Fruge v. Thornhill

560 So. 2d 909, 1990 La. App. LEXIS 920, 1990 WL 47708
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1990
DocketNo. 89 CA 0308
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 560 So. 2d 909 (Fruge v. Thornhill) 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
Fruge v. Thornhill, 560 So. 2d 909, 1990 La. App. LEXIS 920, 1990 WL 47708 (La. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

SHORTESS, Judge.

Evelyn Lea Fruge (plaintiff) was injured in an automobile collision that occurred on the afternoon of September 1, 1984, in the parking lot of a Burger King restaurant located in the 5300 block of Plank Road in Baton Rouge. She entered the parking lot in her Toyota automobile and was struck broadside by a pickup truck, leased by Gulf States Utilities (GSU) and driven by a GSU employee, David Hebert Thornhill. Thorn-hill was backing out of a parking space when the rear bumper and trailer hitch on the truck struck the right front door and fender of plaintiffs automobile.

Plaintiff sued Thornhill and GSU (defendants). At the conclusion of the trial, the jury returned a verdict finding defendants 95% at fault and plaintiff 5% at fault, but finding plaintiffs fault did not “proximately cause” the accident. The jury’s itemized award for damages included, inter alia: past loss of income, $5,625.00; past and future pain and suffering, $18,000.00; past and future mental anguish and emotional distress, $19,000.00; and disability, $21,-000.00. Plaintiff appeals these awards, assigning error as follows:

The general damage award by the jury was inadequate and should be raised to the minimum within the jury’s discretion.
The trial court erred in allowing over objection irrelevant and immaterial testimony regarding the collateral source of employee earned fringe benefit sick leave.
The jury’s verdict for past lost earnings was clearly erroneous.

The latter two assignments of error appear to be alternative arguments and will be addressed as one issue.

PAST LOSS OF INCOME

Plaintiff asserts that due to injuries from the accident she missed 578 hours from her employment as a “security clerk” in the hospital of the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola. Plaintiffs supervisor, Capt. Nolan Lachney, testified that plaintiff used annual leave, compensatory leave and sick leave during the period between the September 1984 accident and the January 1988 date of plaintiffs return to work following surgery. Lachney testified that employees were not allowed to deplete the entirety of accrued sick time and that therefore he approved plaintiffs requests to use annual or compensatory leave for medical purposes. Lachney identified copies of plaintiffs leave records totalling 578 hours.1

Defendants assert that plaintiff has failed to show that these absences were attributable to her injuries and has failed to show valuation of the expenditure of annual, compensatory and sick leave. Defendants cross-examined Lachney with regard to whether an employee is paid for accumulated leave. Plaintiff objected to the line of questioning on the grounds of [911]*911relevance, asserting that accrued leave time is a collateral source from which defendants may not derive a reduction of liability. The trial court overruled the objection: “I am not acquainted with any law that says sick leave is compensable. I know some employers will let you accumulate sick leave and when you leave, you get paid for your sick leave. I would go ahead and overrule the objection.”

The trial court’s instructions to the jury following the close of the evidence were, in part, as follows:

In [regard] to that past loss of income, the law provides that if a person uses their annual leave or sick time from their employment because of an accident, then they are to be compensated for use of their annual leave and/or sick time that they have used. You will have to determine whether she has had past loss of income.

The record shows that plaintiff was forced to use annual, compensatory, and sick leave. She was paid for those days missed, but she incurred a diminution of her accrued leave. Defendants may not benefit from this collateral source. Reeves v. Gulf States Utilities Co., 327 So.2d 671, 676 (La.App. 1st Cir.), writs denied, 330 So.2d 309, 311 (1976); Clement v. State, 528 So.2d 176, 184 n. 1 (La.App. 1st Cir.1988). The measure of the value of the leave is plaintiff’s regular rate of pay. See Id.

Lachney testified plaintiff was a good employee who was present for work “except for the times she [had] doctor appointments.” Lachney was plaintiff’s supervisor until 1986, but even thereafter he saw plaintiff on a daily basis at work. After plaintiff returned to work in January of 1988, until the October 1988 trial, she had not missed one day of work. We believe the record as a whole supports the conclusion that plaintiff missed 578 hours from work as a result of this accident and that she should be compensated at the regular hourly wage applicable. The jury erred in not awarding the sum of $8,488.03.

GENERAL DAMAGES

Plaintiff asserts that the jury’s award of general damages is so inadequate as to constitute clear error and an abuse of its discretion, and asks that we raise the award to the minimum within the jury’s discretion. Coco v. Winston, 341 So.2d 332 (La.1976); Reck v. Stevens, 373 So.2d 498 (La.1979).

Plaintiff was 26 years old and recently married (with two stepsons) at the time of the accident (September 1, 1984). She had not had any previous problems with either her neck or her hand. She experienced pain immediately after the accident and on the following morning awoke unable to turn her head. She initially sought medical attention at the emergency room of the Baton Rouge General Hospital, where x-rays were taken of her neck, pain medication was prescribed, and she was advised to consult a specialist if the problem persisted. With respect to her hand injury, plaintiff was told that it was “just a bruise.”

Two days later, September 4, 1984, plaintiff consulted Dr. William F. Hagemann, an orthopedic surgeon about her neck problem. Dr. Hagemann found plaintiff's range of motion to be 50% normal, advised her not to return to work at that time, and prescribed a cervical collar. Three weeks after this visit plaintiff returned to Hagem-ann and complained of pain in her wrist. The bruise that appeared immediately after the accident had disappeared, but plaintiff testified that the pain had increased. Ha-gemann took x-rays of the wrist, which were normal. He splinted plaintiff’s wrist and told her she could return to work the following day, October 10, 1984. On November 8, 1984, Hagemann injected plaintiff’s wrist with cortisone. At this time she still exhibited tenderness in her neck, but no objective symptoms. Hagemann believed that plaintiff’s neck injury was muscular and that the wrist injury was a sprain. He prescribed traction with a device to be used at home, as well as certain exercises for her neck. Hagemann last saw plaintiff on December 3, 1984. Her wrist had improved from the cortisone. [912]*912She still complained of some neck pain. He told her to continue the exercises and return to see him if the symptoms did not resolve.

Plaintiff did not return to Dr. Hagem-ann. She consulted Dr. Kenneth A. Adatto approximately three months later, in March of 1985. Upon examination Adatto found muscle spasm over the cervical spine and tenderness in the area of the hamate bone of her wrist. After this examination, Adat-to believed plaintiff suffered from “chronic cervical syndrome which just needed further conservative care” and a possible fracture of a small bone in her wrist. Plaintiff did not see Dr. Adatto again until April 10, 1987.

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Related

Spangler v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
673 So. 2d 676 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1996)
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594 So. 2d 464 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1991)
Higley v. Kramer
581 So. 2d 273 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1991)
Fruge v. Thornhill
567 So. 2d 618 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
560 So. 2d 909, 1990 La. App. LEXIS 920, 1990 WL 47708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fruge-v-thornhill-lactapp-1990.