Blankenship v. Mirick

984 S.W.2d 771, 1999 WL 20495
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1999
Docket10-98-020-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 984 S.W.2d 771 (Blankenship v. Mirick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blankenship v. Mirick, 984 S.W.2d 771, 1999 WL 20495 (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

REX D. DAVIS, Chief Justice.

Sheila Mirick filed suit against William E. Blankenship, Jr. for injuries she suffered as a result of a collision between the 1973 Ford pickup in which she was riding and the 1989 Ford pickup driven by Blankenship. A jury found that Blankenship’s negligence proximately caused the collision and awarded Mirick $40,959.03 in damages for pain and mental anguish, loss of earnings, physical impairment, and medical expenses sustained in the past and $30,000.00 in damages for pain and mental anguish, physical impair *773 ment, and medical expenses in the future. The court rendered judgment in accordance with the verdict.

Blankenship raises two issues on appeal concerning the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to: (1) show that his negligence caused certain of Mirick’s injuries; or (2) support the award of damages for past or future physical impairment or future medical expenses.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On May 21, 1994, Blankenship entered Horseshoe Bend Road from a private drive without yielding and headed in a westerly direction along the gravel road. Sheila Mir-ick’s husband Eugene was driving their pickup easterly on the same road. The left side of the Miricks’ pickup was positioned near the center of the road. 1 Blankenship believed the Miricks were entering the westbound side of the road and moved to the eastbound side in an effort to avoid a collision. Nevertheless, a collision ensued.

According to the Department of Public Safety trooper who responded to the scene, Blankenship had an alcohol concentration of 0.09 when the trooper administered a preliminary breath test on the roadside about an hour after the collision. The trooper testified that in his opinion Blankenship was intoxicated at the time of the collision due to the loss of the normal use of his mental and physical faculties. See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 49.01(2)(A) (Vernon 1994). Mr. Mirick and the trooper both testified that the collision occurred because Blankenship failed to yield the right-of-way and not because Mr. Mirick was driving near the center of the road.

Mrs. Mirick rode in the middle of the Miricks’ pickup which did not have a seatbelt for the middle passenger. Thus, she was not wearing a seatbelt at the time of the collision. The force of the collision caused her knees to be “shoved” “up into” the dash. Her knees were bleeding after the collision. A relative who lived nearby transported Mrs. Mirick and her son to the hospital.

In the emergency room, a physician cleansed her wounds and stitched a two-inch laceration across her left knee. Her right knee had “some small abrasions.” The doctor ordered x-rays which were “normal.” He instructed Mrs. Mirick to stay off her feet for a few days and apply ice to her left knee. She was to return in three days for a followup examination. On her return, she reported that her left knee bothered her when she bent or extended it. Another x-ray was “normal.” The physician recommended some pain medication and advised that she might need to follow up with an ¡orthopedist if her symptoms did not improve. The physician noted a “possible chondromalacia left knee” (ie., a bruised left knee) based on the symptoms presented.

Mrs. Mirick’s symptoms did not improve, so she saw Dr. Gary L. Becker, an orthopedist, on June 7. She reported pain in both knees to Becker. He suspected and ultimately diagnosed traumatic chondromalacia patella, a bruising of the cartilage beneath the kneecap. Becker recommended further rest; he instructed Mrs. Mirick to do certain exercises on a daily basis to develop her quadriceps which “protect and hold the kneecap in place”; and he prescribed an anti-inflammatory medication to help reduce inflammation in the knee joints. Two weeks later, Becker determined her symptoms had improved and released her to return to work without limitation. He advised her to continue the exercises and to use the anti-inflammatory medication as needed. He told her to return if she experienced further pain.

Mrs. Mirick testified that Becker told her her knees would continue to hurt and “it’s going to take some time.” She continued to experience swelling, redness, and “a lot of pain.” She finally returned to see Becker again almost ten months after her last visit “because the pain had just got so bad.” When Becker examined her in April 1995 her x-rays revealed “laterally positioned patella” meaning her kneecaps had shifted from their normal positions. He prescribed a conservative treatment regimen including continua *774 tion of the exercises previously recommended and prescription anti-inflammatory medication as needed. At this point, Becker determined that if the conservative regimen was not successful he would have to perform a surgical procedure known as a lateral reti-naeular release to allow the kneecap “to come back where it belongs.”

Mrs. Mirick continued the conservative regimen for another five months. She experienced “increasing problems of pain in both knees.” In October, Becker operated on her left knee which was “more symptomatic.” Mrs. Mirick had a number of post-operative follow-up visits with Becker. In January 1996, Becker noted that she had “done well” with the left knee but was “[n]ow having significant symptoms on the right side.” He operated on the right knee in February. After this operation, Becker noted in a followup examination that Mrs. Mirick had “[g]ood mobility” in the knee and “very little grinding and crepitation.” 2 He did not note any complaints of pain. About a month later Becker examined her again. He determined that the' surgery had done “exceptionally well” for her condition. He noted “some swelling” but did not anticipate “any significant permanent disability.”

In November Mrs. Mirick returned complaining that she continued to experience pain. Becker referred her to a physical therapist. He noted in January 1997 that she still had “some problems” but was being helped by the physical therapy. He recommended additional sessions with the therapist and advised her to purchase an elastic knee support to help stabilize her patella. Six months later, Mrs. Mirick again saw Becker. She continued to experience pain at this time. Becker advised her to continue her exercises and take anti-inflammatory medications as needed. He asked her to return for a follow-up evaluation in two months. The trial began about two months later. Mrs. Mirick apparently did not return to Becker’s office before trial.

CAUSATION

Blankenship’s first issue questions the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s award of damages insofar as it compensates Mrs. Mirick for any medical expenses she incurred after Becker released her for work without any restrictions one month after the collision. Specifically, Blankenship asserts that the record contains no evidence or factually-insuffieient evidence to demonstrate that his negligence in reasonable medical probability caused the dislocation of her kneecaps. Thus, he contends she is not entitled to compensation for the medical expenses she incurred for the treatment of this condition.

A. The Standard op Review

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Bluebook (online)
984 S.W.2d 771, 1999 WL 20495, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenship-v-mirick-texapp-1999.