Fred Starliper v. Adrienne Johnson

CourtIntermediate Court of Appeals of West Virginia
DecidedJune 11, 2025
Docket24-ica-263
StatusPublished

This text of Fred Starliper v. Adrienne Johnson (Fred Starliper v. Adrienne Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Intermediate Court of Appeals of West Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fred Starliper v. Adrienne Johnson, (W. Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA FILED Spring 2025 Term June 11, 2025 ASHLEY N. DEEM, CHIEF DEPUTY CLERK _____________________ INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA No. 24-ICA-263 _____________________

FRED STARLIPER, Defendant Below, Petitioner,

v.

ADRIENNE JOHNSON, Plaintiff Below, Respondent.

___________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jefferson County Honorable Bridget Cohee, Judge Civil Action No. CC-19-2021-C-20

AFFIRMED, in part, and REVERSED, in part, and REMANDED _________________________________________________________

Submitted: April 30, 2025 Filed: June 11, 2025

David A. Mohler, Esq. William C. Brewer, Esq. Joshua A. Lanham, Esq. Ramsey K. Jorgensen, Esq. Bowles Rice LLP William C. Brewer & Associates, PLLC Charleston, West Virginia Morgantown, West Virginia Counsel for Petitioner Counsel for Respondent

JUDGE WHITE delivered the Opinion of the Court. WHITE, JUDGE:

This case arises from a 2019 motor vehicle accident involving Fred Starliper

and Adrienne Johnson. Mr. Starliper appeals the circuit court’s May 27, 2024, order

denying his motion for judgment as a matter of law or, alternatively, a new trial following

a jury trial that resulted in a judgment against him for $109,476.12. Mr. Starliper does not

challenge the jury’s finding that he was solely at fault for causing the accident but contests

the damages awarded. He also argues that Ms. Johnson should not have been allowed to

testify regarding her belief that she might be unable to work for several weeks if she had

carpal tunnel release surgery and her concern that she might lose her job during that period

of disability. Based upon our review of the record and applicable law, we affirm in part,

and reverse in part, the circuit court’s order and remand for further proceedings consistent

with this opinion.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On March 2, 2019, while she was at a stop sign waiting to merge onto Route

9 near Ranson, West Virginia, a vehicle driven by Mr. Starliper struck Ms. Johnson’s rental

car. Ms. Johnson reported immediate pain and was taken by ambulance to Jefferson

Medical Center. At the time, she complained of neck pain and headaches.1 During her stay

1 According to Ms. Johnson, her post-accident neck pain was “overwhelming” and “all consuming.” She testified at the trial of this matter that when the ambulance personnel asked her to rate her pain on a scale of ten, she said “eleven.”

1 in the emergency room, Ms. Johnson did not complain of any problems with her wrists or

fingers. She was discharged the same day as her accident with prescriptions for pain

relievers and a muscle relaxer.

Over the next several weeks, Ms. Johnson continued to suffer from neck pain

and stiffness, although she reported that her headaches gradually subsided. According to

Ms. Johnson, within three weeks of her accident, after returning to work, she began to

experience coldness, numbness, and tingling in her wrist and fingers, primarily on the right

side. Because she had never experienced these symptoms before, and because she was still

having neck pain, she made an appointment with Dr. Sarah Levy, M.D., a general

practitioner with the Allegheny Health Network, who saw her on May 22, 2019. Ms.

Johnson told Dr. Levy of her neck pain and her concern that she had reinjured her neck,

which she had previously injured in a 1986 motor vehicle accident.2 Ms. Johnson also

testified that she informed Dr. Levy of the problems with her wrists and fingers, but the

office notes for this visit do not mention these issues. Dr. Levy referred her to physical

therapy for treatment of her reported injuries.

2 In 1986, Ms. Johnson was involved in an unrelated motor vehicle accident where she was rear-ended and suffered injuries to her neck and hips. As a result of the injuries she sustained in that accident, she underwent physical therapy, and according to her, had completely recovered by 1990 and was not in any pain at the time of the accident involved in this case, almost thirty years later.

2 Between the time she saw Dr. Levy and the time her physical therapy started,

Ms. Johnson realized that she could not move her arm properly while trying to swim. She

testified that her first round of physical therapy was mainly related to moving her arm.

After she completed this round of physical therapy, the COVID-19 pandemic occurred, and

Ms. Johnson stopped receiving medical care. During this time, she used CBD oils, a neck

massager device, copper bracelets, and various other home remedies to relieve her pain and

discomfort.

In January of 2021, she felt a tearing sensation in her shoulder while lifting

a bag of trash. According to Ms. Johnson, this incident aggravated the pain she had been

having in her right shoulder since the 2019 accident. She could not schedule a follow-up

appointment with Dr. Levy until March of 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, at which

point she received a second referral for physical therapy. The notes for this office visit

indicate that Ms. Johnson complained of bilateral wrist pain, in addition to her neck and

shoulder pain. Dr. Levy diagnosed her with chronic right shoulder pain, acute right wrist

pain, and bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. These are the first medical records which

mention complaints of wrist pain.

Ms. Johnson requested an orthopedic referral in November of 2021 and saw

Dr. Steven Regal, M.D., an orthopedic surgeon specializing in hand and wrist problems, in

3 December of 2021.3 During that appointment, Dr. Regal diagnosed Ms. Johnson with

chronic right shoulder pain, bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome, acute pain of the right wrist,

hand pain, pain of the upper extremity, cervical radiculopathy, and right carpal tunnel

syndrome. He ordered a nerve conduction study, which confirmed the diagnosis of right

carpal tunnel syndrome. He also referred her to a spine specialist to evaluate her continued

neck and shoulder pain and cervical radiculopathy.

On January 7, 2022, Ms. Johnson had an office visit with Dr. Ryan Sauber,

M.D., the spine specialist, who diagnosed her with cervical spondylosis and chronic neck

pain. He recommended conservative treatment with medical management of her

symptoms, activity modification avoidance, physical therapy, and topical modalities. He

referred her to a third round of physical therapy, and his office notes indicate that if this

conservative treatment did not provide relief, that she could return to see him and that he

would then consider referring her for an MRI scan. He also recommended carpal tunnel

release surgery for her hand and wrist problems.

In February of 2022, Ms. Johnson again saw Dr. Regal who provided

injections for her carpal tunnel syndrome and recommended a wrist brace. In March of

2022, Ms. Johnson returned to Dr. Regal and obtained another referral for physical therapy.

3 Ms. Johnson testified that when she saw Dr. Regal she was suffering from “the same pain… that I had from the time of the accident, from my neck, my arm .., my shoulder and down into my hand.”

4 Ms. Johnson returned to Dr. Regal for a fourth visit in February of 2023 and

he administered additional injections for carpal tunnel syndrome and pain at the base of

her thumbs. At the time, she did not want release surgery for her carpal tunnel syndrome

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Fred Starliper v. Adrienne Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fred-starliper-v-adrienne-johnson-wvactapp-2025.