Argus v. Scheppegrell

459 So. 2d 238
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1985
Docket83-CA-496
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 459 So. 2d 238 (Argus v. Scheppegrell) 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
Argus v. Scheppegrell, 459 So. 2d 238 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

459 So.2d 238 (1984)

Billie J. Argus, wife of/and Herbert ARGUS
v.
William C. SCHEPPEGRELL, Jr., M.D.

No. 83-CA-496.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

November 21, 1984.
Rehearing Denied December 17, 1984.
Writ Granted March 8, 1985.

*239 Douglas A. Kewley and Bruce A. North, Molony, Nolan, North & Riess, Metairie, and William J. Scheffler, III, Gretna, for Billie J. Argus, wife of/and Herbert Argus, plaintiffs-appellants.

Dominic J. Gianna and John D. Person, Hammett, Leake & Hammett, New Orleans, for William C. Scheppegrell, Jr., M.D., defendant-appellee.

Before BOUTALL, CURRAULT, and DUFRESNE, Jr., JJ.

BOUTALL, Judge.

This case arises from a wrongful death action against a physician brought by parents for the death of their daughter. The plaintiffs appeal a judgment in favor of the defendant.

Cynthia Argus ("Cindy"), nineteen years old, swallowed an undetermined number of tuinal tablets prescribed by Dr. William C. Scheppegrell, Jr., on August 17, 1977, became comatose, and on September 19, 1977 expired without regaining consciousness. Cindy had visited the office of Scheppegrell from December 17, 1975 through August 15, 1977, and beginning with her second visit had received prescriptions regularly for Phenmetrazine Hydrochloride (Preludin), as an appetite suppressant and for Amobarbital Secobarbital (Tuinal) for sleep. Both drugs are controlled dangerous substances under Louisiana law. LSA-R.S. 40:964. On several occasions she also received prescriptions for Vallium.

Billie J. Argus and Herbert Argus, Cindy's mother and father, filed suit on October 6, 1977. On November 24, 1980, a medical review panel rendered an opinion in accordance with LSA-R.S. 40:1299.47 to the effect that Dr. Scheppegrell failed to comply with the appropriate standard of care. The panel agreed with the allegations of the plaintiffs' petition that Dr. Scheppegrell was negligent in

"1. Prescribing drugs over a prolonged period of time, which drugs he knew, or should have known, would cause addiction.
"2. Prescribing drugs in such quantities that their use was deleterious to human life and health."

Trial was held before a jury which returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, Dr. Scheppegrell. The responses of the jury to interrogatories indicate that it found: Dr. Scheppegrell was negligent; his negligence was a proximate cause of Cindy's death; and that Cindy was negligent and her negligence was a cause of her death. In accordance with these responses, because Cindy's contributory negligence barred the parents' recovery, the judge rendered judgment dismissing plaintiff's suit.

The basic premise of plaintiffs' appeal is that the doctor either deliberately, or grossly negligently, performed such acts that so imperilled this young girl that he cannot be excused from the consequences. Appellants refer to the fact that prior to this trial but after Cindy's death Dr. Scheppegrell pleaded guilty to a charge of prescribing for another person controlled dangerous substances not in the usual course of medical practice, and served sixteen months in a Federal prison. Reference is also made to a motion of the defendant, granted by the Court, excluding evidence regarding his treatment of patients other than Cindy or alleged exchanges of prescriptions for sexual favors with other patients and excluding use of the transcript from the Federal criminal trial.

The appellant assigns as errors the court's failure to instruct the jury as to the following: (1) the duty of Dr. Scheppegrell not to commit any affirmative acts that increased the peril of his patient; (2) the unavailability of contributory negligence as a bar to recovery when the doctor has encouraged and abetted the plaintiff's condition; (3) the doctor's need to exercise more care because of his knowledge of *240 Cindy's condition; and (4) the application of the last clear chance doctrine.

A detailed narrative of the events leading up to Cindy's overdose is relevant to our consideration of the assigned errors. The testimony of the mother, Billie Argus, indicates that Cindy left school in the ninth grade at age 16. She had truanted periodically over the last two years, hiding the fact from her mother. She moved in and out of the home from age 17 on, sharing apartments with boy friends and with a girl friend. During the last year of her life she primarily lived in the family's apartment. The mother caught Cindy smoking marijuana when she was 14 years old.

Cindy was introduced to Dr. Scheppegrell by a friend, Denise. Dr. Scheppegrell admitted to prescribing tuinal, preludin and vallium. He testified that Cindy told him she was a model and wanted medication to maintain her weight at 97 pounds. The preludin acted as an appetite suppressant, while tuinal calmed her down enough to sleep. From time to time she complained of being nervous, for which the doctor prescribed vallium. The doctor denied detecting any indications of drug abuse. Whether or not Cindy was using other drugs or obtaining drugs from other physicians is uncertain from the record, as the mother denied previous testimony by deposition regarding Cindy's obtaining drugs from other physicians and reporting to hospital physicians that Cindy used dilaudid, demoral, and librium as well as tuinal, preludin and vallium. She denied also telling the physicians that Cindy abused drugs three to four years. The mother does admit to being aware that Cindy abused drugs at least from the time she began seeing Dr. Scheppegrell. On October 1, 1976 Cindy was picked up by the police and treated at East Jefferson Hospital for a possible overdose of barbituates. Mrs. Argus reported frequently searching Cindy's purse for pills sending her to bed to sleep off being "loaded", and making appointments that Cindy did not keep at the methadone center. She also noticed "track marks" on Cindy's arms.

Sometime within the month prior to Cindy's overdose Mrs. Argus telephoned Dr. Scheppegrell because Cindy began having seizures. She asked him not to prescribe more pills, to which he agreed. Cindy then visited Dr. Scheppegrell on August 15, 1977. He testified that he wanted her to discontinue taking the drugs because her mother informed him she was abusing them, but Cindy explained that a girl friend, not her mother, had made the call. She insisted she had to continue the drugs so that she could be a model and needed the prescriptions to tide her over until she located another doctor. He gave her prescriptions for 50 preludins and 50 tuinals. These are the pills with which Cindy overdosed.

On August 17, 1977 Cindy came home around 1:30 or 2:00 p.m., having spent the night with a boyfriend named Ben. They had had a fight and Cindy appeared depressed. The mother assumed Cindy was loaded on pills or drunk and told her to go to bed, which she did unaided. Cindy awakened, bathed, and called a friend named Mark. When he arrived at the house Mrs. Argus asked him to check Cindy's purse for pills, which he did when Cindy's back was turned. He then tossed two bottles of pills to Mrs. Argus who was seated on the sofa. They left, and she put the pills in her own dresser drawer where she kept aspirin and other medicines. She noted there were only a few pills in the preludin bottle but the tuinal bottle was 3/4 full. Cindy knew of Mrs. Argus's habit of putting medications in her dresser drawer. Thirty minutes later Cindy and Mark returned. Mark said she was loaded or drunk and left. Mrs.

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Related

Tabor v. Doctors Memorial Hospital
554 So. 2d 849 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1989)
Bourne v. Seventh Ward General Hosp.
546 So. 2d 197 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1989)
Argus v. Scheppegrell
489 So. 2d 392 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1986)
Argus v. Scheppegrell
472 So. 2d 573 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
459 So. 2d 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/argus-v-scheppegrell-lactapp-1985.