McMILLIAN, Judge.
A jury returned a defense verdict in a medical malpractice case brought by June and Robert Turrell against Michael J. McNeel, M.D., and his practice, Marietta Plastic Surgery, P.C. Following the denial of their motion for new trial, the Turrells appeal, arguing that the trial court committed errors mid-trial when the Turrells moved for sanctions, and thereafter erred in denying their motions for new trial, to strike liability defenses, and to disqualify defense counsel. Because the trial court was correct in concluding that the Turrells waived their right to seek sanctions against the defendants, we find no error and affirm.
Following a jury trial, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict.
An area of necrotic tissue later developed on Mrs. Turrell's left buttock, which eventually required several additional procedures and surgeries to correct over the course of the next few months. Thereafter, she sued Dr. McNeel and his practice for medical malpractice, contending that he failed to use proper surgical techniques and failed to identify and properly treat her infected wounds. Mr. Turrell sued for loss of consortium.
The case was tried to a jury beginning on September 30, 2013. After the Turrells completed the presentation of their evidence, the trial recessed until the next morning. When the parties and counsel returned to court the next morning on the fourth day of trial, the Turrells represented to the trial court that defense counsel had contacted Mrs. Turrell's treating wound care nurse in violation of the
Defense counsel, who had received no prior notice of plaintiffs' counsel's concerns, explained that while she had previously met with the wound care nurse two years before, along with plaintiffs' counsel, in accordance with the QPO, since that time the defense had
Plaintiffs' counsel declared that the communications violated at least the spirit of the QPO because the defense did not inform the Turrells that they were providing documents to a treating healthcare provider to review in preparation for testifying, and they did not know what documents had been provided. The trial court agreed that contacting the wound care nurse without notifying plaintiffs' counsel was at least a technical violation of the QPO and asked what sanctions the plaintiffs sought. Plaintiffs' counsel requested that the defense be prevented from calling the wound care nurse as a witness.
As the defense did not intend to call the nurse until later that day or the next day, the trial court took the matter under advisement.
Defense counsel responded that she had no notice that the plaintiffs were contemplating a motion to strike the answer, despite having conferred with them several times about whether she would call the wound care nurse or not. The court then found that defense counsel was entitled to notice and an opportunity for a full hearing on the sanctions issue. However, the court determined that scheduling a sanctions hearing mid-trial was impractical because there was a chance that the jury would find out about the sanctions hearing, which the trial court believed might "destroy our case." Although plaintiffs' counsel continued to argue that the court had the authority to address misfeasance in its presence rather than being required to "blow the trial up and set a hearing 30 days out," the trial court observed that the sanctions sought were severe and that the Turrells had to either drop the matter or pursue it, and that if they wanted to pursue it, then the court could not go forward with the trial.
Plaintiffs initially rejected both options and instead moved for what was in essence a continuance until the next morning to further "refine" their motion for an "appropriate sanction." The trial court denied a continuance but allowed counsel to again confer with their clients to reach a permanent decision, rejecting plaintiffs' equivocal request to reserve ruling on their motion to strike defendants' answer until after the jury reached its verdict. After so conferring, plaintiffs' counsel agreed to "permanently withdraw" the motion and proceed with the trial.
The defense continued to present its case, and the plaintiffs offered some evidence in rebuttal. After the jury returned a defense verdict and the trial court entered judgment, the Turrells filed a motion for new trial, a motion for sanctions, and a motion to disqualify defense counsel. The trial court denied the motions, concluding that the Turrells "waived the right to pursue a remedy for defense counsel's alleged misconduct" for violating the QPO and improperly influencing a witness. The court noted that it had offered the Turrells the "full opportunity" to address the allegations of misconduct and would have declared a mistrial, set the matter for a hearing, allowed discovery, and considered sanctions if the evidence warranted them, and had expressly put the Turrells on notice that they would waive the right to pursue any remedy for the alleged misconduct if they chose to proceed with trial.
On appeal, the Turrells contend that the trial court erred in failing to grant them a reasonable amount of time to respond to the defendants' misconduct, in forcing them to choose between a mistrial or waiving the
1. We will first address the Turrells' contention that the trial court erred in failing to grant a continuance. "A motion for continuance of a trial is properly addressed to the sound legal discretion of a trial judge, who is in control of the management of the case in court. The exercise of that discretion will not be disturbed by the appellate courts unless the discretion is manifestly abused." (Citation and footnote omitted.) Davis v. Osinuga, 330 Ga.App. 278, 279, 767 S.E.2d 37 (2014). Based on the facts and circumstances of this case, where plaintiffs' counsel acknowledged they first became concerned about allegedly improper communications in the week prior to trial, we find that the trial court did not manifestly abuse its discretion in denying the plaintiffs' request for a continuance to further consider their motion for sanctions.
2. The Turrells also argue that the trial court erred in forcing them to choose between a mistrial or waiver of their sanctions motion. Generally, "[a] trial court is granted broad authority both to control the course of a trial and to manage discovery disputes, including the imposition of discovery sanctions. We will not interfere with the trial court's exercise of that discretion absent a showing of clear abuse." (Citations omitted). LN West Paces Ferry Assocs., LLC v. McDonald, 306 Ga.App. 641, 646(2)(a), 703 S.E.2d 85 (2010). However, pretermitting whether the trial court abused its discretion in requiring the plaintiffs to choose to go forward with the sanctions motion and have the case mistried or permanently forego moving for sanctions, we find that plaintiffs' counsel waived any further objection at the time the choice was made.
