                    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                    No. 14-1682
                              Filed January 25, 2017


ALAN ANDERSEN, Individually and as Injured Parent of CHELSEA
ANDERSEN and BRODY ANDERSEN, and DIANE ANDERSEN, Wife of Alan
Andersen,
     Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

SOHIT KHANNA, M.D., and IOWA HEART CENTER, P.C.,
     Defendants-Appellees.
________________________________________________________________


       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Scott D. Rosenberg

(partial summary judgment), Dennis J. Stovall (motion to reconsider), and

Michael D. Huppert (pretrial motions and trial), Judges.


       The plaintiffs in a medical malpractice suit appeal from a jury verdict in

favor of the defendant; they also appeal from the court’s rulings granting

defendants’ summary judgment on one claim of inadequate informed consent,

limiting plaintiffs’ second claim of inadequate informed consent, refusing plaintiffs’

request for a rebuttal witness, and refusing proposed jury instructions.

AFFIRMED.


       Marc S. Harding of Harding Law Office, Des Moines, for appellants.

       Nancy J. Penner, Jennifer E. Rinden, and Robert D. Houghton of

Shuttleworth & Ingersoll, P.L.C., Cedar Rapids, for appellees.


       Heard by Potterfield, P.J., and Doyle and Tabor, JJ.
                                          2


POTTERFIELD, Presiding Judge.

       Alan Andersen was the patient in an unsuccessful Bentall heart

procedure,1 performed by defendant Dr. Sohit Khanna at Iowa Heart Center, P.C.

The plaintiffs claimed several of the actions taken by Dr. Khanna fell below the

standard of care and ultimately caused the failure of Andersen’s left ventricle.

The jury found that Dr. Khanna was not negligent.

       On appeal, the plaintiffs maintain they should have been allowed to

present two claims of inadequate informed consent, alleging (1) Dr. Khanna

failed to advise Andersen that he had a “super bad heart” pre-surgery with an

increased risk of mortality and (2) Dr. Khanna was required to inform Andersen

he had never performed the procedure before. Dr. Khanna’s failure to inform

Andersen he had no experience in performing the surgical procedure had been

pled and was the subject of the defendants’ motion for partial summary

judgment, which was granted by one pre-trial judge with a caveat that the

plaintiffs could present evidence on Dr. Khanna’s lack of experience—but could

not argue it should have formed part of the informed consent information.

       The plaintiffs then filed a “motion for reconsideration,” which did not

request reconsideration of the one issue already dismissed—Dr. Khanna’s failure

to include his lack of experience as an informed consent factor. Rather, the

motion for reconsideration was based upon a discovery deposition of a defense

expert, Dr. Henri Cuenoud, who had testified Andersen’s heart condition pre-

surgery was poor, increasing the risk the surgery would fail. The motion for


1
 The Bentall procedure is the replacement of the aortic valve, the aortic root, and the
ascending aorta.
                                           3


reconsideration requested the court allow the plaintiffs to argue that Anderson’s

pre-surgical condition should have been covered by Dr. Khanna as a risk factor

in the informed consent conversation with Andersen. The court eventually ruled

as part of its rulings on pre-trial matters that “Plaintiffs shall be allowed to present

evidence relating to Dr. Cuenoud’s awareness of the Plaintiff’s increased

mortality risk and apprising the Plaintiff of the same.” Dr. Cuenoud’s awareness

of Andersen’s pre-surgery condition was not the issue; Dr. Khanna’s awareness

of the pre-surgery condition and its effect on survivability was the issue—the

court’s ruling inserted the wrong doctor’s name. But the parties tried the case to

the jury without attempting to correct the order, with the plaintiff claiming

Andersen’s pre-surgical condition was good and only Dr. Khanna’s negligence

could have resulted in failure, while the defendants argued Andersen’s pre-

surgical condition was poor, resulting in an enhanced risk for the surgery, which

then failed for that reason. Andersen did not present his alternate claim: that if

Andersen’s pre-surgical condition was poor, Dr. Khanna should have informed

him of the increased risk as part of the informed consent conversation. Both

parties proceeded as though both informed consent claims—Dr. Khanna’s lack of

experience and Andersen’s enhanced risk—had been dismissed by the trial

court. After the close of the plaintiffs’ case and after Dr. Khanna’s testimony in

his own defense, the trial judge ruled that since the parties had tried the case

based on the notion the issues of informed consent had been dismissed, he was

not going to allow the issue to be raised at that point. Andersen raises both

informed consent issues on appeal but was unable to say during oral argument
                                          4


whether the issues had been pled or what ruling prevented the presentation of

evidence.

        Additionally, the plaintiffs argue the court abused its discretion when it

refused to allow them to present a rebuttal witness, and they urge us to find the

court erred when it refused to provide their proposed marshalling instruction to

the jury.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

       Andersen was born in 1952 with a heart defect.2 The defect and the

resulting strain it caused on Andersen’s heart ultimately caused his need for

heart surgery.

