Baloney v. Carter

387 So. 2d 54
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 30, 1980
Docket11174
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 387 So. 2d 54 (Baloney v. Carter) 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
Baloney v. Carter, 387 So. 2d 54 (La. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

387 So.2d 54 (1980)

Carmen BALONEY
v.
Dr. Warren K. CARTER et al.

No. 11174.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 30, 1980.

*55 Daniel E. Becnel, Reserve, for plaintiff-appellant.

Adams & Reese, Edward J. Rice, Jr., New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Henderson, Hanemann & Morris, Robert L. Morris, Houma, for defendant-appellee.

Before GULOTTA, GARRISON and CHEHARDY, JJ.

GARRISON, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court, dismissing plaintiff's suit against East Jefferson General Hospital, Doctors Warren K. Carter and Ronald Hardey, who have an exclusive contract to provide medical services to the emergency room at East Jefferson Hospital, and Hartford Fire Insurance Co.,[1] the insurer of Carter and Hardey.

Carmen Baloney was injured in a head-on collision on I-10 on September 29, 1974, when a vehicle driven by Michael Frilot was traveling in the wrong direction on I-10. Carmen Baloney was a guest passenger in the vehicle driven by Herman Clayton, Jr. Officers from Troop B of the State Police Force ordered a rescue unit and Carmen Baloney and Herman Clayton were taken to the East Jefferson Emergency Room for treatment. Michael Frilot was pronounced dead on arrival.

The Emergency Room record states:

"History:
Patient brought in by Kenner Fire Unit from I-10 and Loyola. Auto accident. Police at the scene. Patient complains of pain in both legs—laceration right elbow.
Diagnosis:
Laceration and contusions left knee.
Full Range of Motion:
All joints—x-ray, no fracture.
Blood Pressure:   138/90
Pulse:            108
Respiration:       28

Treatment:

X-ray Left Knee.

* * * * * *

"Recommendation and/or instructions to patient: See Guevara (lined out and added) "Meharry Hospital" in one week.

/signed/ R.A. Hardey, M.D. 9/24/74"

On October 2, plaintiff was admitted to Oschner Hospital at the request of Dr. F. J. Padua, an orthopedist whom she had consulted in the interim. At Oschner, she underwent treatment for a fractured pelvis and a fractured right leg. She was treated at Oschner, where she was placed in traction, for a period of approximately three weeks.

Carmen Baloney filed the instant suit in tort alleging negligence on the part of the defendants in failing to properly diagnose the injuries, failing to properly x-ray Carmen Baloney, failing to refer plaintiff to a specialist, failing to hospitalize the plaintiff after she had so requested and failing to properly equip and/or supervise the operation of the emergency room.

After trial on the merits, the district court rendered judgment reading in part as follows:

". . . the Court being of the opinion that while defendants were negligent in the premises,[2] that said negligence was in *56 no way responsible for any damage to Plaintiff, and that said case is a classi example of `injuria absque damnun'"[3]

From the judgment of dismissal, which we reverse, Carmen Baloney appealed.

At trial, Carmen Baloney testified as follows:

"Q: And, when you got to the emergency room, did you make any complaint?

A: Yes, I did. My knee—well, my knee was cut. I complained about that and my hip, that my right hip was hurting. It was hurting. It was very painful and I couldn't stand on it at all, not alone. I needed help. Somebody had to be on both sides of me to hold me up. I couldn't put pressure on it at all.

Q: Did you ask for the hip to be X-rayed?

A: Yes, I did.

Q: Did you ask for any other x-rays to be taken?

A: No. My concern was the hip. That's where I was paining. But, the only x-rays that was taken was the one of the knee that was cut. So, they had to take x-rays to see if they had any debris, any debris in my knee.

Q: Now, did you see Dr. Hardey, at the emergency room?

Q: What did he tell you and what did he do for you?

A: He sutured my knee and I had—the arm wasn't bad enough to have stiches, so, they just bandaged it up. And, I complained about my hip. So, he said he checked it and say it most probably was a sprain. So, I asked him could he give me some kind of pain pill to help it because it was hurting real bad. So, he said well, I'll give you a prescription for some pain pills. So, he gave me the pain pills and told me that the only thing I had to do was like rub my leg down real good with either some alcohol or something to help the sprain.

Q: Now, did you, Carmen, at that time, tell the physician that you had been unconscious after the accident?

A: Yes. He asked what happened. I told him that I had—that I was sleeping and that I was knocked unconscious.

Q: Did you tell that to the nurse also when she asked you and took a history?

A: Yes.

Q: Were you next to Mr. Clayton, being treated in the emergency room?

A: Yes. The only thing they had separating us was the curtains. (Tr. pp. 99-101).

* * * * * *

"Q: Now, after you were released from the hospital, were you able to walk down to the car?

A: No. I couldn't get off the table alone. It was painful. Like the nurse told me, she said, you can walk now. You just put pressure on this other leg that has the suture, you walk—like they have the little stool you usually step on to get on, I tried, but I couldn't, and I told her. So, my brother put me in the wheelchair and he brought me down and he had to carry me to the car and out of the car after we got home.

* * * * * *

"Q: Now, after you went home, did you have any further problems with your hip?

A: It got worse. I was beginning to stiffen up. Like, it was after I got home from the hospital, by the time it took us to get home I was stretched out on the back seat, and I was beginning to stiffen up. Then, when we got home my brother carried me and put me in the bed and I was all stiff and everything then. And it was hurting and as the days passed on it got worse.

Q: Were you in bed the entire time, from the period before you saw a physician?

A: Yes, I was." (Tr. pp. 101-102)

* * * * * *

*57 "Q: When you got to the Oschner Foundation Hospital, did you tell the physician that admitted you what had happened and what was hurting?

Q: Did you tell the admit clerk that you were asleep when the crash took place and that you were awakened and alert when you reached the hospital? Did you tell them that?

Q: Did you also tell them that you had pain in your hip and that you were treated at the East Jefferson Hospital for your elbow, your left knee and you were x-rayed?

Q: And, that's what you had told the admit clerk when you arrived there, four days after the accident occurred, at Oschner?

Q: Did you ever tell any other physicians at Oschner that the pain in your hip didn't start until two or three days after the accident?

A: No, because it started that same night of the accident, right after the accident. At least I became alert—that's when I started feeling the pain." (Tr. pp. 106-107)

* * * * * *

"Q: Did you ask Dr. Hardey to have you hip x-rayed?

Q: Why did you ask him that?

A: Because it was hurting and I figured something was wrong with it because of the way it was hurting.

Q: Did you ask him to have your hip x-rayed before or after your knee was x-rayed?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
387 So. 2d 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baloney-v-carter-lactapp-1980.