Farmers Texas County Mutual Insurance Company v. Ashlee Elizabeth Pagan

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 2014
Docket14-13-00048-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Farmers Texas County Mutual Insurance Company v. Ashlee Elizabeth Pagan (Farmers Texas County Mutual Insurance Company v. Ashlee Elizabeth Pagan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Texas County Mutual Insurance Company v. Ashlee Elizabeth Pagan, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Affirmed and Majority and Dissenting Opinions filed December 16, 2014.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-13-00048-CV

FARMERS TEXAS COUNTY MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, Appellant V. ASHLEE ELIZABETH PAGAN, Appellee

On Appeal from the 60th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. B-182,564

DISSENTING OPINION

I. Introduction

Farmers appeals urging reversible error in the exclusion of evidence and insufficiency of the evidence to support the personal injury judgment for damages. The Majority affirms. In my view, the Majority erroneously shifts plaintiff’s burden to prove medical causation to the defendant to disprove an inadequate and incomplete differential diagnosis. I respectfully dissent. II. Exclusion of Evidence

Few and far between are the cases in which the exclusion of evidence amounts to reversible error. This is one such case.

The timeline of what the Majority characterizes as Pagan’s “lasting shoulder injury” places the excluded 2009 horse-incident evidence in context and thereby belies the conclusion the Majority reaches about its admissibility:

• 3/2008. Pagan is in a motor vehicle accident (MVA). She does not report a shoulder injury at that time.

• 4/2008 – 4/2009. Pagan sees her doctor five times in the year following the MVA and never once mentions her shoulder.

• EXCLUDED. 4/2009. Pagan falls from a horse and suffers an injury. (Pagan sworn interrogatory response).

• EXCLUDED. 4/2009. Pagan returns to her doctor and requests back and shoulder x-rays. (Faseler records).

• EXCLUDED. 4/2009. Pagan reports to Diagnostic Health for the back and shoulder x-rays she requested. Diagnostic Health reports the history as: “Trampled by a horse, contusions.” (Diagnostic Health records).

• Pagan’s shoulder diagnostics and treatment continue from April 2009 with an uninterrupted course of x-rays, MRIs, repetitive steroid injections, repetitive pain medication, physiotherapy, and physical therapy. Surgery is recommended.

The Majority concludes that all evidence of Pagan’s April 2009 fall from a horse was properly excluded pursuant to (1) Rule 403 of the Texas Rules of Evidence because it would confuse the jury; and (2) Rule 702 of the Texas Rules

2 of Evidence because Farmers did not prove the horse incident is a plausible cause of Pagan’s injuries, in whole or in part. 1

Addressing Rule 403, the Majority concludes there is no “factual correlation” between the 2009 horse incident and the “lasting injuries for which Pagan recovered damages in this case.” The statement is belied entirely by the medical records. The very first diagnostic study of Pagan’s shoulder, an x-ray performed at Pagan’s request in April 2009, bears the history: “Trampled by a horse, contusions.” Prior to April 2009, Pagan never complained of a shoulder injury, 2 never received a diagnosis of shoulder injury, never received a pain pill for shoulder pain, never received an injection into her shoulder, and never had physiotherapy or physical therapy for the shoulder. But the Majority concludes that the jury would be confused because the April 2009 x-ray Pagan requested was normal. If the jury was confused about medical causation because the 2009 x-ray was normal, the jury would be no less confused that neither Pagan nor her physician requested an x-ray of the shoulder at any time in 2008 following the MVA.

Conversely, the factual correlation between the 2009 horse incident and the shoulder complaint is overwhelming. As mentioned, after Pagan fell from the horse in April 2009, she asked for shoulder and back x-rays; they were normal.

1 These are “other legitimate bases” for exclusion considered by the Majority. Pagan objected to all of Farmers’ proffered 2009 horse-incident evidence on the sole basis that Farmers did not bring expert testimony to establish a link between the 2009 horse incident and Pagan’s shoulder injuries. 2 Though Pagan sought no medical assistance on the day of the 2008 MVA, she went to an emergency room physician the following day. The physician noted her neck and back complaints in two places on the intake. That form also provided two opportunities for the physician to mark or note a shoulder complaint; it isn’t marked or noted. In the five visits Pagan made to a doctor between that emergency visit and the April 2009 horse incident, the word “shoulder” does not appear once in the medical records.

3 She returned to her doctor, Dr. Faseler, in October 2009 with continued shoulder pain. In May 2010, Dr. Faseler referred Pagan to Dr. Beaudry for continued complaints of shoulder pain. Dr. Beaudry treated it with pain medication and steroid injections. Dr. Beaudry again saw Pagan for shoulder pain in January 2011. He referred her to a neurosurgeon who performed unsuccessful physiotherapy on Pagan’s shoulder. Dr. Beaudry saw Pagan yet again for shoulder pain in July and August 2011. He conducted additional studies and prescribed additional pain medication and injections.

Rule 403 does not contemplate the exclusion of evidence merely because it is controverted or offers competing theories of causation. The jury might have believed Pagan’s post-interrogatory testimony that she did not really fall or she wasn’t really injured when the horse bumped her. The jury might have believed Pagan’s testimony and that of her boyfriend that she really did suffer a shoulder injury in 2008. The jury might have believed that all of Pagan’s injuries and all of Pagan’s damages in the past and in the future are attributable to the 2008 MVA. In my view, however, neither the trial judge nor this court may “believe” the truth of Pagan’s causation evidence to determine the admissibility of Farmers’ controverting evidence on causation. Causation was the only issue in this case. It was the role of the jury to examine the disputed facts. But, the jury never knew there was a dispute about what caused Pagan’s injuries because they never heard a word about her falling from a horse. If causation evidence is “confusing” under Rule 403 because it creates a dispute, then Rule 403 excludes all but evidence of sole cause. Such a construction of the rule finds no support in Texas law.

Next, the Majority affirms the exclusion of the medical records and testimony under Rule 702. Farmers proffered deposition testimony from Pagan’s medical causation expert, showing that:

4 • Dr. Beaudry, in rendering his opinion about the cause of Pagan’s 2012 injuries, was completely unaware that Pagan had suffered an intervening fall from a horse for which she received medical treatment to her neck and shoulder;

• Dr. Beaudry felt that information would have been “an important piece of medical history that [he] would have liked to have known before treating her”; and most importantly

• Dr. Beaudry agreed it is “possible that an incident involving a horse trampling its rider could cause an injury similar to the ones that Ms. Pagan is complaining about and seeking treatment [for].”

Though he rendered a causation opinion on the basis of a differential diagnosis, Dr. Beaudry had not seen any of the medical records (1) from the emergency room visit following the 2008 MVA; (2) from Pagan’s regular physician for April 2008 to April 2009; or (3) from the Diagnostic Health report, which noted Pagan was trampled by a horse.

The Majority acknowledges that the differential diagnosis, as part of Pagan’s substantive burden of proof, requires Dr. Beaudry to exclude other plausible causes of the injuries for which Pagan seeks compensation “‘with reasonable certainty.’” See Transcon. Ins. Co. v. Crump, 330 S.W.3d 211, 218 (Tex. 2010) (quoting Merrell Dow Pharm., Inc. v.

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Farmers Texas County Mutual Insurance Company v. Ashlee Elizabeth Pagan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-texas-county-mutual-insurance-company-v-as-texapp-2014.