       In January 2004, Andersen met with a doctor at the Iowa Heart Center

who then referred Andersen to a surgeon within the practice, Dr. Khanna. Dr.

Khanna met with Andersen and his wife Diane, and Andersen was scheduled to

have a non-emergency Bentall procedure on January 22, 2004.

       Dr. Khanna performed the surgery, which required completely stopping

Andersen’s       heart   (through   various   measures      including   administering

cardioplegia) and putting him on bypass. When the procedure was completed,

Dr. Khanna was unable to get the left ventricle of Andersen’s heart restarted. Dr.

Khanna tried a number of techniques to restart the left ventricle, but none were

successful.      Dr. Khanna and another surgeon placed an assist device in

Andersen’s chest, which replaced the function of the left ventricle. Following the

unsuccessful surgery, Andersen experienced a number of complications and he


2
  Andersen has a congenital bicuspid aortic valve; in other words, he was born with two
flaps in his aortic valve rather than the typical three.
                                          5


was in a coma for a period of time. Andersen was transferred to the University of

Iowa Hospital.

       On February 26, 2004, when he was strong enough for another heart

surgery, Andersen received a HeartMate—a less temporary device meant to

assist the left side of his heart. The HeartMate came with its own complications

and challenges, and Andersen continued to have other health concerns.              He

remained in the hospital in Iowa City until May 7, 2004.

       Andersen lived with the HeartMate until he was able to receive a heart

transplant on October 22, 2006.       Like the HeartMate, the transplant and the

corresponding medications that were necessary led to other health issues—such

as increased risk of cancer.

       In September 2005, before Andersen received the heart transplant, the

plaintiffs filed their first petition at law, claiming Dr. Khanna “was negligent in his

treatment of Andersen by various acts and omissions.”

       The plaintiffs filed an amended petition in August 2008, alleging

specifically that Dr. Khanna was negligent in the following ways:

               a. Failing to properly advise Andersen regarding the risks
       and dangers of the procedures recommended by Khanna, and
       failing to obtain informed consent for the procedures actually
       performed;
               b. Failing to properly assess, monitor, and care for Andersen
       before, during, and after the surgical procedure performed by
       Khanna on January 22, 2004;
               c. Failing to properly perform the surgical procedure
       undertaken by him on Andersen on January 22, 2004; and
               d. Failing to properly advise Andersen that he [Khanna] had
       limited experience in performing the Bentall procedure.

(Alteration in original.)
                                             6


       In May 2010,3 the defendants filed a motion for partial summary judgment,

maintaining the plaintiffs’ fourth claim—that Dr. Khanna had failed to properly

advise Andersen that he had limited experience performing the procedure—did

not fall within the requirements of informed consent, and thus there was no legal

basis for the claim.      The defendants asserted they were “entitled to partial

summary judgment in their favor on the informed consent claim to the extent it is

based on the alleged failure to disclose Dr. Khanna’s personal characteristics or

experience in obtaining Andersen’s informed consent.”

       A contested hearing was held on the matter, and on June 15, the district

court granted the defendants motion.4 In its ruling, the court stated:

       The Court agrees with the Defendant Khanna and the Iowa Heart
       Center that the informed consent for patients as defined under Iowa
       law requires a disclosure to the patient of all known material
       information concerning a particular procedure. The Court finds that
       Iowa law does not include a duty to disclose personal
       characteristics or experience of a physician or doctor in obtaining
       informed consent from a patient. Therefore, pursuant to Iowa law,
       the Court finds that the motion for summary judgment filed by Dr.
       Khanna and the Iowa Heart Center regarding informed consent is
       hereby sustained.
              The Court does observe, however, that this ruling does not
       prevent Plaintiffs from introducing evidence regarding the abilities,
       knowledge, experience and expertise of Dr. Khanna in performing
       the procedure at issue in this case. Clearly, these factors would be
       relevant to the issue of whether or not Dr. Khanna was negligent in
       performing medical procedures involved in this case.

       The plaintiffs filed a “motion to reconsider,” urging the court to allow a

second informed consent claim based on the defense expert, Dr. Cuenoud, who

testified in a deposition that Andersen’s heart was in such bad shape prior to

3
 By this point, the trial had already been continued twice.
4
  In its ruling, the court also granted summary judgment for the defendants on the
plaintiffs’ claim against Iowa Heart Center, P.C. for allegedly negligently credentialing Dr.
Khanna. There is no claim of error regarding that part of the court’s ruling.
                                           7


surgery that Andersen had a “significantly increased risk of complications during

the surgery.” Dr. Cuenoud also opined that Dr. Khanna was aware of the poor

condition of Andersen’s heart before surgery. The plaintiffs maintained that Dr.

