Glenda M. Hall, Mercedes Jackson, Curator of Glenda M. Hall v. James Brent Freese and Altruk Freight Systems, a Subsidiary of Roco International

735 F.2d 956, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 20702
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 9, 1984
Docket83-4254
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 735 F.2d 956 (Glenda M. Hall, Mercedes Jackson, Curator of Glenda M. Hall v. James Brent Freese and Altruk Freight Systems, a Subsidiary of Roco International) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenda M. Hall, Mercedes Jackson, Curator of Glenda M. Hall v. James Brent Freese and Altruk Freight Systems, a Subsidiary of Roco International, 735 F.2d 956, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 20702 (5th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

The appellant, Mercedes Jackson, argues on behalf of her daughter and ward, Glenda Hall, that Hall is entitled to a new trial of her personal injury suit because of the inadequacy of the verdict. She further argues that Hall is entitled to a new trial on the basis of prejudicial remarks made by the defense counsel. We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case for a new trial.

I.

In November 1979, Hall, a twenty-seven-year-old black woman, was injured in a traffic accident in north Mississippi. The van in which she was riding was struck by a truck driven by James Freese and owned by Altruk Freight Systems. Hall was thrown against the van’s windshield when the truck struck the van from the rear. She sustained a blow to her forehead and a severe cut. She was taken to a local hospital where the doctors determined that she had suffered a concussion. Hall stayed in the hospital for three days before returning to New Orleans, where she lived.

After returning to New Orleans, Hall consulted a neurologist because she was suffering severe headaches. Hall returned to work a few weeks after the accident, but she continued to seek treatment, visiting a number of different doctors from whom she requested prescription medicines to relieve her headaches. Over a period of several months, Hall accumulated approximately fifteen different prescriptions.

*958 Eventually, Hall’s doctors referred her to a psychiatrist because she had become psychotic. She had become unable to work or to care for herself and her thirteen-year-old daughter, and she often remained in her bedroom for days at a time, afraid to leave ic In short, by the time this case was tried, she was totally disabled by her mental illness.

In February 1981, Hall filed this diversity suit against Freese and Altruk, claiming that she had suffered damages of $2,500,-000 because of the accident. Hall claimed that she had become completely disabled by epilepsy and psychosis caused by damage to her brain sustained in the accident. In early 1983, just before the case was tried, Hall’s mother, Mercedes Jackson, was appointed Hall’s curator and was substituted for Hall as plaintiff.

Altruk 1 admitted that it was liable for Freese’s negligence, which caused the acei-dent, and for the damages Hall suffered as a result of the accident. Altruk conceded that Hall had sustained physical injuries which required her to be hospitalized and which caused her considerable pain. The main issue at trial was whether Hall’s psychosis and epilepsy were triggered by the accident.

At trial, Hall presented the testimony of seven expert witnesses, including the surgeon who treated her back and neck injuries; two neurologists and two psychiatrists, all of whom had treated Hall; a nurse, who testified about the cost of providing nursing care; and an economist who testified about the economic effects of Hall’s permanent disability. All of the medical experts except one psychiatrist testified by deposition.

Dr. Martin, a neurologist who examined Hall several times between February 1980 and May 1981, testified that she suffered from post-traumatic depression and neurosis. He stated that Hall’s injury was not physical or neurological, but emotional, and that Hall was not permanently disabled “from a neurological standpoint.” Martin referred Hall to a psychiatrist for treatment because she appeared to be “seriously depressed” and was “not responding well to anti-depressant medication.”

j)r Weisberg, another neurologist, statecj that jjall was “acutely psychotic” when fjrst examined her in January 1981, and was «not capable of independent living, ... [or] caring for herself ____” Hall constantly hallucinated and did not know what day or month it was when he examined her. In addition, Dr. Weisberg found that Hall was experiencing major psychomotor seizures approximately two times per week, and that these seizures could have resulted from the accident. Her psychosis, however, in his opinion, was “an unlikely result of [the] accident____” Although he stated that he could not rule out the blow to the head as the cause of Hall’s psychosis, Dr. Weisberg believed that there were “more likely explanations for the acute psychotic disorder, one being schizophrenia.” Durmg cross-examination, Dr. Weisberg testified that he could not say with reasonable medical certainty that Hall’s psychosis or hallucinations were proximately caused by the accident, but on redirect examination he said, “I believe it is more probable than *at her in3uries resulted from the acci" en '

Hall’s psychiatrist, Dr. Cohen, testified that Hall suffered from hallucinations, was severely depressed and had contemplated suicide. He stated, “My impression ... [was] that she was psychotic, that she was not functional, and that, as far as I could tell, the psychosis was triggered or precipitated by the accident of [19]79. At least I found no information that would give another explanation.” Dr. Cohen testified that Han was suffering from a multiple personality disorder and was completely disabled by this condition,

Dr. Cox, a psychiatrist who examined Hall in order to assess her competency to stand trial for criminal charges brought *959 against her in 1981, did believe that Hall’s psychosis was related to the accident: “My opinion, [is that] she has posttraumatic psy-chomotor epilepsy, and I think that she also has a psychosis, a psychotic disturbance, which is secondary to the chronic effect of the psychomotor epileptic disorder that she has.” Dr. Cox was the only medical expert who testified in person at trial. He disagreed with Dr. Cohen’s diagnosis that Hall had a multiple personality disorder and with Dr. Weisberg’s suggestion that Hall was schizophrenic, but he did testify that progressively worsening psychiatric symptoms such as those Hall exhibited had been scientifically linked to head injuries. He stated “with reasonable medical certainty” that Hall’s condition was a result of the November 1979 accident.

Mrs. Jackson, Hall’s mother, testified that she has assumed responsibility for the care of both Hall and her daughter. Hall frequently becomes hysterical and has nightmares about the accident. In addition, she experiences epileptic seizures. Hall often spends three or four days in a row in her bedroom, afraid to leave it. Mrs. Jackson is a nurse’s aide, and she must make sure that Hall takes the drugs prescribed for her.

It is clear from the evidence presented at trial that Hall is a severely disabled woman. She is unable to care for herself or her daughter and requires almost constant supervision. Expert testimony showed that her special damages, that is, lost earnings plus future medical expenses, exceed $500,-000.

Having been presented with the evidence summarized above, the jury returned a general verdict for Hall of $55,000. Hall moved for a new trial, arguing to the district court that such a low verdict in the face of the overwhelming evidence of Hall’s disability must have been the product of passion or prejudice. The district court denied the motion for a new trial, and Hall appealed.

II.

Hall makes to this court essentially the same argument she made to the district court in support of her motion for a new trial.

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735 F.2d 956, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 20702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenda-m-hall-mercedes-jackson-curator-of-glenda-m-hall-v-james-brent-ca5-1984.