Aleisha Gaston Versus Willie Earl Harkless, Individually, and Willie Earl Harkless, Dds, D/B/A "Smiles" Family Dentistry and Xyz Insurance Company

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2019
Docket19-CA-410
StatusUnknown

This text of Aleisha Gaston Versus Willie Earl Harkless, Individually, and Willie Earl Harkless, Dds, D/B/A "Smiles" Family Dentistry and Xyz Insurance Company (Aleisha Gaston Versus Willie Earl Harkless, Individually, and Willie Earl Harkless, Dds, D/B/A "Smiles" Family Dentistry and Xyz Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Aleisha Gaston Versus Willie Earl Harkless, Individually, and Willie Earl Harkless, Dds, D/B/A "Smiles" Family Dentistry and Xyz Insurance Company, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

ALEISHA GASTON NO. 19-CA-410

VERSUS FIFTH CIRCUIT

WILLIE EARL HARKLESS, INDIVIDUALLY, COURT OF APPEAL AND WILLIE EARL HARKLESS, DDS, D/B/A "SMILES" FAMILY DENTISTRY AND XYZ STATE OF LOUISIANA INSURANCE COMPANY

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 788-976, DIVISION "G" HONORABLE E. ADRIAN ADAMS, JUDGE PRESIDING

December 30, 2019

JUDE G. GRAVOIS JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Hans J. Liljeberg, and John J. Molaison, Jr.

AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART; REMANDED JGG HJL JJM COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, ALEISHA GASTON Veleka Eskinde Ann M. Johnson-Griffin

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, WILLIE EARL HARKLESS, D.D.S., D/B/A "SMILES" FAMILY DENTISTRY Donald C. Douglas, Jr. Robert G. Harvey, Sr. GRAVOIS, J.

Plaintiff, Aleisha Gaston, appeals a judgment of the trial court sustaining an

exception of prescription filed by defendants, Willie Earl Harkless and Willie Earl

Harkless, DDS, d/b/a Smiles Family Dentistry, LLC. For the following reasons,

we affirm the judgment in part, reverse the judgment in part, and remand the

matter to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On September 15, 2017, Dr. Harkless provided dental services to Ms.

Gaston. On October 16, 2017, Dr. Harkless and Ms. Gaston began a sexually

intimate relationship. According to Ms. Gaston, prior to their first sexual

encounter, Dr. Harkless advised her that he did not have any sexually transmitted

diseases (“STDs”) and protection was not needed. On October 17 or 18, the dates

of their second and third sexual encounters, Dr. Harkless gave Ms. Gaston

approximately 40 penicillin pills from a supply he kept in his dental office. He did

not give Ms. Gaston a specific reason as to why he was supplying her with the

medicine; nonetheless, Ms. Gaston took the pills as directed. Because of Dr.

Harkless’ insistence that Ms. Gaston take the pills, she scheduled an appointment

with her gynecologist and was subsequently tested for all STDs. On October 25,

2017, the test results came back as “abnormal.” On that date, Ms. Gaston informed

Dr. Harkless about the test results, and he denied having an STD (herpes).

However, on October 27, 2017, after a second round of tests, Ms. Gaston tested

positive for both Herpes Simplex Virus 1 and Herpes Simplex Virus 2. When

confronted with the results, Dr. Harkless again denied having herpes.

Subsequently, on or about November 2, 2017, hives began to appear all over Ms.

Gaston’s body. Thereafter, she was diagnosed with a fixed drug reaction to the

penicillin given to her by Dr. Harkless. Dr. Harkless’ last sexual encounter with

Ms. Gaston occurred on or about November 22, 2017.

19-CA-410 1 On October 28, 2018, Ms. Gaston fax-filed a petition for damages alleging

two causes of action: 1) intentional exposure and transmission of a sexually

transmitted disease; and 2) intentional infliction of emotional distress. In her first

claim, Ms. Gaston argued that she did not have a sexually transmitted disease prior

to her intimate relationship with Dr. Harkless, and the injuries she sustained were a

direct and proximate cause of Dr. Harkless’ actions. In her second claim, Ms.

Gaston argued that the elements of intentional inflection of emotional distress are

evident in Dr. Harkless lying to her about not needing protection and thus

intentionally infecting her with an STD. Furthermore, she alleged that the

elements of intentional infliction of emotional distress are evident because

sometime after February 10, 2018, Dr. Harkless had a person on his staff text an

image of him holding a gun to Ms. Gaston in an effort to intimidate her into not

taking legal action against him.

On December 17, 2018, defendants filed an exception of prescription. They

argued that Ms. Gaston’s claims are subject to a one-year prescriptive period and

are prescribed on the face of the pleadings. Specifically, regarding the claim of

intentional exposure and transmission of an STD, defendants argued that

prescription began to run on October 16, 2017, when Ms. Gaston and Dr. Harkless

began their sexually intimate relationship, or at the latest, October 25, 2017, when

Ms. Gaston received the “abnormal” test results and discussed the results with Dr.

Harkless. Either date, defendants argued, is more than one year from the date suit

was filed on October 28, 2018. Further, regarding a claim of improper prescription

of medication which caused an adverse reaction, defendants argued that the

medication was given on October 17 or 18, 2017, well over a year before suit was

filed on October 28, 2018.

On February 8, 2019, Ms. Gaston filed a first amending petition for

damages, alleging therein as an additional claim that Dr. Harkless was negligent in

19-CA-410 2 prescribing medication on October 17 or 18 that resulted in a fixed drug reaction

on November 2, 2017.1 As a result of the reaction, she was left with dark lesions

on her body that are both permanent and highly visible. She claimed that Dr.

Harkless’ failure to make any inquiries into her medical history and current

prescriptions caused the fixed drug reaction. She alleged that the medicine was

prescribed in an effort to mask the symptoms of the STD that Dr. Harkless

transmitted to her.

The trial court held a hearing on the exception of prescription on April 1,

2019. Neither Ms. Gaston nor her counsel were present at the hearing. At the

hearing, defense counsel explained to the court that the hearing on the exception

had originally been set for January 23, 2019, and that he had agreed to reset the

matter after plaintiff and her counsel did not appear because of alleged service

issues. Defense counsel explained that on March 6, 2019, after the matter was

reset to April 1, 2019, he sent a copy of the signed order resetting the hearing to

April 1, 2019 to Ms. Gaston’s counsel by certified mail. On March 13, 2019,

defense counsel received by fax a copy of a letter from Ms. Gaston’s counsel to the

24th Judicial District Court Clerk of Court concerning the insufficiency of service

of defendants’ exception of prescription. In the letter, Ms. Gaston’s counsel

claimed that on March 8, 2019, she received a copy of the order resetting the

hearing on the exception of prescription for April 1, 2019. She claimed, however,

that she had not been properly served with a copy of the exception of prescription.

At the hearing on April 1, 2019, defense counsel stated that he faxed a copy of the

exception of prescription to Ms. Gaston’s counsel on December 17, 2018, the day

he filed the exception with the court.

1 In her motion for leave to file her amended petition, Ms. Gaston noted that on November 1, 2018, she filed a medical review panel request with the Patient’s Compensation Fund (“(PCF”) concerning a claim that Dr. Harkless prescribed penicillin to her in order to mask the progression of and interfere with the STD test results. The PCF notified Ms. Gaston by letter dated November 14, 2018 that defendants were not qualified under the PCF.

19-CA-410 3 As to the exception of prescription, at the hearing on April 1, 2019,

defendants argued that Mr. Gaston’s claims are prescribed on the face of the

pleadings, and that everything pleaded occurred well over a year before the

petitions were filed.

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