Khanna’s failure to inform Andersen of the increased risks created a basis for this

second informed-consent claim.

       In September 2011, the district court ruled on the pending motion to

reconsider. The court stated, “The Court reconsiders in June 15, 2010 ruling and

enters the following ruling modifying the same only as follows: The Plaintiffs shall

be allowed to present evidence relating to Dr. Cuenoud’s awareness of the

Plaintiff’s increased mortality risk and apprising the Plaintiff of the same.”5

       The trial was scheduled to begin on October 31, 2011. It ended in a

mistrial after a plaintiffs’ attorney represented during jury selection that Dr.

Khanna had lied.

       The trial was then rescheduled to begin in April 2013. In March 2013,

leading up to trial, the defendants filed a third motion in limine, in which they

raised some new limine issues but also expressed their understanding about the

current state of the court’s previous rulings.        In doing so, the defendants

expressed, “Plaintiff’s informed consent claim that had been dismissed on

summary judgment was not reinstated by the [September 2011] reconsideration

of that dismissal.” The court filed an order in response to the motion, stating in

pertinent part: “The prior rulings of the court . . . are reaffirmed and shall stand as

the rulings of this court once trial commences.”

5
  The parties now seem to agree that the insertion of Dr. Cuenoud’s name in the ruling
on reconsideration was a scrivener’s error and should have been Dr. Khanna. However,
the confusion from this mistake endured throughout most of the trial.
                                          8


       The second trial also ended in a mistrial due to the same plaintiffs’

attorney violating the court’s ruling in limine that the jury not be allowed to

consider Andersen’s medical expenses in determining the extent of his injuries.

The plaintiffs’ attorney in question had his pro hac vice admission revoked, and

the plaintiffs engaged new representation.

       The trial was then rescheduled for July 2014. Whether the plaintiffs had

an informed-consent claim was raised again in a pre-trial hearing on July 2. The

defendants made clear to the court that they understood there was no informed-

consent claim based on the alleged failure to advise Andersen he was at

increased risk during the surgery due to his “bad heart.” The plaintiffs countered

that they believed there was a viable claim because of Dr. Cuenoud’s deposition

testimony. The defendants responded, “Your Honor, that is our expert, not an

expert to be called in plaintiffs’ case-in-chief. Plaintiff’s didn’t cross-designate or

in any way indicate a reliance on our expert opinions, so we believe informed

consent is out of the case.” The defendants did not argue they had never moved

for summary judgment on the issue of the “super bad heart” and it was not the

subject of the summary judgment ruling. The plaintiffs did not argue their theory

of the case that Andersen did not have a “super bad heart” and should have

survived the surgery. The court responded:

              Well, here is where I'm still confused, more so from a lack of
       sustained involvement in this case. There was an informed
       consent claim that was the subject of a summary judgment motion
       which was granted. Now, ordinarily that would tell me everything I
       need to know about the viability of the informed consent claim. Has
       there been any effort to re-plead another informed consent claim
       since [the ruling granting partial summary judgment]?

The plaintiffs’ attorney responded, “Not to my knowledge.”
                                         9


      During voir dire examination on July 7, 2014, outside the presence of the

potential jurors, the court and the attorneys again discussed the prior rulings on

the claim for informed consent. The court stated, in part:

      [Plaintiffs’ attorney] had requested some guidance regarding where
      he could or could not go in jury selection, and that transformed into
      a general discussion about the issue of Dr. Khanna’s qualifications
      or lack thereof to perform the procedure that brings us all together
      today.
              ....
              But it would appear to me that this issue has been
      addressed in one of the previous rulings from my predecessors. It
      looks like it was Judge Stovall in his ruling September 20th, 2011,
      where he addressed the defendants’ second motion in limine. And
      I’m just going to read . . . . ‘Dr. Khanna’s qualifications may be
      pursued by the plaintiffs in the context of a general negligence
      claim, along with the issue of informed consent, consistent with the
      Court’s ruling on this issue in the plaintiff’s motion to reconsider.’

      Once trial started, the plaintiffs called a number of expert witnesses; more

than one expert testified Andersen was a “good candidate” for the surgery, and

another expert testified he “would expect a good result” for Andersen having the

procedure. None of the plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that Andersen was more at

risk to have an unsuccessful outcome in the surgery due to other issues with his

heart. In fact, the plaintiffs’ theory was that because Andersen had such a high

likelihood of success, it must have been the negligent action (or inaction) of Dr.

Khanna that caused the failure of the left ventricle.        Andersen’s testimony

presented in the plaintiffs’ case did not include questioning on the issue of

informed consent.