Rather than stating any continuing objection on the record to what the plaintiffs now call a "Hobson's choice," plaintiffs' counsel, after being given some time to confer with their clients off the record, responded to the trial court's direction by conceding:
It is clear that plaintiffs elected to proceed to a jury verdict rather than face a mistrial and a separate hearing on the alleged misconduct. However, after the jury rendered a defense verdict, plaintiffs nonetheless attempted to renew the very motion they agreed to permanently withdraw. It is axiomatic that "[a] party cannot complain of error created by his own legal strategy, trial procedure or conduct." (Citations omitted.) LN West Paces Ferry Assocs., LLC, 306 Ga.App. at 648-649(3)(a), 703 S.E.2d 85. And by failing to object to the choice put to them at the time it was made, plaintiffs have waived this argument. Id. at 649(3)(c), 703 S.E.2d 85.
3. In light of this waiver, plaintiffs' remaining enumerations of error are moot.
Judgment affirmed.
RAY, J., concurs.
BARNES, P.J., concurs specially.
BARNES, Presiding Judge, concurring specially.
While I agree with the majority that the Turrells waived their right to seek sanctions against the defendants in this medical malpractice case, I would find that they did so only because they did not renew their objection when they were presented with the option of doing so or accepting a mistrial. Because I do not agree with all that is said, I concur specially.
First, the plaintiffs in this case did not seek a continuance of the trial at any time. What they sought, reasonably, was for the trial court to defer ruling on their motion for sanctions until the following morning. This request was made after lunch on the fourth
Further, when the plaintiffs asked the trial court to defer ruling until the next morning, they did not know the extent of any efforts by the defendants to influence the treating wound care nurse. After further colloquy, the plaintiffs withdrew their motion for sanctions, but the defendants protested the withdrawal and wanted the matter resolved immediately. At that point the trial court gave plaintiffs' counsel ten minutes to confer with his client and then "either proceed on the motion or you withdraw it permanently." The trial court had made it abundantly clear early in the trial that once it ruled, she wanted to hear no further response from the attorneys, and upon his return, counsel chose the lesser of the two evils and again withdrew the motion for sanctions.
The trial court essentially required the plaintiffs to guess whether the defendants had done more than simply pass the plaintiff's medical records through a defense attorney that the hospital had previously hired to represent the nurse, rather like making them choose to go all in or fold during a game of five-card stud when they had only seen two of their cards.
And the context of the sanctions motion as set out in the majority is incomplete. First, trial counsel had an agreement that they would disclose to opposing counsel who might be coming the next day, an agreement memorialized in the pretrial order. The defendants failed to comply with that agreement. The defense had listed their expert nurse and the treating wound care nurse as may-call witnesses. In opening, plaintiffs referred to anticipated testimony of the expert nurse, who in deposition disputed Dr. McNeel's opinion that pictures of Mrs. Turrell's wounds showed no signs of infection, and of the wound care nurse, who also saw signs of infection where Dr. McNeel saw none. During the plaintiffs' cross-examination of Dr. McNeel on day three of the trial, however, defense counsel objected to a question about the opinion of his hired expert nurse on the ground that the expert was not going to testify. Plaintiffs' counsel responded that he did not know the defense was not going to call their expert although he had asked who they would call. The court said to defense counsel, "If you weren't going to call [your expert], you should put them on notice you weren't going to call her," and defense counsel replied, "Well, I just have." The trial court pointed out that because of the "inappropriate" timing of the notice, the plaintiffs were unable to call the expert themselves, but defense counsel responded, "Well, I'm not required to put [plaintiffs' counsel] on notice, at any time[;] if I choose not to call a witness that's on the witness list, I don't have to."
At the end of the day, defense counsel notified the plaintiffs that they might call the wound care nurse the next day. Before trial began the next morning, plaintiffs' counsel told the court that he believed that the defense had contacted the wound care nurse ex parte in violation of the QPO and had given her medical records in violation of HIPAA. After discussion, the trial court took the matter under advisement, but when plaintiffs' counsel stated his understanding that another medical malpractice lawyer, Henry Green, had actually delivered the records to the nurse, the trial court questioned defense counsel further. Counsel explained that she involved Green in the transmission process because the hospital had previously procured him to represent the nurse.
The trial court responded that something was "a little unusual," and noted that "Mr. Green has been known to communicate with parties and witnesses, and others related to cases, inappropriately, according to some judges. So that really puts a little stick in the wheel there."
While the defendants argue that mistrial or waiver were the only proper options the trial court could have offered, the trial court had a third option, which was to make no ruling at all. The Turrells had withdrawn their motion for sanctions, and therefore no motion was pending that required a ruling, much less a preemptive ruling to forestall any future motion for sanctions regardless of any information the Turrells subsequently uncovered about the defendants' actions. "There is neither reason nor precedent for the proposition that when in a legal proceeding a motion has been submitted to the court and subsequently withdrawn as formally as it was made, the question raised by the motion can be afterwards considered, unless the motion shall have been subsequently renewed." Howard v. State, 115 Ga. 244, 250-251, 41 S.E. 654 (1902).
To quote our Supreme Court in a discovery violation case, a trial "is not supposed to be a game in which the parties maneuver to hide the truth about relevant facts, and when a party does intentionally mislead its adversary, it bears the risk that the truth will later be revealed[.]" Ford Motor Co. v. Conley, 294 Ga. 530, 559, 757 S.E.2d 20 (2014). In this case, however, we will never know why the wound care nurse became reluctant to testify.
For these reasons, I do not agree with the majority's analysis of this appeal and its conclusion that the Turrells waived the issue by making the choice forced upon them. But because the Turrells did not renew their objection or make a continuing objection, I agree that the issue was waived on appeal.