• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Experienced Indiana Law Firm | Trial Lawyers Giving Power to Your Voice for Over 55 Years

CohenMalad, LLP | Trial Lawyers Giving Power to Your Voice for Over 55 Years

CohenMalad is rated highly on Google Reviews by clients.
Toll Free866.446.7478Toll Free317.636.6481
Make a Payment free consult
  • English

Search

  • About Us
  • Attorneys
  • Services
    • Appellate Law
    • Business Services & Litigation
    • Class Action
    • Eminent Domain
    • Family Law
    • Medical Malpractice
    • Personal Injury
    • Pharmaceutical & Medical Device Litigation
    • Real Estate Services & Litigation
    • Sexual Abuse
  • Testimonials
  • Resources
    • Alerts
    • Firm News
    • Video Library
    • Blog
    • FAQs
  • Contact
  • English

Home » Our Blog » Medical Malpractice and Motor Vehicles

Medical Malpractice and Motor Vehicles

By CohenMalad, LLP

by: David J. Cutshaw, Attorney
Is a doctor responsible for a motorist’s injuries when he or she fails to warn his patient that the medications he is giving the patient may cause the patient to black out while driving an automobile? The answer to that question was discussed by the Indiana Court of Appeals in the case of Manley v. Sherer, 960 N.E. 2d 815 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011).

In the Manley case, a doctor gave his patient certain medications and treatment which caused the patient to black out while driving, severely injuring an unsuspecting motorist. The injured motorist claimed that the doctor was negligent for failing to warn the patient that she should not drive while taking these medicines because she could lose consciousness. The doctor’s lawyers tried to get the case dismissed because the injured motorist was not a patient of the doctor’s and thus the doctor owed no duty to the injured motorist. The Court of Appeals found that it was foreseeable that a patient of the doctor could injure others if adequate warnings as to the use of certain medicines were not given to the patient and allowed the case to proceed to trial against the doctor.
The case may be appealed to the Indiana Supreme Court, but the Supreme Court said in 1997 that an injured motorist can sue a doctor who failed to warn a patient not to drive after the doctor saw the patient lose consciousness in his office after giving the patient a certain medicine–and let the patient leave his office; and the patient then blacked out and killed another person in a car accident. That Supreme Court case is Cram v. Howell, 680 N.E. 2d 1096 (Ind. 1997)

Primary Sidebar

ASK ABOUT AN INITIAL FREE CONSULTATION TODAY

  • Hidden
  • Hidden
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

CohenMalad, LLP

One Indiana Square Suite 1400
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204
317.636.6481
Toll Free: 866.446.7478
  • twitter logo

Copyright © 2025 CohenMalad, LLP
Disclaimer Privacy Policy

  • About Us
  • Attorneys
  • Services
    ▼
    • Appellate Law
    • Business Services & Litigation
    • Class Action
    • Eminent Domain
    • Family Law
    • Medical Malpractice
    • Personal Injury
    • Pharmaceutical & Medical Device Litigation
    • Real Estate Services & Litigation
    • Sexual Abuse
  • Testimonials
  • Resources
    ▼
    • Alerts
    • Firm News
    • Video Library
    • Blog
    • FAQs
  • Contact
  • English
Cookies and other technology are used on this website to tailor your user experience and evaluate our marketing strategy. By clicking any link on this site you agree to our privacy policy.
En este sitio web utilizamos cookies y otras tecnologías para personalizar su experiencia de usuario y evaluar nuestra estrategia de marketing. Al hacer clic en cualquier enlace de esta plataforma, usted acepta nuestra política de privacidad.
Agree