Durkee v. City of Shreveport

587 So. 2d 722, 1991 WL 190739
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 1991
Docket22469-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 587 So. 2d 722 (Durkee v. City of Shreveport) 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
Durkee v. City of Shreveport, 587 So. 2d 722, 1991 WL 190739 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

587 So.2d 722 (1991)

Carolyn Denise Turpin DURKEE, Appellee,
v.
The CITY OF SHREVEPORT, Appellant.

No. 22469-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

September 25, 1991.
Writ Denied December 2, 1991.

*724 Lunn, Irion, Johnson, Salley & Carlisle by Charles W. Salley, and James A. Mijalis, Shreveport, for appellant.

James L. Fortson, Shreveport, for appellee.

Before MARVIN, SEXTON, NORRIS, VICTORY and BROWN, JJ.

NORRIS, Judge.

The City of Shreveport appeals a judgment which held the city strictly liable for a defect on its premises and awarded damages of $269,068.68 to the plaintiff, Carolyn Durkee. We conclude the trial court did not err in finding that the city's premises were defective, that the defect caused the plaintiff's injuries or that the plaintiff was *725 not comparatively negligent; however, the court abused its discretion by awarding excessive damages. The judgment will be amended and affirmed.

Facts

Mrs. Durkee worked for Shreveport Air Center, an independent contractor at the Shreveport Regional Airport. Her job, which she had held for over four years, was to ride a golf cart or van from the terminal to the planes that just landed, transport passengers or luggage from the plane to the terminal, carry supplies to the plane, and get passengers or luggage to the plane before it took off. On the average day she made 25 to 30 trips from the tarmac to the ramp area.

On the morning of December 31, 1986 she had driven some passengers in the van from a private plane to their connecting flight. She returned to the rear entrance of the old terminal building and parked the van. She parked it over a narrow strip of concrete on which a free-standing fence had once stood. When Mrs. Durkee stepped from the floorboard to the ground, her right foot landed squarely on an iron fence post stub that protruded about 4½" from the surface of the concrete. Her foot twisted with a loud "pop," rolled off the side of the I-beam and she fell to the ground. Her sudden pain was so severe that she could not even call for help. Fellow workers in the old terminal building spotted her in distress and had her conveyed by ambulance to the Willis-Knighton emergency room.

At the hospital Mrs. Durkee's foot was swelling out of her soft leather tennis shoe and badly discolored. Technicians packed the foot in ice, gave her some pain medication, placed the foot in a metal brace and then x-rayed the foot. According to hospital records, she was diagnosed with a severe sprain of the right ankle; she was advised to stay off the foot and see a private physician.

On January 2, 1987 Mrs. Durkee went to Dr. Don Burt, an orthopedist in Shreveport. Finding her foot still swollen, he took more x-rays and diagnosed a severe ankle sprain which should heal in eight to 10 weeks; he told her to use crutches, stay off work a while and attend therapy.

Mrs. Durkee did so, returning to light duty work after two weeks. She received electrical stimulation therapy at the Bone and Joint Clinic and saw Dr. Burt three times in January 1987. Although she was working only light duty and abridging her usual routine of heavy athletic and sporting activity, her foot was not getting much better. She returned to Dr. Burt in June 1987 saying she improved for a while but was still having recurrences of soreness and swelling. She also complained of an unsightly blue lump on the right side of her foot. Dr. Burt did not at the time note any swelling or blue lump; he took additional x-rays which were negative. He again diagnosed a severe ankle sprain. He testified in deposition that Mrs. Durkee was experiencing a "flare-up" of the old sprain.

Sometime in early 1987 Mrs. Durkee's husband took a new job and moved his family to Atlanta, Georgia. She has not worked outside the home since the move. On the morning of July 24, 1987 Mrs. Durkee went to make a 180° turn in her kitchen and her right foot "gave way" beneath her; she collapsed in pain. She went to the Family Practice Center, where a general practitioner advised her she had aggravated the prior ankle sprain and sustained another sprain or strain. He prescribed pain medication, wrapped the ankle and advised her to stay off her injured foot. Mrs. Durkee complied and enjoyed an initial improvement; however, she continued to experience episodes of pain, sometimes so bad she could not walk.

On September 23, 1987 she saw a podiatrist in Georgia, Dr. Alan Shaw. Dr. Shaw noted that her complaint of pain was directly over the calcaneo-cuboid joint. He took an anterior-posterior x-ray which, he testified, showed a fracture of the joint with a bone chip. He described it as an avulsion fracture, consistent with her history of a "fairly violent" twist of the ankle in December 1986. Dr. Shaw recommended conservative treatment but advised her that *726 surgery might be the only way to get lasting relief.

Mrs. Durkee filed this suit in October 1987. On the advice of her counsel, she went to another Shreveport orthopedist, Dr. Ragan Green, in November 1987. Dr. Green noticed diffuse thickening in the lateral midfoot and tenderness over the lateral calcaneo-cuboid joint. He ran an x-ray which showed calcification, perhaps indicative of a ligamentous injury, but no evidence of a break. He diagnosed a sprain of the foot (not ankle). At a second visit in March 1989, Dr. Green x-rayed the entire foot and found a small bone spur at the calcaneo-cuboid joint.

Mrs. Durkee returned to Dr. Shaw in March 1989; he took more x-rays and ran a CT scan which he interpreted as showing degenerative changes, an old fracture and a bone chip. Because over two years of conservative treatment had failed to end her of episodes of acute pain, Mrs. Durkee underwent surgery in May 1989. The surgery went as expected except that Dr. Shaw removed two bone chips (measuring 1.5 × 1.3 × 0.3 cm and 1.4 × 0.9 × 0.5 cm) and a fragment of firm fibrofatty tissue (measuring 1.0 × 0.7 × 0.4 cm) from the site. By the time of trial in October 1989, Mrs. Durkee testified that the old blue lump was gone and she could do more walking now.

Dr. Shaw testified that even with the surgery, he would expect Mrs. Durkee to experience two or three painful flare-ups a year for the rest of her life. He estimated that each flare would last four to six weeks, requiring four or five doctor visits and x-rays, for a total of $500, and 12 or 13 therapy sessions, which his office does not perform and are not included in his medical estimate. He assessed a permanent disability of 12% for the lower extremity and 4-5% for the whole body.

Mrs. Durkee's expert economist, Dr. Melvin Harju, testified that her life expectancy was 46.4 years. On the basis of three flare-ups per year, each requiring medicals of $500 and 12 or 13 therapy sessions (which Mrs. Durkee estimated at $60 or $70 apiece), she would sustain future medical costs with a present value of $115,326. He also testified that doctor visits and therapy sessions would cause her to lose 36 half-days of work per year over her worklife expectancy of 16.6 years, thus diminishing her future earnings by $14,307 to $23,001.

Action of the trial court

In a long written opinion, the trial court found that the city owned and operated the area where the accident took place; that the walkway had a protruding yet inconspicuous fence post which created an unreasonable risk of harm and was therefore defective; that the city had reasonable notice of the defect; that the defect caused Mrs. Durkee's injury; and that Mrs. Durkee was not comparatively at fault.

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Bluebook (online)
587 So. 2d 722, 1991 WL 190739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durkee-v-city-of-shreveport-lactapp-1991.