Cherney v. North Carolina Zoological Park

CourtNorth Carolina Industrial Commission
DecidedSeptember 12, 2008
DocketI.C. No. TA-16246.
StatusPublished

This text of Cherney v. North Carolina Zoological Park (Cherney v. North Carolina Zoological Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Carolina Industrial Commission primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherney v. North Carolina Zoological Park, (N.C. Super. Ct. 2008).

Opinion

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In accordance with the directives of the North Carolina Supreme Court, the Full Commission enters the following Decision and Order.

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The Full Commission finds as facts and concludes as matters of law the following, which were entered into by the parties as:

STIPULATIONS
1. All parties have been correctly designated and there is no question as to misjoinder or non-joinder of parties.

2. The accident involving plaintiff, which is the subject of this claim, occurred on July 18, 1998 in the African Pavilion of the North Carolina Zoological Park.

3. The plaintiff's date of birth is April 1, 1940, so at the time of the accident which is the subject of this claim, plaintiff was 58 years old.

4. The mortuary tables of N.C. Gen Stat. § 8-46 are in evidence. According to those tables, plaintiff had a life expectancy at the time of the hearing before the Deputy Commissioner on August 13, 2001 (at her then age of 61) of 20.4 years.

5. All deposition exhibits are authentic and admissible into evidence. Plaintiff's medical record and bills, paginated from C-0001 through C-0874, are authentic and genuine and are in evidence.

6. Plaintiff's medical records and X-rays (including positives of X-rays) are in evidence and can be used for substantive and illustrative purposes, and such items can be used by either party in lieu of medical expert testimony. The parties agreed that no medical expert testimony would be required by live appearance, deposition or video deposition.

7. The surgeries performed at UNC Hospitals by Dr. Bos, in Raleigh by Dr. Fajgenbaum, and in Ohio by Dr. Pugh and the rehabilitation treatments plaintiff received in North Carolina and Ohio were necessary, related and resulted from the injuries plaintiff suffered in the accident which is the subject of this claim. The cost of those treatments was $80,094.67. *Page 3

8. The report from Dr. Pugh in Ohio is admitted into evidence in lieu of deposition testimony.

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Based upon all of the competent evidence of record and reasonable inferences flowing therefrom, the Full Commission makes the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT
1. Plaintiff was injured at the North Carolina Zoological Park's African Pavilion on Saturday, July 18, 1998 when an approximately 34-foot tall ficus benjamina, a tropical tree with multiple trunks, fell onto a nearby Traveler's tree, a portion of which then broke off and fell on plaintiff.

2. At the time of her injury, plaintiff was a lawful visitor to the Zoo's African Pavilion, a fully-enclosed, indoor facility.

3. The ficus tree was located in the center of a concrete planter, 7-10 feet from the walkways. The ficus tree had previously fallen over on June 27, 1988. After that fall, since the ficus tree and its roots appeared healthy, it was replanted in the same planter and six 7-strand, 3/8" cables going in four directions were looped around the tree and attached to the planter's walls. These cables were used to aid the tree in keeping it upright and to assist in monitoring the tree.

4. There was no evidence that the first of the two named employees, Ron Ferguson, has any involvement with the tree that fell on plaintiff.

5. Named employee Virginia Wall had been employed by defendant as its Curator of Horticulture since 1987. Ms. Wall, an expert in zoological horticulture in outdoor conservatory type environments and in growing tropical plants, was responsible for the management of all of *Page 4 the Zoo's indoor and outdoor plants, including the ficus tree, through the supervision of 50 Zoo staff members.

6. After the ficus tree was cabled following its earlier fall on June 27, 1988, Zoo personnel supervised by Virginia Wall checked the cables on the tree monthly for slack, tension, and deterioration. The monthly cable check was a method of monitoring what the tree was doing and tracking the tree's movements to determine how the tree was shifting.

7. The ficus tree was pruned twice a year to remove the weight of new foliage, to balance the tree and its root system, curtailing any shifting or change in position, removing any disease and decay, and to allow for aesthetics and more light transmission. This tree was scheduled as the number one priority tree to be pruned during the summer pruning to begin on July 20, 1998 due to its heavy canopy.

8. Each week before the facility was opened to the public, the foliage of the plants in the Zoo's African Pavilion was syringed with a hose to add humidity to the air, to wash foliage, and to control insect infestations. The ficus tree had last been syringed, thereby adding more weight to the tree's canopy, by Zoo personnel supervised by Virginia Wall at 9:00 a.m. on July 18, 1998, approximately six hours before the accident.

9. As a result of the ficus tree falling and injuring plaintiff, she underwent an open reduction and internal fixation to repair her fractured right femur at UNC Hospitals. This operation involved installation of a rod screwed into the ball end of the fractured femur and a plate affixed to the lower shaft of the fractured femur with metal screws to hold plaintiff's fractured femur together. During the surgery, surgeons had to cut and reattach a tendon to bring the splintered pieces of bone together. *Page 5

10. As a further consequence of the July 18, 1998 accident, plaintiff suffered compression fractures to 3 vertebrae in her spine, as well as several fractured ribs.

11. On July 23, 1998, plaintiff was transferred to in-patient rehab to begin extensive rehabilitation of her fractured right femur. On August 6, 1998, after 20 days of hospitalization and in-patient rehab, plaintiff was discharged to her home with a hospital bed, walker, and bedside commode and with orders to continue her rehabilitation with the assistance of home health care.

12. Over the next six months, plaintiff continued to experience pain in her right leg when attempting to bear weight or walk, as well as pain in her back and ribs.

13. As of December 2, 1998, almost five months after the accident, plaintiff had not recovered to the point that she was independent, had not driven an automobile since the accident at the Zoo, and was unable to walk without a cane.

14. On January 8, 1999, Dr. Fajgenbaum, an orthopedic surgeon, diagnosed plaintiff with a non-union of her fractured right femur and advised plaintiff that to correct it, she needed a second operation on her right leg.

15. On January 19, 1999, Dr. Fajgenbaum performed a second operation removing the original hardware from plaintiff's right femur, correcting the rotation deformity internally, and replacing the old rod, plate and screws with new hardware of the same type. In addition, this second operation also involved making a new incision into plaintiff's pelvis to remove bone, which was surgically chipped out and used to pack the area of non-union in her fractured femur.

16. Following this second operation, plaintiff underwent another round of physical therapy and rehabilitation in an effort to correct her abnormal gait. *Page 6

17.

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Cherney v. North Carolina Zoological Park, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherney-v-north-carolina-zoological-park-ncworkcompcom-2008.