      On the eighth day of the trial, after plaintiffs had rested but before the

testimony of defense expert Dr. Cuenoud, plaintiffs asked the court for guidance
                                         10


regarding the scope of the testimony they could elicit from the doctor.           The

plaintiffs argued,

       Remember, we talked about the issue of informed consent being
       out of the case, with the one exception that the Court reconsiders it
       June 15th, 2010 ruling and says that the plaintiff shall be allowed to
       present evidence relating to Dr. Cuenoud’s awareness of the
       plaintiff’s increased mortality risk and apprising the plaintiff of the
       same, which apprising the plaintiff of the same, of course, is
       informed consent.
               So by them bringing him in here to testify, I believe that
       that’s fair game irrespective of whether they raise the issue or not,
       but I certainly don’t want to go there if you don’t want me to.

After a brief recess and more discussion on the topic, the court ruled:

               All right. The parties and the Court have taken this case up
       to this point we’re now in the waning days of trial, after a week and
       a half of trial, operating under the assumption that informed consent
       was out of the case. I know that there have been some issues
       back and forth on this topic, but in general, either in terms of offers
       of proof or other proffers of evidence, nothing has been presented
       that would suggest that informed consent was going to be a theory
       of liability for the jury to resolve or at least to preserve for further
       review. I’m not going to reopen that issue mid-trial to allow for a
       discussion of whether or not Dr. Khanna should be found liable or
       negligent for not discussing any increased risks from the surgery
       that the doctor may be testifying about today.
               So I’m not going to reconsider the prior rulings on informed
       consent, while acknowledging that it is possible that [the September
       2011 ruling on the motion to reconsider] may have inserted the
       wrong doctor’s name in [the] ruling regarding whose awareness of
       the increased mortality risk in apprising Mr. Andersen of the same
       may have been intended. I don’t know if that reference to the
       doctor’s awareness relates to Dr. Khanna or not. I don’t see any
       way to reasonably read that sentence without concluding that
       perhaps Dr. Cuenoud was inadvertently inserted when Dr. Khanna
       may have been intended.
               But that being said, the parties under the Court’s direction
       have kept this case from being developed as an informed consent
       case, and that’s not going to change mid-trial, with the plaintiffs
       having rested.

       Dr. Cuenoud testified that, in his opinion, Dr. Khanna had done nothing

wrong in either performing the Bentall procedure or in the steps he took afterward
                                           11


to try to restart Andersen’s left ventricle.      Rather, Dr. Cuenoud opined the

reasons Andersen’s left ventricle had failed was due to “extreme exhaustion” of

the heart. When asked why Andersen’s heart was extremely exhausted Dr.

Cuenoud explained:

               Because Mr. Andersen was like a marathon runner or
       arriving at the end of the marathon. You cannot run another
       marathon. So his heart had been submitted to an abnormal valve
       for years. He has been very stable and suddenly in December of
       2003 the heart started to give up, so his heart—when he went to
       surgery, his heart was not a normal heart, was a heart that was
       tired. So when you add the stunning[6] on top of it, some patients
       can’t tolerate that.

The defendants also called another expert witness, Dr. Love, who testified that

Andersen’s ongoing issues with his heart leading up to the surgery likely caused

the failure. The doctor testified.

       And all this is to say that particular situation in this patient would
       lend to the possibility that you’re going to have a real great difficulty
       protecting the heart adequately or not—simply not be able to
       protect it adequately because of the 50 years of the physiology and
       the anatomic abnormalities that I just described.

Later, the doctor opined, “I think this heart was stunned from global inability to

protect it. That’s the way it behaved afterwards.”

       Near the conclusion of the defendants’ presentation of evidence, the

plaintiffs indicated to the court they intended to call a rebuttal witness to respond

to the defendants’ experts who “have beaten the drum about plaintiff’s heart

being such that it would be difficult for him to recover.” The plaintiffs indicated

they believed they “should be entitled to challenge the defense of the so-called

6
  In another part of his testimony, Dr. Cuenoud described “stunning”: “When the heart re-
emerges from that cold period of an hour or two, it’s weak. It’s weak for many minutes,
sometimes an hour, and then it recovers its strength. So the cold effect is stressful to
the heart, so it’s called post cardioplegia stunning.”
                                          12


worn-out heart.” The defendants resisted, arguing that their experts had testified

pursuant to their designations, so there was nothing new or unexpected that the

plaintiffs needed to rebut.

       In making its ruling, the court noted that in the plaintiffs’ case-in-chief, they

had an expert who testified regarding his opinion about the condition of the heart

before the surgery. The court also found that the defense experts had testified in

accordance with their prior designations, so “[i]f it was a surprise, it wasn’t

because of a lack of prior disclosure.” The court denied plaintiffs’ request to

present rebuttal witnesses.

