Hurst v. Eaton

588 So. 2d 1130, 1991 WL 226419
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 18, 1991
DocketCA 89 2044
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 588 So. 2d 1130 (Hurst v. Eaton) 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
Hurst v. Eaton, 588 So. 2d 1130, 1991 WL 226419 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

588 So.2d 1130 (1991)

Joseph E. HURST
v.
Charles R. EATON, Estes Cadillac, Inc. State Farm Insurance.

No. CA 89 2044.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

October 18, 1991.

*1132 Paul Katz, Covington, for plaintiff-appellant.

Raymond A. Pelletri, New Orleans, for defendants-appellees.

Before EDWARDS, LANIER and GONZALES, JJ.

EDWARDS, Judge.

Plaintiff, Joseph E. Hurst, appeals the judgment pursuant to a jury verdict which awarded him $20,000.00 in damages for injuries resulting from an automobile accident, less a credit for amounts previously received in medical payments, plus interest and costs. He contends that the jury awarded inadequate special and general damages for his injuries and that his award should not have been subject to a credit for the medical payments which he received from the insurer of the vehicle in which he was riding at the time of the accident. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we amend and affirm the judgment.

FACTS AND MEDICAL TESTIMONY

Liability was not at issue in this trial, as the parties stipulated the events of the accident in question. The only issue before the jury was the existence and extent of damages arising from the accident, and the only defendant was State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company (State Farm), who was the insurer for both vehicles involved in the accident. Mr. Hurst was a guest passenger in an automobile driven by Tammy Parker on May 30, 1985, when the collision occurred. A vehicle driven by Charles R. Eaton executed a left turn from the right lane directly into the path of Ms. Parker's car. The two vehicles had been travelling north on a divided fourlane highway. After the accident, the plaintiff did not seek immediate medical attention, despite having struck the windshield with his head with sufficient force to crack the glass. He also testified that he had struck his shoulder on the "post." Mr. Hurst went home and sought emergency room treatment on the following day. He was referred to his treating physician for further treatment, whom he saw eleven days later.

From this point, plaintiff's course of medical treatment and the testimony thereon by the various experts who treated him become somewhat complex and detailed, the reasons for which are compounded by his medical history prior to the accident. At the time of the accident, Mr. Hurst had been a diabetic for over 17 years and had various problems associated with that condition. Additionally, because of prior accidents and a congenital condition, he had two separate cervical disc fusions. The defendant successfully contended at trial that the problems which plaintiff suffered subsequent to the accident were not caused by the accident itself, but were at least partially, if not completely, the result of plaintiff's pre-existing medical problems. A review of the medical testimony, in the order presented at trial, rather than a chronological overview, is helpful to understanding the jury's verdict.

Dr. Bruce S. Samuels, who was qualified by the court as an expert in internal medicine, testified first. He was consulted by Mr. Hurst's treating physician to manage plaintiff's medical problems, rather than his injuries, while he was hospitalized in November, 1985, nearly six months postaccident. Dr. Samuels stated that he found objective signs of muscle spasm in the patient's neck and lower back, that his blood pressure was not well controlled, and that there were eye ground changes consistent with elevated blood pressure. Mr. Hurst was at that time already taking Minipress, an anti-hypertensive medication. Dr. Samuels testified that the effect of physical trauma, pain, and emotional distress on hypertension usually is to elevate it, as well as to adversely affect the control of diabetes. He felt that the most probable explanation of plaintiff's diabetic and hypertension problems during this period was that they resulted from the automobile accident and trauma.

Dr. Samuels also explained some of the adverse effects of diabetes on the body. *1133 He stated that it affects how the white blood cells work, and consequently how one heals. It can damage nerves, the eyes and the kidneys. While he admitted that some of the mechanisms, particularly of eye damage, are not well understood, he also opined that "the stress of this patient's injury adversely affected his diabetic control which would definitely contribute to either the occurrence or the acceleration of diabetic retinopathy...." He defined diabetic retinopathy in layman's terms as a loss of vision or blurring, and explained that he did not treat this condition in patients, and therefore, did not question plaintiff extensively in this regard. On cross-examination, he admitted that he did not have any information or records of plaintiff's previous blood pressure and blood sugar levels prior to the accident, and therefore, could not say whether Mr. Hurst's elevated blood pressure was something new or something old.

Additionally, Dr Samuels diagnosed gastritis in Mr. Hurst, based on his vomiting blood shortly after his discharge from this first hospitalization November 24—December 5, 1985, which had resulted in his readmission on the day after his discharge, December 6, 1985. Dr. Samuels defined gastritis as a diffused irritation of the lining of the stomach that usually precedes ulcers and which sometimes bleeds; he opined that the gastritis was also attributable to the accident because physical pain, trauma, and emotional stress, which plaintiff claimed to be suffering as a result of the accident, are known causes of this condition. He also stated that gastritis would adversely affect diabetes, because the patient would be unable to eat if nauseated, and consequently, his blood sugar levels would be affected. Finally, he testified that Mr. Hurst also had a fungus infection in his esophagus, which can occur from uncontrolled or poorly controlled diabetes. He and his partner, a Dr. Huddleston, disagreed on whether the GI bleeding was caused by the gastritis or the esophageal infection. Dr. Samuels' conclusion was that both hospitalizations in November and December of 1985 were, if not directly, at least indirectly attributable to the accident.

Dr. David Jarrott, who was plaintiff's treating neurosurgeon, testified next and was accepted as an expert in the field of neurosurgery. He stated that he had first seen Mr. Hurst after a prior accident in September, 1979, and had performed a cervical disc fusion at the C6-C7 level in 1980 as a result of that earlier injury. The plaintiff had a satisfactory recovery from the 1980 fusion. Mr. Hurst also has a congenital fusion, one present from birth, at the C5-6 level. Dr. Jarrott saw the plaintiff eleven days after this accident, and his initial impression at that time was cervical sprain. There were no X-rays taken at that visit. He did not think surgery was appropriate, but because of Mr. Hurst's continued complaints of neck, shoulder, right arm and head pain, he admitted plaintiff to the hospital in November, 1985, to run tests. He related the patient's continued symptoms to a disc abnormality at the C7-T1 level, immediately below the 1980 fusion at C6-C7, based on an EMG in November, 1988, which documented "evidence of nerve damage of the type that would be related to pressure on the nerve in the cervical spine or in the neck." Dr. Jarrott thought this was related to the development of a calcium deposit or spur on the edge of the disc in question, which was pressing upon nerves. He noted that Mr. Hurst did not have this problem prior to the May, 1985 accident.

Dr.

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588 So. 2d 1130, 1991 WL 226419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurst-v-eaton-lactapp-1991.