Allen v. State

535 So. 2d 903, 1988 WL 97247
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 21, 1988
Docket19892-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 535 So. 2d 903 (Allen v. State) 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.

Bluebook
Allen v. State, 535 So. 2d 903, 1988 WL 97247 (La. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

535 So.2d 903 (1988)

Othello ALLEN, Plaintiff-Appellee, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Louisiana, et al., Defendant-Appellant, Appellee.

No. 19892-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 21, 1988.
Writ Denied December 2, 1988.

*905 Booth, Lockard, Politz, LeSage & D'Anna, by John R. D'Anna, Shreveport, for appellant.

Robert E. Piper, Jr., Donald R. Miller, Shreveport, for appellee.

Before MARVIN, JASPER E. JONES and NORRIS, JJ.

MARVIN, Judge.

In this medical malpractice action, the State and the LSU Medical Center in Shreveport appeal a judgment awarding damages that total more than $435,000 to a wood cutter whose left leg became infected and gangrenous and had to be amputated after he fell in the woods about a week before.

Plaintiff also appealed, seeking to increase the awards for general damages ($225,000) and loss of earnings ($268,437.09, which the trial court reduced by $103,534 plaintiff would receive as social security disability benefits).

We affirm the general damage award. We amend to delete awards for future raises in salary and for lost homemaking services ($45,926 total) that we find are factually unfounded. We disallow the reduction for social security benefits and further increase the award for loss of earnings to $275,000 to have the amended judgment total $500,000, the maximum allowable award for medical malpractice damages against the State under LRS 40:1299.39. As amended, the judgment is affirmed.

The State contends that its doctor, a first-year internal medicine resident at the medical center, should not have been found negligent for his failure to diagnose plaintiff's infection when he first examined and released plaintiff two days before the condition became obvious. Expert opinion, of course, conflicted.

The State's doctor was found negligent essentially because he failed to determine that the severe muscle spasm in plaintiff's leg, which he treated and was concerned with, was caused, not by plaintiff's fall a week before, but by pain from the gangrenous infection.

Our review of conflicting testimony, in the light that most favorably supports the judgment, convinces us that the trial court's conclusions are not clearly wrong and are supported by a preponderance of the evidence.

FACTS

On October 19, 1982, the 37-year-old plaintiff, Othello Allen, fell about 3½ feet from a log or stump into pine tree limbs and other brush that had been piled on the ground. He fell on his left side, experienced back pain, and had no visible abrasions, contusions, or lacerations. He was not able to work on October 20.

On October 21, he complained to his hometown doctor in Mansfield, Dr. Bucy, of a "catch" in his back and pain in his hips and buttocks. Allen did not complain of leg pain. Dr. Bucy noticed no visible signs of injury on his body or significant abnormalities in Allen's back or leg. Dr. Bucy examined Allen's rectum to rule out an abscess as the cause of his pain. He noticed no swelling or discoloration of Allen's left leg. Dr. Bucy prescribed a muscle relaxant, Soma Compound, and did not hospitalize him.

After seeing Dr. Bucy on October 21, Allen began to experience pain in his left leg which became progressively worse. On October 24, for financial reasons, Allen's wife took him to the LSU Medical Center in Shreveport, where they were directed to the walk-in clinic for ambulatory care about 6:30 p.m. About 1½ hours later, a nurse recorded Allen's temperature (98°) and blood pressure (90/50). She wrote that he complained of a "catch on left hip to thigh area" and that he was not in acute distress.

Dr. Tynes, the State's first-year internal medicine resident, saw Allen around 3:30 a.m. on October 25. The hospital records also note this history:

*906 37-year-old black male was in normal state of health until 4-5 days ago when he went to his usual job as a pulpwood cutter and returned with low back pain. This eventually settled in the left thigh; muscles have been pulled for 2 days. Saw a local M.D. who prescribed Soma, no relief.

Dr. Tynes also examined Allen's rectum and ruled out an abscess. He found severe muscle spasm in the quadricep and hamstring muscles of Allen's left thigh, which he deduced was post-traumatic reflex muscle spasm, caused either by direct blunt trauma or by pulling or straining the muscles.

Dr. Tynes did not determine or inquire how Allen's injury occurred, whether it was a fall or a blunt trauma such as being hit with a log. He found the severity of the muscle spasm noteworthy in light of the apparently mild trauma and the absence of any visible cuts, bruises or other wounds to the skin.

Dr. Tynes said seven hours was not an unusually long wait in the walk-in clinic and that he probably would have noticed any temperature increase during his physical examination. He said he always checks the patient's heart rate and would have noticed, and charted, any accelerated heart or respiratory rate. Dr. Tynes explained that he usually does not chart expected or normal findings.

Dr. Tynes said he "eyeballed," but did not measure, the circumference of Allen's left and right legs on October 25. He said that he had to touch the left leg to examine the muscle spasm and that he would have noticed the presence of any elevated local temperature or bubbles under the skin and would have charted any abnormal findings.

Dr. Tynes explained that he did not take X rays on October 25 because he found nothing to suggest Allen had a broken bone. Dr. Tynes further explained that he knew muscle spasm could result from the leg's reaction to pain caused by an infection, but did not suspect an infection because he found no cuts, bruises, skin lesions, pus, swelling, or discoloration of Allen's left leg.

Dr. Tynes informally consulted about the condition of Allen's leg, however, with another first-year resident (in urology) who had had some surgical experience. Both doctors examined Allen's leg and agreed Allen should be given Valium "to see if we could quell some of the muscle spasms that might be hiding some underlying pathology we didn't know about, and also to try to reduce some of the discomfort." Dr. Tynes injected the Valium intravenously. This injection did not produce expected results, but only slightly improved the spasms and Allen's range of motion.

Dr. Tynes prescribed Flexeril, a muscle relaxant stronger than Soma, as well as pain medication and warm soaks. He did not chart, but felt sure he gave, verbal instructions for Allen to call or come back if any new problems developed. Dr. Tynes did not recall Allen being disoriented and said he would have investigated this if he had noticed it. The urology resident generally corroborated Dr. Tynes.

Allen said he was so sick when he was taken to LSUMC that he didn't remember anything except leaving home to go there on October 24. His wife and her brother-in-law said Allen, on October 24-25, was incoherent, couldn't walk, was feverish, sweating a lot, and his leg was visibly swollen and red.

DEVELOPMENTS AFTER OCTOBER 25

Allen remembered nothing that happened between going home on October 25 and his return to LSUMC on October 27. His wife said she gave him the medicine and the sitz baths prescribed by Dr. Tynes on October 25, but that Allen's fever, leg pain, and swelling progressively increased. She returned him to the LSUMC emergency room about 6:00 p.m. on October 27, disoriented, unresponsive, and severely ill. The hospital records give this account of his condition:

37-year-old black male complained of swollen leg five days.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
535 So. 2d 903, 1988 WL 97247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-state-lactapp-1988.