       After the defense rested, the court and the parties discussed what

instructions should be given to the jury. The plaintiffs asked the court to instruct

the jury that Dr. Khanna’s lack of experience in performing the Bentall procedure

was a separate specification of negligence.            The court had proposed a

marshalling instruction as follows:

       The plaintiffs must prove all of the following propositions:
               1. Sohit Khanna, M.D. was negligent in one or more of the
       following ways:
                       a. In providing inadequate myocardial protection to
               Alan Andersen’s heart during the Bentall procedure; or
                       b. In improperly reattaching Alan Andersen’s left main
               coronary artery during the Bentall procedure; or
                       c. In taking too much time to perform the left main
               coronary artery bypass in response to the failure of Alan
               Andersen’s left ventricle following the Bentall procedure.
               2. The negligence was a cause of damage to the plaintiffs.
               3. The amount of damage.
               If the plaintiffs have failed to prove any of these propositions,
       the plaintiffs are not entitled to damages from the defendants. If the
       plaintiffs have proved all of these propositions, the plaintiffs are
       entitled to damages from the defendants in some amount.
                                          13


The plaintiffs asked the court to add another subsection under (1), stating, “In

performing the Bentall procedure on Alan Andersen without being properly

trained or without the experience to do so.” The court refused the plaintiffs’

request. Plaintiffs also requested jury instructions on the issues of inadequate

informed consent, which were denied by the court.

       Following deliberation, the jury returned a verdict finding that Dr. Khanna

was not negligent. The jury did not reach the causation question.

       The plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial, alleging several errors they

believed entitled them to a new trial. The defendants resisted, and a hearing was

held. The court denied the plaintiffs motion in its entirety.

       The plaintiffs appeal.

II. Standards of Review.

       We review summary judgment rulings for correction of errors at law. Roll

v. Newhall, ___ N.W.2d ___, ___, 2016 WL 7421325, at *2 (Iowa 2016). We

examine the record before the district court to determine whether any material

fact is in dispute, and if not, whether the district court correctly applied the law.

Id.

       We generally review evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion. Williams

v. Hedican, 561 N.W.2d 817, 822 (Iowa 1997).

       We review the district court’s decision disallowing the plaintiffs’ use of a

rebuttal witness for an abuse of discretion. See Carolan v. Hill, 553 N.W.2d 882,

889 (Iowa 1996) (“The trial court’s ruling will be disturbed only upon a clear

abuse of discretion.”).
                                         14


       “Iowa law requires a court to give a requested jury instruction if it correctly

states the applicable law and is not embodied in other instructions.” Alcala v.

Marriott Inter., Inc., 880 N.W.2d 699, 707 (Iowa 2016). “The verb ‘require’ is

mandatory and leaves no room for trial court discretion.” Id. Thus, absent a

discretionary component, “we review refusals to give a requested jury instruction

for correction of errors at law.” Id.

III. Discussion.

       A. Informed Consent.

       Plaintiffs argue they were wrongly prevented from having the jury decide

two informed-consent claims. They maintain Dr. Khanna was negligent for failing

to inform Andersen (1) he had a “super bad heart,” which substantially increased

his risk of the procedure being unsuccessful and (2) Dr. Khanna had never

performed the procedure before.

       “[T[he doctrine of informed consent arises out of the unquestioned

principle that absent extenuating circumstances a patient has the right to

exercise control over his or her body by making an informed decision concerning

whether to submit to a particular medical procedure.”            Pauscher v. Iowa

Methodist Med. Ctr., 408 N.W.2d 355, 358 (Iowa 1987).               “Thus, a doctor

recommending a particular procedure generally has, among other obligations,

the duty to disclose to the patient all material risks involved in the procedure.” Id.

Under the “patient rule,” “the physician’s duty to disclose is measured by the

patient’s need to have access to all information material to making a truly

informed and intelligent decision concerning the proposed medical procedure.”
                                            15

Id. at 359. The rule applies in all informed consent cases, in both elective and

nonelective procedures. Id.

       To be successful in a claim for failure to obtain informed consent, the

patient must establish:

              (1) The existence of a material risk unknown to the patient;
              (2) A failure to disclose that risk on the part of the physician;
              (3) Disclosure of the risk would have led a reasonable
       patient in plaintiff's position to reject the medical procedure or
       choose a different course of treatment; and
              (4) Injury.

Id. at 360.    “Further, the patient ordinarily will be required to present expert

testimony relating to the nature of the risk and the likelihood of its occurrence, in

order for the jury to determine, from the standpoint of a reasonable patient,

whether the risk is a material one.” Id.

       1. “Super Bad Heart.”

