PARKER, Justice.
Jamie Gaddy appeals the judgment of the Calhoun Circuit Court ("the circuit court") dismissing with prejudice Gaddy's medical-malpractice action against Lisa Arleen Brascho, a certified registered-nurse anesthetist. We dismiss the appeal.
An extensive recitation of the facts is not necessary for purposes of resolving this appeal. On November 8, 2007, J. Patrick Stewart, M.D., with the assistance of Brascho, performed a laproscopic hysterectomy on Gaddy ("the procedure"). In her complaint, Gaddy alleges that Brascho breached the standard of care in regard to the placement and monitoring of shoulder braces used during the procedure to hold Gaddy's body in the proper position. Specifically, at issue was whether the shoulder braces were placed over Gaddy's clavicle area rather than her acromion process.
On November 6, 2009, Gaddy filed a medical-malpractice action under the Alabama Medical Liability Act, § 6-5-480 et seq. and § 6-5-540 et seq., Ala.Code 1975, against Brascho, among others. Before the trial, Gaddy's claims against all the defendants but Brascho were disposed of. The trial court then set the case against Brascho for trial on June 18, 2012.
On June 8, 2012, Brascho filed a motion in limine requesting that the trial court "enter an [o]rder preventing [Gaddy] from attempting to introduce into evidence or otherwise argue to the jury that there is allegedly a higher probability of injury if the [shoulder] supports [were placed] over [Gaddy's] acromion process." The deposition testimony of Gaddy's expert witnesses, Dr. J. Patrick Stewart and Dr. Amir M. Torabi, were the subject of Brascho's motion in limine. Brascho's motion in limine was based, in part, on the following argument:
On June 11, 2012, the trial court granted Brascho's motion in limine, as follows:
It appears that Gaddy interpreted the trial court's pretrial order granting Brascho's motion in limine as having the practical effect of prohibiting Dr. Stewart and Dr. Torabi from testifying at trial.
On June 18, 2012, before the trial began and even though the trial court had already granted Brascho's motion in limine,
On June 19, 2012, the trial court entered the following order dismissing Gaddy's complaint against Brascho:
Gaddy appealed.
On May 6, 2013, this Court entered the following show-cause order concerning Gaddy's appeal:
On May 17, 2013, Gaddy filed a brief in response to this Court's show-cause order arguing that she did not consent to the trial court's grant of Brascho's motion in limine and that she did not request dismissal of her case. Gaddy argued that she
On May 29, 2013, this Court, by an order issued by the clerk's office, dismissed Gaddy's appeal, as follows:
On June 11, 2013, this Court, by an order issued by the clerk's office, reinstated Gaddy's appeal, as follows:
We must first determine whether this Court has jurisdiction over Gaddy's appeal. Brascho argues in her appellate brief that Gaddy has no right to appeal the trial court's order dismissing Gaddy's appeal because Brascho never requested that the trial court dismiss the case and "the dismissal was at the request of or at the very least, was consented to by [Gaddy]." In her reply brief and in her brief in response to this Court's show-cause order, Gaddy baldly alleges that she did not consent to the dismissal of her case; the record, however, clearly indicates that she did. Gaddy also argues, as set forth above, that the trial court's grant of Brascho's motion in limine "effectively dismissed [Gaddy's] case, and the immediately-following order of dismissal was just a procedural formality to formally create a final judgment for closing the civil action."
Gaddy's appeal is undisputedly from the trial court's June 19, 2012, judgment dismissing Gaddy's case against Brascho, which Gaddy undisputedly requested, or at the very least consented to. Before this Court, Gaddy does not challenge the trial court's dismissal of Gaddy's case against Brascho, nor would this Court expect her to do so, because she requested the dismissal. According to Gaddy, the reason she requested the dismissal of her case
APPEAL DISMISSED.
STUART, MAIN, WISE, and BRYAN, JJ., concur.
BOLIN and SHAW, JJ., concur in the result.
MOORE, C.J., and MURDOCK, J., dissent.
MURDOCK, Justice (dissenting).
As the main opinion explains, the following exchange occurred between the trial court and Jamie Gaddy's counsel following the trial court's ruling, over Gaddy's strenuous objection, granting the motion in limine filed by the defendant, Lisa Arleen Brascho:
I read the comments of the trial court and Gaddy's counsel as simply an admirably candid admission that, without the involuntarily excluded evidence, the plaintiff would not be able to present substantial evidence in support of her claims if the trial court were to allow the case to go forward. It is the type of admission that, in the interest of judicial economy and honesty to the court, this Court should encourage. Given that the dismissal of Gaddy's claim was the logically and legally required consequence of this admission, which itself was merely an honest response to a involuntary and vigorously contested
I do not believe this Court is accurately reading from the transcript the practical sense intended by the informal exchange of both the trial court and Gaddy's counsel. Indeed, the above-quoted colloquy concludes with the trial court's own observation that, if Gaddy's counsel wished to do so, he certainly could appeal from the trial court's judgment. With this statement, the trial court itself evinced its own understanding that the dismissal it was ordering was by no means intended as a voluntary one by Gaddy and that it did not take its previous question or counsel's answer to it as suggesting otherwise.
I believe Gaddy hereby is deprived of appellate review of the trial court's decision regarding the exclusion of certain evidence, a review to which she is entitled. I therefore respectfully must dissent. In so doing, I express no view as to the merits of Gaddy's position on the substantive issue of the admissibility of the excluded evidence.
In Martin, also a medical-malpractice case, the trial court granted a motion in limine filed by the defendant after trial began, thereby prohibiting the plaintiff's expert witness from testifying. At the close of the plaintiff's case, the defendant filed a motion for a judgment as a matter of law ("JML"), which the trial court granted; nothing in Martin indicates that the plaintiff stipulated to the trial court's entry of the JML. The plaintiff appealed, and this Court considered the merits of the plaintiff's appeal. Martin is distinguishable from this case because there is no indication that the plaintiff in Martin asked for a JML to be entered against her and because Gaddy has appealed not a JML, but the requested dismissal of her case.
Gaddy also relies upon Kysar v. BP America Production Co., 273 P.3d 867 (N.M.Ct.App. 2012). We need not consider this authority because it is from a foreign jurisdiction. However, even if we did consider Kysar, it is distinguishable from this case. In Kysar, the Court of Appeals of New Mexico did not dismiss an appeal from a "stipulated conditional directed verdict." 273 P.3d at 871. As stated above, Gaddy's appeal is not from a "stipulated conditional directed verdict," but from a requested dismissal.