdict was denied but the Plaintiff was allowed to file an Amended Complaint to add allegations of recklessness and to include a claim for punitive damages. The court also severed the issues related to the punitive damages claim to be resolved at a second, later trial with a different jury.
After the jury in the first trial entered an award in favor of the Plaintiff, the pleadings were reopened by the trial court and the parties proceeded to conduct punitive damages discovery prior to the second trial.
There was then a second trial at which the jury entered an award of punitive damages.
Following the punitive damages trial, the Defendants filed various post-trial motions and, eventually, this appeal. A central issue on appeal was whether the trial court abused its discretion in allowing, in the middle of a trial and after the expiration of the applicable statute of limitations, the Plaintiff to amend the Complaint to add allegations of recklessness and the claim for punitive damages.
The Superior Court ruled that the amendment of the Complaint to allow for claims of recklessness was not barred by the applicable statute of limitations. The main rationale for the appellate court’s decision in this regard was that recklessness and gross negligence are not to be considered distinct causes of action separate and apart from claims of ordinary negligence.
However, the appellate court did find that the trial court’s decision, during the course of trial, to allow the Plaintiff to add a claim for punitive damages was improper as that resulted in an unfair surprise to the Defendants at that late hour of the case.
The appellate court noted that the record revealed that the Plaintiffs did not pursue a claim of recklessness during the course of discovery and only introduced the concept of recklessness for the first time during the course of the trial.
The Superior Court noted that the Plaintiff’s failure to develop the specific theory of recovery in the form of recklessness during the course of discovery was not, in this case, a mere technicality subject to being cured by an amendment of the Complaint to conform to the evidence at any point. Rather, the Superior Court noted that the record in this case revealed that the Plaintiff had developed a theory of liability at trial that was substantively different from the theory developed by the Plaintiff during the course of discovery and as alleged in the original Complaint.
The Superior Court additionally noted that the Plaintiff had solicited the word “reckless” from witnesses during the course of a trial, which witnesses, in the eyes of the Superior Court, could not be expected to understand the legal significance of that term. The Superior Court noted that the witnesses’ use of the word “reckless” in their testimony was of no legal significance until the trial court subsequently permitted the Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint in which recklessness was then alleged for the first time.
Accordingly, the appellate court found that this matter did not involve simply an amendment of the pleadings in order to conform the Complaint to the evidence produced at trial. Rather, the Superior Court viewed this matter as involving an introduction of a new theory of recovery at a late date in the proceedings, which action was of the type that is frowned upon by the courts and which often results in a violation of the statute of limitations.
While the court found that the statute of limitations did not serve to bar the addition of a claim of recklessness under this set of facts and given that recklessness is only considered a state of mind in regards to a negligence claim, the Superior Court found that the unfair surprise to the opposing party from the late amendment served as grounds that should have compelled the trial court to deny permission to amend the Complaint.
The Superior Court concluded that unfair surprise existed in this case “where a negligence Plaintiff, without explanation, withholds the precise theory of recovery until the latest possible time.”
The court noted that, if, as the Plaintiff asserted, the facts of the Plaintiff’s original Complaint were sufficient to support a recklessness theory of recovery, then the Plaintiff should have developed that theory during the course of discovery. The Superior Court noted that, while it ascribed no motive to the Plaintiff in this case, it felt that, to reach a different conclusion, would be to invite negligence plaintiffs to withhold their theory of recovery, whether it is a negligence, gross negligence, or recklessness claim, until the last possible minute for the specific purpose of creating an unfair surprise to the opposing party.
For these reasons, the Superior Court concluded that the trial court abused its discretion in permitting the Plaintiff to amend their Complaint during the course of trial to add a claim for punitive damages.
As such, the Superior Court affirmed the jury’s verdict relative to the award of compensatory damages but vacated the second jury’s award of punitive damages. The case was remanded for further proceedings.
Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.
I send thanks to Attorney Joseph T. (“Jody”) Healey of the Scranton, PA law firm of Cipriani &Werner for bringing this case to my attention.
As such, the Superior Court affirmed the jury’s verdict relative to the award of compensatory damages but vacated the second jury’s award of punitive damages. The case was remanded for further proceedings.
Anyone wishing to review a copy of this decision may click this LINK.
I send thanks to Attorney Joseph T. (“Jody”) Healey of the Scranton, PA law firm of Cipriani &Werner for bringing this case to my attention.