       A lot of confusion has been generated by the way the informed consent

claims have been argued—as if there was only one such claim.7

       The defendants moved for the summary dismissal of one of those

claims—the one based upon Dr. Khanna’s failure to tell Andersen about his

inexperience. The court, in its ruling, appeared to consider only the one claim

challenged by the defendants, stating:

       The Court finds that Iowa law does not include a duty to disclose
       personal characteristics or experience of a physician or doctor in
       obtaining informed consent from a patient. Therefore, pursuant to
       Iowa law, the Court finds that the motion for summary judgment

7
  Part of the dispute involving the various rulings and their evolution at trial involve the
fact that three different judges presided over important components of the case with later
judges interpreting and then adopting those earlier rulings as their own. The parties
acted on their own misinterpretation of the plain language of the rulings resulting in an
assumption the claims of inadequate informed consent were dismissed.
                                         16


       filed by Dr. Khanna and the Iowa Heart Center regarding informed
       consent is hereby sustained.

However, the plaintiffs apparently understood the court’s ruling to mean that both

claims had been dismissed, as they filed their motion to reconsider asking the

court to reinstate the “super bad heart” claim based on the fact that Dr. Khanna

had failed to inform Andersen that he was at an increased risk because of the

history of his heart.

       In ruling on the motion to reconsider, the court wrote, “The Court

reconsiders its June 15, 2010 ruling and enters the following ruling modifying the

same only as follows: The Plaintiffs shall be allowed to present evidence relating

to Dr. Cuenoud’s awareness of the Plaintiff’s increased mortality risk and

apprising the Plaintiff of the same.”      While it is clear to us that the only

reasonable reading of the reconsideration ruling is that Andersen’s claim of

inadequate informed consent could be explored at trial relating to Dr. Khanna’s

understanding of any increased mortality risk and whether Dr. Khanna informed

Andersen of the increased risk, the plaintiffs did not seek to clarify the order nor

to introduce evidence of Dr. Khanna’s opinion of the pre-surgical condition of

Andersen’s heart.       In other words, the plaintiffs did not, either during the

presentation of their evidence or in their cross-examination of Dr. Khanna, raise

the issue regarding what Andersen had been told by Dr. Khanna or what he

should have been told by Dr. Khanna regarding the condition of his heart pre-

surgery.
                                          17


       Then, before Dr. Cuenoud’s testimony, the parties and the court had the

following discussion outside the presence of the jury. The plaintiffs’ attorney

stated:

              Just the one other issue here, Judge, so that we don’t get off
       into the area of violating a motion in limine. Remember, we talked
       about the issue of informed consent being out of the case, with the
       one exception that the Court reconsiders its June 15th, 2010 ruling
       relating Dr. Cuenoud’s awareness of the plaintiff’s increased
       mortality risk and apprising the plaintiff of the same, which apprising
       the plaintiff of the same, of course, is informed consent.
              So by their bringing him in here to testify, I believe that that’s
       fair game irrespective of whether they raise the issue or not, but I
       certainly don’t want to go there if you don’t want me to.

The court heard from both parties and took a recess to “digest” the information

before ultimately ruling that the plaintiffs would not be allowed to ask even Dr.

Cuenoud about his awareness of the Andersen’s increased mortality risk and

apprising Andersen of the same. In making its ruling, the court stated:

       [T]he parties under the Court’s direction have kept this case from
       being developed as an informed consent case, and that’s not going
       to change mid-trial, with the plaintiffs having rested. And so we’ll
       have to wait to see how that shakes out down the road, but for the
       remainder of the trial, informed consent is still out.

Still, after they had rested, the plaintiffs made an offer of proof in which Andersen

testified if he had been told he had a twenty-five percent chance of dying during

the surgery, he would have “thought a lot more about having the surgery,”

thought about getting a second opinion, and “would have made sure that [his

cardiologist] was involved in that decision.” In another offer of proof, Andersen

testified that if he had been told he had a “super bad heart” before surgery, he

would not have allowed Dr. Khanna to schedule the surgery without consulting

other doctors and he “would have wanted to know what made my chances for
                                          18


survival so much worse than everybody else’s.” Andersen also made it clear that

Dr. Khanna did not inform him that he “had a super bad heart for an elective

surgery that was more difficult than the traditional Bentall elective surgery.”

        The jury never heard or decided the issue, and the plaintiffs maintain this

is in error.

        However, the reason the jury never heard the issue was because both

parties wrongly proceeded under the theory that the “super bad heart” claim had

been dismissed when the court dismissed the claim regarding Dr. Khanna’s duty

to inform Andersen about his lack of experience. The ruling on the motion for

partial summary judgment was silent toward and did not dismiss the “super bad

heart” claim, and, if anything, the ruling on the motion to reconsider reinstated or

at least allowed that claim. That being said, though the claim survived summary

judgment, the plaintiffs failed to pursue it at trial. They did not cross-designate

defense expert Dr. Cuenoud or question their own experts about material risk

and a doctor’s duty to inform, they never re-pled their claim or asked the court for

clarification of when or how this informed-consent claim ceased to exist, and they

never made an offer of proof regarding what Andersen knew or had been told

about the condition of his heart pre-surgery during their case-in-chief. Because

the source of the confusion appears to come from nothing more than the parties’

own misinterpretation of the plain language of rulings early in the case, there is

no relief that we can offer. We find no abuse of discretion in the court’s refusal to

expand the issues at trial after the close of the plaintiffs’ case.
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       2. Experience of Doctor.

