Charles N. James v. Rachel M. Carawan

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 2006
Docket2006-CA-02024-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of Charles N. James v. Rachel M. Carawan (Charles N. James v. Rachel M. Carawan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles N. James v. Rachel M. Carawan, (Mich. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2006-CA-02024-SCT

CHARLES N. JAMES

v.

RACHEL M. CARAWAN

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/16/2006 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. KOSTA N. VLAHOS COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: HANCOCK COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: MELINDA O. JOHNSON ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: MARIANO J. BARVIE’ NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED - 09/04/2008 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

EN BANC.

WALLER, PRESIDING JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On September 20, 2001, Rachel M. Carawan filed a negligence suit against Charles

N. James in the Circuit Court of Hancock County stemming from an automobile accident in

which she suffered injuries to her back. On July 31, 2003, prior to trial, James captured

video of Carawan riding various rides at the Six Flags amusement park in New Orleans,

Louisiana. The day before trial, Carawan stipulated that she would not seek damages beyond

July 29, 2003, and moved to exclude the Six Flags video. Carawan asserted that she had

fully recovered as of July 29, after undergoing an epidural steroid injection that same day.

The court excluded the video. The jury returned a verdict for Carawan in the exact amount of her medical bills and lost wages. The trial court subsequently granted an additur. Because

we find the trial court erred in excluding the July 2003 Six Flags video as evidence, we

reverse and remand for a new trial.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On December 19, 2000, Carawan, Pamela Liles, and Liles’s three-year-old daughter

stopped for gas at a Chevron station in Diamondhead, Mississippi. Carawan, who was

driving a 1996 Honda Civic, got out and pumped the gas, while Liles’s and Liles’s daughter

remained inside the vehicle. As Carawan waited for the tank to fill, she leaned against the

vehicle with her backside. About this same time, Carawan heard Liles scream and turned her

head just before her rear bumper was struck by a 1996 Ford Crown Victoria. James, the

driver of this vehicle, failed to see Carawan’s car as he backed out of his parking space. The

force of the impact threw Carawan forward and caused a small dent in her bumper, along

with some chipped paint.1 Carawan experienced no immediate pain or injury from the

accident.

¶3. When Carawan awoke the next morning, she experienced stiffness and soreness in her

back. She reported to work at the Grand Casino in Gulfport, but was soon dismissed because

she was unable to perform her work. That same day, she went to Hancock Medical Center

1 The parties dispute the severity of the impact. Liles, who was sitting in the front passenger’s seat at the time, stated that the impact caused her to be “thrown back” toward the driver’s seat. The accident caused $386 in damages to Carawan’s vehicle. James estimated that he was going about two miles per hour when he hit Carawan’s car. Furthermore, he did not notice any tire marks on the pavement to indicate her vehicle had actually moved as a result of the impact.

2 in Bay St. Louis and received some pain medicine and muscle relaxers. A week later, as the

pain and tightness continued, she went to Memorial Hospital in Gulfport. Carawan was

examined, given some muscle relaxers, and told to return for a follow-up examination if the

pain did not subside within a week.

¶4. In January 2001, Carawan sought treatment from Dr. Michael Wilensky, who

prescribed Celebrex and recommended physical therapy. Wilensky also provided her a

doctor’s note excusing her from work for December 2000 through March 2001. Carawan

attended physical therapy sessions from April 2001 through July 2001, but did not attend

every session because she had to care for her bedridden father. While undergoing physical

therapy, she experienced intermittent periods of relief, followed by relapses of pain.2

¶5. Around the end of April 2001, Carawan returned to work as a bartender.

Accommodations were made so that she would not have to perform any excessive lifting.

Despite these accommodations, Carawan experienced increasing tightness in her back due

to the repetitious lifting required in bartending.

¶6. In June 2001, Carawan began seeing orthopedic surgeon Dr. M. F. Longnecker, Jr.

Longnecker performed a magnetic resonance imaging examination (MRI), the results of

which appeared normal. He diagnosed her problems as being muscular in nature, and

prescribed a gradual exercise program, incorporating aquatherapy, along with continued use

2 Carawan testified about two specific instances which re-aggravated her back—once when she attempted to maneuver her father in his bed, and once when she slid a chair up to a table.

3 of anti-inflammatory medicine and muscle relaxers. Longnecker ended his treatment of

Carawan in July 2001.

¶7. On September 20, 2001, Carawan filed suit against James in the Circuit Court of

Hancock County. Carawan claimed that she had suffered severe injuries as a result of

James’s negligence. According to the complaint, these alleged injuries extended to her head,

neck, and back, and caused excruciating pain that ultimately rendered her temporarily and

totally disabled. James denied the allegations in his initial answer.

¶8. Thereafter, in February 2002, citing persistent pain in her mid-to-lower back, Carawan

sought the services of Dr. Victor T. Bazzone. 3 Following an initial examination, Bazzone’s

differential diagnosis was either (1) a ruptured disk or (2) myofascial disease, which Bazzone

defined as an irritation or malfunction to muscles and the covering of the muscles. Bazzone

performed a second MRI of Carawan’s lower back, which revealed a small bulging of disks.4

For a better picture of the bone itself and the disks, Bazzone conducted a myelogram and a

computerized tomography (CT) scan.5 While not ruling out the possibility of a ruptured disk,

he diagnosed primarily a myofascial injury. For treatment, he prescribed 400 milligrams of

3 Bazzone frequented the Lb’s Restaurant at the Grand Casino where Carawan worked. After observing Carawan’s difficulty working and walking, he suggested that she come by his office for an evaluation. 4 Bazzone recommended another MRI because the previous one had focused on the chest and neck areas, rather than her lower back. 5 According to Bazzone, a myelogram is a diagnostic test involving a spinal tap which inserts dye into the area surrounding the spinal cord. Once the dye is in place, a CT scan is conducted.

4 ibuprofen daily, weight/resistance training three days a week, and walking one-to-one-and-a-

half miles, six days a week. Any future appointments were left to Carawan’s discretion.

¶9. Carawan returned to Bazzone in March 2003 because of continuing back pain and, as

a new development, numbness in her big toe. Because of this change and the passage of time

since her last examination, Bazzone performed another MRI, which showed that the disk had

moved a little more.6 At this point, the possibility of surgery was discussed. Carawan,

however, elected not to undergo surgery because she wanted to finish her degree.7 Thus,

Bazzone simply prescribed a new anti-inflammatory drug.

¶10. In May 2003, Carawan went back to Bazzone with increasing pain and further decline.

Surgery was discussed again, but Carawan chose not to undergo it because of her father’s

deteriorating condition. Believing that surgery probably would be necessary at some point,

Bazzone sent her to Dr.

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