Ellis v. Brown

196 So. 3d 665, 2016 WL 2908154, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 980
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 18, 2016
DocketNo. 50,690-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 196 So. 3d 665 (Ellis v. Brown) 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
Ellis v. Brown, 196 So. 3d 665, 2016 WL 2908154, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 980 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

|, Devlin and Eureka Ellis, individually and on behalf of their three minor children, appeal a judgment awarding them damages as a result of a minor collision on an Interstate entrance ramp. We affirm.

Factual Background

On the evening of March 8, 2014, Eureka Ellis was driving her husband’s white 2013 Dodge Charger; the couple’s three children, Precious, Devonta and Detrayle (ages 17, 16 and 15', respectively), were passengers. Ms. Ellis was taking the eastbound entrance ramp from Thomas Road onto 1-20 in West Monroe. At the same time, Gregory Brown, driving his 2009 Chevy Silverado, was taking the same entrance ramp onto 1-20. Apparently, Brown attempted to merge into the outer lane, where Ms. Ellis was driving, before the space was clear and the Silverado made contact with the Charger, leaving a small ding and two scratches on its driver’s side rear quarter panel. Ms. Ellis and Devonta testified the impact was “pretty hard,” although in deposition Devonta had called it “a little jerk.” Precious said it was “kind of hard,” while Brown called it “very slight.”

Ms. Ellis and Brown exited their vehicles, and Brown asked her if they even needed to call the police; however, she had already phoned her husband, who told her to call the police, so she did. A policeman came to the scene, but he wrote no ticket. He asked Ms. Ellis 'and the children, who had remained in the car, if they were injured or needed medical attention, and they told him no. (The parties also referred to an accident report, but it was not introduced into evidence.)

12Mr. Ellis’s insurer, State Farm, wrote an estimate for repairs to the Charger’s left rear quarter panel and bumper cover, a new tape stripe, and painting and coating, a total of $1,232.98. Less Mr. Ellis’s $250 deductible, the payment was $982.98. (No copy of the insurance check was introduced into evidence.) Mr. Ellis testified that he took the ear to his brother, who performed the repairs for the insurance check plus $250 cash. Mr. Ellis admitted he had no receipts for the repairs.

Ms. Ellis and the children never sought treatment from a medical doctor. However, 12 days after the accident, March 20, they went to Dr. Dan Holt, a chiropractor in Monroe. Dr. Holt diagnosed all four patients with peck pain, upper, middle and low back pain, and some of them with headaches, shoulder or leg pain. Although X-rays showed no anatomical injuries, he considered them to be suffering from sprains, strains, headaches and various limitations of motion; he diagnosed five or six subluxations in each patient. He prescribed a very active course of therapy, including spinal manipulation, electrical stimulation, traetion, ice, massage and trigger points, with treatments twice a week for six months. For nearly three months, all four patients came to the office regularly, and Dr. Holt noted gradual improvements, especially in Devonta, citing objective observations and the patients’ reports. They did not complete the regimen, however, as they went out of town for a family funeral in early June and, after they got back, they , simply did not return to the chiropractor. Dr. Holt testified that because of this, they had probably not reached maximum medical benefit. Still, he submitted a, bill for his services: he treated Ms. Ellis, Precious and RDetrayle 22 times, for a total of $3,955.00 each, and Devonta 21 times, for a total of $3,520.00.

Procedural History and Trial Evidence

The Ellises, individually and on behalf of the children, • filed this suit in September [668]*6682014 against Brown and his insurer, Continental Casualty Co., demanding general damages for the auto accident and loss of consortium, and special damages for the chiropractor bills, repairs to the Charger and Ms. Ellis’s two lost days’ wages. In June 2015, the court granted the plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, holding that Brown was 100% at fault in causing the accident.

The matter came to trial over two days in July and August 2015; various eviden-tiary matters, mentioned below, were not resolved pretrial. Plaintiffs’ counsel conceded that their insurer, State Farm, was subrogated to their insurer’s position with respect to the insurance check and that their claim was for only the $250. deductible.

Ms, Ellis testified as outlined above, but after admitting she Rad no time sheets or pay stubs to document any missed work, she waived her lost wages claim. She also admitted that in July 2012 (20 months before the instant accident), she had been in another auto. accident, for which she (and Detrayle) had received chiropractic treatment with a different chiropractor, Dr. Arnold Harris,, and reported injuries very similar to those in the instant claim. She insisted that in the earlier accident, a rear-end collision on 1-20 in West Monroe, the impact was not as, hard as when Brown sideswiped her on the entrance ramp.

|4Mr. and Ms. Ellis gave inconsistent testimony about the' repairs to the Charger. In response to discovery, they had offered not the original color photos but grainy, black-and-white photocopies, even though Mr. Ellis said his brother (the repairman) still had the originals. Mr. Ellis was unsure if the photos were taken before or' after the repairs; Ms.' Ellis said they were taken before.- Exhibit P-7, admitted into evidence, seems to show one shallow scratch- above the driver’s-side combination light.

Two of the children, Precious and De-vonta, testified as outlined above. On cross-examination, Precious, denied that she injured her leg or limped into Dr, Holt’s office, although Dr. Holt had recorded these observations. Devonta admitted stating in deposition that he did not hurt his shoulder, but insisted'that he really did. Detrayle did not testify because, according to Mr. Ellis, he is developmentally disabled.

Dr. Holt presented a meticulous.review of each patient’s every visit, voicing his extreme confidence in their complaints of pain and impaired function in activities of daily life. On cross-examination, he admitted his license had been suspended in the 1990s for, as he called it, administrative charges (defense counsel called it over-treating Medicaid patients), that he often reduced his fees for volume customers and waived them for litigants who lost their cases, and had an advertising agreement with plaintiffs’ counsel (who had bought out Dr. Holt’s billboard contract). Notably, Dr. Holt claimed to be unaware of this court’s opinion, Pratt v. Culpepper, 49,627 (La.App. 2 Cir. 2/27/15), 162 So.3d 616, which held that evidence of his suspension was admissible to show his history of over-treatment and Ifito impeach his recommendations of long-term chiropractic care.

Dr. Harris, the prior chiropractor, testified . that he had treated Ms. Ellis and Detrayle in 2Q12, but they had quit coming to appointments long before the prescribed course of treatment ended. He also gave Ms. Ellis a TENS (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulator) unit to use at home as needed, as she was still in pain as of November 2012.

Finally, Brown testified, saying the impact was “very slight.” He looked and [669]*669saw only a scratch on the Charger, and no dent at all.

Action of the Trial Court

The court did not rule from the bench but told the parties that some damages were in order, of a minimal nature, as in Smart v. Calhoun, 49,943 (La.App. 2 Cir.

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196 So. 3d 665, 2016 WL 2908154, 2016 La. App. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-brown-lactapp-2016.