       The defendants maintained, and the trial court found, the doctor’s

obligation to obtain informed consent does not create a duty that the doctor

inform the patient about the doctor’s lack of surgical experience. The plaintiffs

maintain the district court’s ruling granting summary judgment and dismissing the

claim was in error.

       The defendants maintain doctors are only required to inform patients

about possible risks and issues with the procedure itself, while the plaintiffs

assert that doctors also have a duty to inform the patient of physician-specific

information that a reasonable patient would want to know in order to make a

“truly informed and intelligent decision.”

       In support of their position, the plaintiffs urge us to consider cases where

other states have found that a doctor’s failure to inform the patient of his or her

lack of experience was sufficient to create a jury question about whether it was a

failure to obtain informed consent. See Goldberg v. Boone, 912 A.2d 698, 702,

716–17 (Md. 2006) (noting the court had previously recognized “that the level of

a physician’s experience may form the basis for an informed consent action” and

holding a jury question had been generated where the patient alleged that his

more-complex-than-usual surgery combined with the doctor’s lack of experience,

gave rise to a duty that the doctor inform the patient there were more

experienced surgeons in the region who could perform the surgery); see also

Johnson by Adler v. Kokemoor, 545 N.W.2d 495, 505 (Wis. 1996) (“We conclude

that the circuit court did not erroneously exercise its discretion in admitting

evidence regarding the defendant’s lack of experience and the difficulty of the
                                           20


proposed procedure. A reasonable person in the plaintiff’s position would have

considered such information material in making an intelligent and informed

decision about the surgery.”).

       Neither party has identified, and we have not found, an opinion where an

Iowa court has explicitly considered whether the doctor’s inexperience is a

material risk or factor that falls within the duty to disclose.

       That being said, we are persuaded the defendants and the trial court’s

reading of the informed-consent requirement is the current state of the law. Iowa

Code section 147.137 (2007) provides, “A consent in writing to any medical or

surgical procedure or course of procedures in patient care which meets the

requirements of this section shall create a presumption that informed consent

was given.” The statute continues, stating that “[a] consent in writing meets the

requirements” if it:

              Sets forth in general terms the nature and purpose of the
       procedure or procedures, together with the known risks, if any, of
       death, brain damage, quadriplegia, paraplegia, the loss or loss of
       function of any organ or limb, or disfiguring scars associated with
       such procedure or procedures, with the probability of each such risk
       if reasonably determinable.

Iowa Code § 147.137(1).          The statute is silent as to any physician-specific

information that must be disclosed to meet the informed-consent requirements.

       We agree with the district court that the plaintiffs’ claim for failure to obtain

informed consent based on Dr. Khanna’s lack of inexperience is not a basis for

recovery; Dr. Khanna did not have a duty to inform Andersen of his experience,

or lack thereof, in performing the procedure.            Summary dismissal of this

informed-consent claim was appropriate as a matter of law. See Overturff v.
                                          21

Raddatz Funeral Servs., Inc., 757 N.W.2d 241, 245 (Iowa 2008) (“Because the

existence of a duty under a given set of facts is a question of law for the court, it

is properly resolvable by summary judgment.”).

       B. Rebuttal Witness.

       Plaintiffs claim the district court abused its discretion when it prevented

them from calling a rebuttal witness to in order to respond to the defense expert

witnesses’ testimony regarding the condition of Andersen’s heart before surgery.

The plaintiffs claimed they needed to call the rebuttal witness to explain “no, this

isn’t true what Cuenoud said, and why.”

       Rebuttal evidence “explains, repels, controverts, or disproves evidence

produced by the other side.” State v. Webb, 309 N.W.2d 404, 411 (Iowa 1981).

However, “[r]ebuttal is not intended to give a party an opportunity to tell his [or

her] story twice or to present evidence that was proper in the case in chief.”

Carolan v. Hill, 553 N.W.2d 882, 889 (Iowa 1996) (second alteration in original)

(citation omitted).    “Thus, rebuttal should not be used as corroboration,

reiteration, or repetition of the plaintiff’s case in chief,” and “evidence which is

merely cumulative, . . . which merely bolsters or supplements that already

adduced by the plaintiff, is not admissible as rebuttal.” Id. (citation omitted).

