Felicia Clement v. Scott A. Citron

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 19, 2013
DocketCA-0013-0063
StatusUnknown

This text of Felicia Clement v. Scott A. Citron (Felicia Clement v. Scott A. Citron) 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
Felicia Clement v. Scott A. Citron, (La. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

13-63

FELICIA CLEMENT

VERSUS

SCOTT A. CITRON, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FIFTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF LAFAYETTE, NO. 2010-2918 HONORABLE KRISTIAN DENNIS EARLES, DISTRICT JUDGE

ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Shannon J. Gremillion and Phyllis M. Keaty, Judges.

AFFIRMED AS AMENDED.

Leon Anthony Crist Law Offices of Robert D. Ford 111 Veterans Boulevard – Suite 1670 Metairie, LA 70005 Telephone: (504) 461-4440 COUNSEL FOR: Defendants/Appellees - The Hanover Insurance Company, Scott A. Citron, and Hub City Ford, Inc.

James Paul Lambert P. O. Box 53083 Lafayette, LA 70505-3083 Telephone: (337) 261-3737 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellant - Felicia Clement Thomas M. Daigle 711 Johnston Street Lafayette, LA 70501 Telephone: (337) 234-4049 COUNSEL FOR: Plaintiff/Appellant - Felicia Clement THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

The plaintiff, Felicia Clement, appeals a jury verdict and a judgment

pursuant to that verdict awarding her inconsistent damages arising from a rear-end

collision with the defendant, Scott Citron. For the following reasons, we amend

and affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I.

ISSUE

We must decide whether the jury awarded damages so inconsistent as

to constitute an abuse of discretion necessitating a de novo review.

II.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On June 30, 2009, Ms. Clement, a thirty-one-year-old bank teller, who

worked as a night janitor to support herself and her teenaged son, was stopped in

traffic when her 1997 Mitsubishi was hit from behind by Mr. Citron. Ms.

Clement’s vehicle was knocked into the vehicle stopped in front of her and thus

was impacted twice, first from the back and then from the front. Ms. Clement’s

vehicle was totaled.

Ms. Clement hit her face on the steering wheel and sustained

abrasions and bruises to her left eye, contusions of the head and left shoulder,

contusions and swelling of the left knee, cervical injury, and a herniated lumbar

disk at L4-5.

Six months after the accident, radiating pain in her back and legs,

medically termed radiculopathy, caused Ms. Clement to leave her night job as a part-time janitor, where she had earned $4,000.00 a year in extra income. Because

months of physical therapy and pain medication brought only intermittent relief,

Ms. Clement’s orthopedist began discussing epidural steroid injections and surgery

in February 2010. Ms. Clement was still undergoing twice-weekly physical

therapy sessions in March 2010.

While riding as a back-seat passenger on March 14, 2010, Ms.

Clement was in a second automobile accident, wherein she sustained another

cervical injury, but alleged no worsening of the lumbar injury. This was confirmed

by both of her physicians and the physical therapy reports.

Ms. Clement sued Mr. Citron, his employer, Hub City Ford, Inc., and

their liability insurer, The Hanover Insurance Company (collectively referred to as

“the defendant”). She settled a separate claim with the driver from the March 2010

accident, and very little is known about that incident, except for the emergency

room visit showing a “low” impact to the front of the car.

When steroid injections did not provide any meaningful relief, Ms.

Clement left her job at the bank in May of 2011 and underwent an instrumented

decompression and fusion for the lumbar disc herniation at L4-5. While the

surgery was successful for the most part, at the time of trial a year later in May

2012, Ms. Clement was still under her physician’s care, undergoing physical

therapy for a flare-up of lumbar pain. Though she was instructed not to return to

the manual labor of janitorial work, her release to return to work in the banking

field was anticipated within a few weeks, when the current round of physical

therapy was completed. Ms. Clement’s former bank supervisor testified that she

would rehire Ms. Clement when something came available. Ms. Clement, who had

2 been promoted to teller supervisor with a salary of $32,000.00, would have to start

over, however, as a teller, which paid $20,000.00 per year.

Following trial, the jury awarded Ms. Clement all past lost wages

from both jobs, $41,000.00. It awarded $100,000.00 in past medical expenses,

$100,000.00 in future medical expenses, $20,000.00 for future lost earnings,

$150,000.00 for pain and suffering, and zero for loss of enjoyment of life.

Ms. Clement’s appeal asserts errors against the jury for inconsistent

damage awards, failure to award all past medical expenses, inadequate awards for

future medical costs and future earning capacity, and failure to award any amount

for loss of enjoyment of life. She also asserts errors against the trial judge for

failures to direct the verdict, give additional jury charges, and provide a more

specific jury verdict form.

III.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

An appellate court may not set aside a trial court’s findings of fact in

absence of manifest error or unless it is clearly wrong. Stobart v. State, Through

DOTD, 617 So.2d 880 (La.1993). Errors of law are reviewed de novo. Land v.

Vidrine, 10-1342 (La. 3/15/11), 62 So.3d 36.

IV.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Inconsistent Awards

The jury attributed all of Ms. Clement’s past lost wages to the rear-

end collision by Mr. Citron on June 30, 2009, by awarding the $41,000.00 she

requested. This amount included $32,000.00 for the one year of work lost by Ms.

3 Clement as a bank teller supervisor from the time of surgery (May 2011) to the

time of trial (May 2012); and it included $9,000.00 for the two and one quarter

years of lost wages as a part-time janitor, from her resignation in January 2010 to

trial in May 2012 ($4,000.00/yr. x 2¼). Accordingly, the jury found Mr. Citron

liable for one hundred percent (100%) of Ms. Clement’s lost wages.

The jury, however, declined to make an award that would pay for the

medical treatment and expenses Ms. Clement incurred during that same time

frame. Where Ms. Clement proved and documented $174,000.00 in undisputed

medical expenses at the time of trial, the jury awarded only $100,000.00.

Likewise, the jury awarded only $100,000.00 in future medical expenses, though

the calculated cost of her surgeon’s medical plan was almost four times that

amount. Finally, the jury made no award for loss of enjoyment of life, though the

evidence indicated otherwise.

The manifest error standard of review provides that a jury’s verdict

cannot be reversed unless the court, after reviewing the record in its entirety, finds

there to be no reasonable factual basis for the jury’s findings and determines them

to be manifestly erroneous or clearly wrong. Stobart, 617 So.2d 880. Where,

however, legal error interdicts the fact-finding process, the manifest error standard

no longer applies. Ferrell v. Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., 94-1252 (La. 2/20/95), 650

So.2d 742. In such instances, if the record is complete, the appellate court is

charged to make its own independent de novo review of the record. Id.

The supreme court has recognized that inconsistent jury verdicts may,

in certain circumstances, constitute such legal error, requiring the appellate court to

conduct a de novo review. See Green v. K-Mart Corp., 03-2495 (La. 5/25/04), 874

So.2d 838.

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