Cheryl and Michael Mitchell v. Baton Rouge Orthopaedic Clinic, L.L.C. and Robert W. Easton, M.D.

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 17, 2020
Docket2019CA0939
StatusUnknown

This text of Cheryl and Michael Mitchell v. Baton Rouge Orthopaedic Clinic, L.L.C. and Robert W. Easton, M.D. (Cheryl and Michael Mitchell v. Baton Rouge Orthopaedic Clinic, L.L.C. and Robert W. Easton, M.D.) 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
Cheryl and Michael Mitchell v. Baton Rouge Orthopaedic Clinic, L.L.C. and Robert W. Easton, M.D., (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 CA 0939

LCHERYL AND MICHAEL MITCHELL

v L VERSUS

t' BATON ROUGE ORTHOPAEDIC CLINIC, L.L.C. AND ROBERT W. EASTON, M.D.

Judgment Rendered: DEC 1 7 2020

On Appeal from the 19th Judicial District Court In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana Trial Court No. 658229

Honorable Timothy E. Kelley, Judge Presiding

Nelson W. Wagar, III Attorneys for Plaintiffs/ Appellants, Sarah W. Hickman Cheryl and Michael Mitchell Mandeville, Louisiana

Tara S. Bourgeois Attorneys for Defendants/ Appellees, Garrett S. Callaway Robert W. Easton, M.D., Baton Rouge Herbert J. Mang, Jr. Orthopaedic Clinic, L.L.C., et al. Nancy B. Roberts Baton Rouge, Louisiana

BEFORE: GUIDRY, McCLENDON, HIGGINBOTHAM, HOLDRIDGE, AND PENZATO, JJ.

rv C

t='! ( fir i .] , C 5' vt Gti ! _ si'1., ' + iru) PENZATO, J.

Plaintiffs, Cheryl and Michael Mitchell, appeal a trial court judgment in

favor of defendants, Robert W. Easton, M.D., Baton Rouge Orthopaedic Clinic,

L.L.C., Physician Assurance SPC as part of Y -Bridge Insurance Company, and

Baton Rouge Orthopaedic Clinic Segregated Portfolio Company as part of Y -

Bridge Insurance SPC ( collectively " defendants"), granting an exception raising

the objection of prescription and dismissing all of plaintiffs' claims. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On August 23, 2015, defendant Dr. Easton performed a left total hip

arthroplasty revision on plaintiff Cheryl Mitchell, during which Mrs. Mitchell' s

sciatic nerve was severed. Plaintiffs filed this medical malpractice action on May

26, 2017, alleging therein that Dr. Easton severed the nerve causing paralysis.

Plaintiffs further alleged that Mrs. Mitchell continued treatment with Dr. Easton

and that the basis for Dr. Easton' s continuing treatment and Mrs. Mitchell' s

continuing rehabilitation and further surgery was " her belief in and reliance upon

the physician/patient relationship and his advice that with such continued care and

rehabilitation, on his recommendation, the nerve would regenerate, heal and/ or

return her leg to a normal or acceptable condition." According to the petition, on

November 15, 2016, Dr. Easton advised Mrs. Mitchell that he no longer believed

that she would regain the function of her left lower extremity. Defendants filed a

peremptory exception raising the objection of prescription on the grounds that

plaintiffs' lawsuit, filed on May 26, 2017, alleged the date of medical malpractice

as August 23, 2015, and therefore was prescribed because it was not filed within

one year of the date of the alleged malpractice or within one year of the discovery

of the alleged malpractice.

An evidentiary hearing was held on March 18, 2019. Dr. Easton testified

that on August 11, 2015, he performed a left total hip arthroplasty on Mrs.

