Cazes v. Raisinger

430 So. 2d 104
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1983
Docket82-CA-71
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 430 So. 2d 104 (Cazes v. Raisinger) 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
Cazes v. Raisinger, 430 So. 2d 104 (La. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

430 So.2d 104 (1983)

Alex CAZES, Widower of Mary Cazes, Laura Cazes Beadle and Alma Cazes Michel
v.
J. RAISINGER, His Employer, Jack Eckerd Corporation d/b/a Eckerd Drug Store No. 523 and Their Insurance Carrier, the Travelers Indemnity Company.

No. 82-CA-71.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

March 8, 1983.
Rehearing Denied May 18, 1983.

Daniel E. Becnel, Jr., Reserve, for Alex Cazes, et al., plaintiffs-appellees.

William A. Norfolk, Taylor, Porter, Brooks & Phillips, Baton Rouge, for J. Raisinger, et al., defendants-appellants.

Before BOUTALL, GAUDIN and GRISBAUM, JJ.

BOUTALL, Judge.

This suit arises from the alleged negligent mislabeling of a prescription by a pharmacist. The patient for whom the medication was prescribed became ill and died of congestive heart failure several months later. From a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs in a wrongful death action the defendants have appealed.

Mrs. Cazes, a 71-year-old resident of Reserve, Louisiana, had been chronically ill with heart and lung problems and with diabetes for several years. She entered East Jefferson Hospital on July 30, 1980 with difficulty breathing. Dr. Methee Tontiplaphol examined her in the emergency room and determined that she was suffering from acute pulmonary edema and also that she had been without her regular heart medicine and diabetes medicine for two days. He had her admitted to the hospital for treatment and discharged her on August 2.

Dr. Tontiplaphol provided her at time of discharge with a prescription for Lanoxin, a form of digitalis, which she had been taking regularly at least since 1979. On August 5, 1980 she returned to the emergency room with symptoms of an overdose of Lanoxin. It was discovered by Dr. Tontiplaphol that she had taken four pills a day rather than the one pill he had prescribed. An Eckerd Drugs prescription label from the medicine bottle was found, with typed instructions *105 reading, "One tablet four times a day." After treatment in the emergency room Dr. Tontiplaphol sent Mrs. Cazes home with instructions to wait two days, then resume the Lanoxin but take only one pill each morning.

At the suggestion of counsel for the plaintiffs, Mrs. Cazes consulted Dr. Christy Montegut periodically for "evaluation and follow-up" from August 22 through December, 1980, being hospitalized by him for congestive heart failure from December 22 through 24. Counsel also referred Mrs. Cazes to a psychiatrist for two sessions, August 25 and September 3, 1980, because she had become afraid to take her medicine. On January 4, 1981, Mrs. Cazes entered East Jefferson with congestive heart failure and acute anteroseptal myocardial infarction, returned home January 14 but re-entered the hospital the next day, and expired on January 16, 1981. Her former physician, Dr. Greenberg, attended her from January 4 until her death. The death certificate, signed by Dr. Greenberg, showed the immediate cause of death as acute myocardial infarction, as a consequence of coronary artery disease and chronic pulmonary disease. An autopsy was not performed.

Mr. and Mrs. Cazes filed suit for damages against J. Raisinger, the pharmacist who filled the prescription, and Jack Eckerd Corporation, and their insurer, Travelers Indemnity Company, on December 11, 1980. After Mrs. Cazes' death the petition was amended to substitute Mrs. Cazes' three surviving children for her as plaintiffs. The amended petition alleged that she died as a result of an irregular heartbeat caused by the overdose of Lanoxin which aggravated a pre-existing heart and circulatory condition.

Additionally plaintiffs amended the suit to institute an action for their own damages for the death of their mother/spouse. C.C. art. 2315.

The court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, and against all defendants, awarding each of the four plaintiffs $10,000 general damages in survivorship and $10,000 general damages for wrongful death, plus any special damages incurred in either situation, with legal interest from date of judicial demand and costs. This appeal followed.

In his reasons for judgment, the trial court adopted the findings of fact and legal conclusions set forth in the plaintiff's post trial memorandum. The issues before this court are whether the record supports the finding of a causal connection between the overdose of Lanoxin and Mrs. Cazes' death and whether the amount of the award was in excess of the discretion allowed to the trial judge.

The records of East Jefferson Hospital were placed in evidence and stipulated to by the plaintiffs and defendant. The plaintiffs introduced into the record the depositions of two treating physicians, Doctors Tontiplaphol and Montegut, in lieu of their live testimony and presented as witnesses the widower, Mr. Cazes, and the Cazes's two daughters. The plaintiffs' testimony rather amazingly is that Mrs. Cazes had no heart problems before the incident and sheds no light on the issues before us. The defendants called Dr. Joe Milton McCurdy, who was accepted by the court as an expert in the field of internal medicine.

The East Jefferson Hospital records reveal the following admissions:

November 13-16, 1979, for removal of a cataract. Dr. K.G. Pinter, the consulting internist who examined Mrs. Cazes, stated in his report that her referring physician from Lutcher gave a history of pulmonary emphysema, diabetes, and arteriosclerotic heart disease, and of a hospitalization in the spring of 1979 for acute congestive heart failure. He further reported that at the time of her admission she was taking 0.25 mg. of Lanoxin daily. Among other findings his examination revealed:

"... somewhat enlarged heart to the left with harsh, blowing systolic murmur in the right and left sternal border with a maximum intensity over the apex...."
January 9-16, 1980, for acute and chronic pulmonary disease and pneumonitis. The *106 treating physician was Dr. Samuel Greenberg.
July 30—August 2, 1980, for acute pulmonary edema, as described above.
August 5, 1980, emergency room treatment only for digitalis toxicity, as described above.
December 22-24, 1980, for a sudden acute episode of shortness of breath, which Dr. Christy Montegut attributed to "aortic stenosis with acute decompensation."
January 4-14, 1981, and January 15-16, 1981, for myocardial infarction and congestive heart failure which resulted in death, as described above; treated by Dr. Samuel Greenberg.

None of the three medical witnesses was willing to state unreservedly that the Lanoxin overdose caused Mrs. Cazes's death by disrupting the heart rhythm, thereby aggravating her previously existing heart condition.

Dr. Montegut's deposition was the most favorable to the plaintiffs. He stated that medical literature reports that Lanoxin can produce lasting effects even after the drug is discontinued, but that it is often times speculative. The effect he noted was that some patients taking Lanoxin, when discontinued, still had heart function as well as if continued on Lanoxin. He stated the usual effect of an overdose of Lanoxin only lasts 2 or 3 days and at the time of his examination of Mrs. Cazes on September 19, 1980 she exhibited no signs or symptoms he would attribute to the excessive dose of Lanoxin. Consistent with that he stated that Mrs. Cazes needed treatment regardless of the Lanoxin poisoning, that when she first saw him he felt he was treating both things and then with time it was basically the underlying heart problem.

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Related

Hatten v. Price
663 So. 2d 351 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1995)

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430 So. 2d 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cazes-v-raisinger-lactapp-1983.