       Insofar as the plaintiffs claim they should have been allowed to present

rebuttal testimony to rebut the defense experts’ testimony that Andersen had a

“super bad heart,” which increased his chances of having an unsuccessful

procedure, we cannot say the district court abused its discretion in disallowing

them to do so. The plaintiffs were aware the defense experts were going to

testify as such. In fact, they relied on Dr. Cuenoud’s deposition testimony in
                                          22


which he compared Andersen’s heart to that of a marathon runner at the end of a

race as the basis for their 2011 motion to reconsider. The plaintiffs were alerted

to the fact that such testimony was likely to occur, and they provided testimony to

the contrary from their own experts during the plaintiffs’ case-in-chief. Rebuttal

evidence is not meant to let the plaintiffs have the last word on a disputed issue.

       Next, plaintiffs claim they needed to present rebuttal testimony to show

that they were never informed of Andersen’s “super bad heart.”             There was

nothing preventing the plaintiffs’ attorney from eliciting testimony from Andersen

and his wife Diane regarding the fact that they had never been told Andersen had

an increased risk of his left ventricle failing. Even before the district court made it

clear that it believed the ruling on the motion to reconsider applied to what Dr.

Khanna knew about Andersen’s heart before surgery and what information had

been imparted to Andersen, the court reiterated several times that plaintiffs were

“allowed to present evidence relating to Dr. Cuenoud’s awareness of the

Plaintiff’s increased mortality risk and apprising the Plaintiff of the same.” We

cannot say the district court abused its discretion in preventing the plaintiffs from

calling a rebuttal witness to elicit evidence that could have been presented in the

case-in-chief.

       Finally, the plaintiffs maintain that not being allowed to present the rebuttal

evidence “gives the impression that Mr. Andersen knew all of the risks and

simply chose to take those risks with his super bad heart.” It is unclear to us

what claim of error the plaintiffs are making here; to the extent we understand

their argument to be one regarding causation of the harm experienced by
                                          23


plaintiffs, we note that the jury never got to the question of causation because it

found Dr. Khanna had not been negligent.

       We find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision to deny the

plaintiffs’ request to call an expert rebuttal witness.

       C. Jury Instructions.

       The plaintiffs maintain the district court erred when it denied their request

to amend a jury instruction to include an additional, separate specification of

negligence. Namely, the plaintiffs wanted the instruction to read, in part:

       The plaintiffs must prove all of the following propositions:

              1. Sohit Khanna, M.D. was negligent in one or more of the
       following ways:
                     a. In performing the Bentall procedure on Alan
              Andersen without being properly trained or without the
              experience to do so.

       The plaintiffs objected to the instruction without the added specification,

and, after the court denied their request to amend the instruction, they raised the

alleged claim of error in their motion for new trial.

       A court must give a requested instruction when it states a correct rule of

law applicable to the facts of the case that is not embodied in other instructions.

See Mulhern v. Catholic Health Initiatives, 799 N.W.2d 104, 123 (Iowa 2011).

However, here we are persuaded by the district court’s reasoning regarding why

the proposed addition is not a correct statement of the law. The court compared

the plaintiffs’ assertion that Dr. Khanna’s lack of experience alone was an act of

negligence with the proposition that a drunk driver is negligent simply for being

drunk. As our supreme court has stated:
                                         24


       [I]ntoxication in and of itself is not, as defendant seems to contend,
       conclusive evidence of . . . negligence. . . .
               . . . . Before a drunk driver can be held liable for injuries to
       another or barred from recovering for his own injuries, his
       intoxicated condition must be translated into outward conduct which
       is negligent and bears a causal relationship to the injury.
               Evidence of an intoxicated condition is properly admissible
       as one of the circumstances surrounding conduct showing a lack of
       due care under the circumstances.

Yost v. Miner, 163 N.W.2d 557, 561 (Iowa 1968) (citations omitted). The district

court concluded:

              Just as an intoxicated driver is not negligent merely by virtue
       of that intoxication absent “outward conduct which is negligent,” so
       too an inexperienced physician is not negligent simply as a result of
       that inexperience; that lack of training or experience must translate
       into a deviation of the standard of care in performing the procedure
       in question.

We agree with the district court’s rationale. Additionally, we note the plaintiffs

were allowed to (and did) introduce evidence regarding Dr. Khanna’s lack of

experience in performing the procedure, and the jury was able to consider such

evidence in determining whether the doctor had performed the procedure in a

negligent manner.

       We find no error in the district court’s refusal to amend the marshalling

instruction given to the jury.

IV. Conclusion.

       Because we find no error on the district court’s part that prevented the jury

from hearing that Andersen was never told about his “super bad heart,” there is

no relief that we can grant. Because Dr. Khanna had no duty to inform Andersen

of his inexperience in performing the procedure, summary judgment of that

informed consent claim was proper. Additionally, the court did not abuse its
                                          25


discretion in refusing to allow the plaintiffs to call a rebuttal witness, and the court

did not err in refusing to provide the plaintiffs’ proposed marshalling instruction to

the jury. We affirm.

       AFFIRMED.