2 Mitchell. Following the August 11, 2015 procedure, Mrs. Mitchell re -dislocated

her hip, and on August 23, 2015, Dr. Easton performed a revision of the August

11, 2015 arthroplasty. While Mrs. Mitchell was in the recovery room, Dr. Easton

noticed that Mrs. Mitchell had foot drop. According to his testimony at the hearing

on the exception raising the objection of prescription, he advised Mrs. Mitchell' s

family and returned Mrs. Mitchell to surgery to determine the cause. During this

second surgery, Dr. Easton discovered that Mrs. Mitchell' s sciatic nerve was

lacerated. Dr. Easton contacted Dr. Rasheed Ahmad, a hand surgeon with

experience in nerve repairs. Dr. Ahmad examined the wound and confirmed a

fresh laceration in the sciatic nerve. Dr. Ahmad repaired the nerve, and Dr. Easton

continued with the remainder of the surgery. Dr. Easton testified that after

completing the surgery, he advised Mr. Mitchell of the sciatic nerve injury and

subsequent repair. Dr. Easton further testified that the following day, he spoke to

Mrs. Mitchell and told her that her sciatic nerve had been lacerated during the hip

revision and that Dr. Ahmad had repaired it. He also told Mrs. Mitchell that she

had left foot drop as a result of the nerve injury. With regard to the prognosis of

her left foot drop, Dr. Easton testified he advised Mrs. Mitchell that " it would take

time, and there is a possibility it could recover, there is a possibility it might not

recover, but most of the time at a year mark, whatever function you have, that is

kind of what you are left with." According to Dr. Easton, he did not tell Mrs.

Mitchell that her sciatic nerve was going to regenerate, her left foot drop would

completely resolve, she was going to be better in a year, or in a year her left foot

would be back to normal.

Dr. Easton testified that upon Mrs. Mitchell' s discharge from the hospital

following the August 23, 2015 surgeries, she went to inpatient rehabilitation for

recovery from her left hip arthroplasty and subsequent revision. On September 30,

2015, Dr. Easton performed a revision of the left total hip arthroplasty. According

3 to Dr. Easton, he performed this procedure because Mrs. Mitchell continued to

have dislocation issues; the procedure was not related to the sciatic nerve injury.

Dr. Easton testified that he continued to treat Mrs. Mitchell post-operatively until

November 15, 2016, to monitor the hip implant and to examine the joint and

prosthesis. He continued to monitor the sciatic nerve injury during that time to

determine if Mrs. Mitchell had any feeling or motion but was not treating her for

the nerve injury because there was no treatment for said injury. According to Dr.

Easton, the only treatment to restore nerve function was the repair that Dr. Ahmed

had performed. According to Dr. Easton, he never told Mrs. Mitchell that he

would fix, correct, or repair her sciatic nerve injury. He testified that his post-

operative treatment was standard for a hip arthroplasty and revision patient and

was not directed to or for Mrs. Mitchell' s sciatic nerve injury.

At the hearing on the exception, Mrs. Mitchell testified that the morning

following her August 23, 2015 surgery, Dr. Easton came to her hospital room and

told her that her sciatic nerve had been severed during the revision surgery and he

had called in another doctor to " get it back together." According to Mrs. Mitchell,

Dr. Easton told her that it was going to take up to a year before they would know

the full results of the surgery to repair her sciatic nerve and she should " not give up

hope." Mrs. Mitchell testified that during the course of her post-operative visits,

Dr. Easton continued to tell her " to wait a year" to determine the outcome of the

surgery to repair her sciatic nerve. Mrs. Mitchell acknowledged that she knew that

her foot had paralysis on August 24, 2015, but she did not immediately file suit

against Dr. Easton because she trusted him. According to Mrs. Mitchell, " He said

to give it a year, so that is what [ she] did. [ She] waited." However, Mrs. Mitchell

acknowledged that in a deposition she had previously given in this matter, she

testified that although she wanted to believe that her condition would improve

al within a year, she did not believe Dr. Easton when he said her condition would

improve in a year.

Mrs. Mitchell' s daughter, Michelle Goudeaux, also testified at the hearing.

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Cheryl and Michael Mitchell v. Baton Rouge Orthopaedic Clinic, L.L.C. and Robert W. Easton, M.D., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheryl-and-michael-mitchell-v-baton-rouge-orthopaedic-clinic-llc-and-lactapp-2020.