Jermaine Anthony Vallier Jr. v. Carolyn M. Holloway

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 19, 2025
Docket09-23-00397-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jermaine Anthony Vallier Jr. v. Carolyn M. Holloway (Jermaine Anthony Vallier Jr. v. Carolyn M. Holloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jermaine Anthony Vallier Jr. v. Carolyn M. Holloway, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-23-00397-CV __________________

JERMAINE ANTHONY VALLIER JR., Appellant

V.

CAROLYN M. HOLLOWAY, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 172nd District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. E-206651 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this personal injury suit, Appellant Jermaine Anthony Vallier Jr.

(Appellant, Vallier, or Defendant) appeals from a judgment in favor of Appellee

Carolyn M. Holloway (Appellee, Holloway, or Plaintiff). In three issues, Vallier

challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury’s award of

$96,250 for physical pain and mental anguish in the future and the award of $96,250

for future physical impairment. We sustain Appellant’s issues in part, affirm the

judgment in part, and reverse and render in part.

1 Background and Evidence at Trial Pertinent to this Appeal1

The Accident

Holloway filed suit against Vallier, alleging that on January 9, 2020, Vallier

failed to control his speed, failed to yield the right of way, ran a stop sign, and struck

the vehicle Holloway was driving. According to the petition, Holloway sustained

bodily injuries requiring medical care and treatment, and her damages and personal

injuries were proximately caused by Vallier’s negligence. The case was tried before

a jury.

Testimony of Jennifer LaBorde

Jennifer LaBorde testified that she has been a family nurse practitioner since

2012, is board-certified in family practice, received a Bachelor of Science in

Nursing, as well as a Master of Science in Nursing, and she has worked in pain

management for the past nine or ten years. LaBorde works for Lone Star Pain Clinic,

operating formerly as Dickerson Pain Clinic, under her supervising physician, Dr.

Karen Dickerson. According to LaBorde, she works different hours from Dr.

Dickerson, and LaBorde has never watched Dr. Dickerson physically examine

someone but instead reads her charts. LaBorde explained that as a nurse practitioner

at a pain management clinic, she assesses, diagnoses, and treats patients. As for

In this memorandum opinion, we only discuss background facts and 1

evidence pertinent to the issues on appeal. 2 LaBorde’s qualifications, she testified that she has not been to medical school, and

she is not a doctor. LaBorde explained that she is allowed to prescribe medicine

under her supervising physician, she is allowed to order surgical consultations and

recommend injections, but as a nurse, she is not allowed to perform spinal injections

or surgeries. She testified that she is board certified in family practice and that she

has treated people long-term who had injections for many years.

According to LaBorde, when a patient comes into the clinic, LaBorde obtains

the patient’s history, learns where they are hurting and the type of pain, and then

determines appropriate diagnostic testing necessary for diagnosing the problem such

as X-rays, MRIs, and CAT scans. LaBorde explained that patients at the clinic are

often “treat[ed] with anti-inflammatory, muscle relaxers[]” depending on the

severity of pain.

LaBorde testified that Holloway was a patient of the clinic and that LaBorde

was not the only nurse practitioner that treated Holloway at the clinic. LaBorde

recalled that, according to the clinic’s records, twenty-one-year-old Holloway

delivered her baby on May 30, 2020, and first visited the clinic on June 1, 2020, and

Dr. Dickerson was the first to examine Holloway. Holloway returned to the clinic

on June 4, 2020, and was not evaluated by Dr. Dickerson or LaBorde, but she was

evaluated by a different family nurse practitioner. LaBorde agreed that Holloway

was not seen at the clinic again until October of 2022. LaBorde testified that although

3 she had not seen any medical records regarding what was going on with Holloway

during those two-and-a-half years, LaBorde believed that breastfeeding was a

reasonable explanation for a patient not getting steroid injections and other

medications from a pain clinic, and also a mother would need help taking care of a

child after the mother received a steroid injection because the mother’s activities

would be limited. According to LaBorde, she saw Holloway in October of 2022 and

an MRI was ordered based on Holloway’s complaints of “low back pain that was

radiating into the left hip and down the leg with some numbness and tingling,” neck

pain, and headaches. LaBorde stated Holloway waited to get an MRI evaluation

because at the time of the automobile accident with Vallier she was pregnant, and it

would make sense to wait until after the baby was born to have testing done because

while pregnant an MRI evaluation would be prohibited due to risk of radiation to the

fetus.

LaBorde testified that the MRI showed Holloway suffered from four herniated

discs. LaBorde testified that there is really no reason for someone in their early

twenties to have disc herniations and that she saw no signs of aging or arthritic

changes like stenosis in Holloway’s MRI or any evidence of degeneration on the

radiologist’s report. When asked how LaBorde, with her knowledge as a nurse

practitioner dealing with spinal injuries, could explain four herniated discs in a

twenty-one-year-old without major trauma, defense counsel objected on the basis

4 that LaBorde “has not been qualified to testify on the issue of causation[,]” and the

trial court overruled the objection. LaBorde answered “[t]here is really no reason

why she would have dis[c] herniations at 20—early 20s.” LaBorde testified that Dr.

Dickerson read the MRI and recommended injections that Dr. Dickerson

administered to Holloway in November and December of 2022. According to

LaBorde, she last examined Holloway more than six months before trial, and

LaBorde agreed that at that time Holloway’s examination was “100 percent

normal[.]” Although LaBorde told Holloway to come back if needed, she never

returned to the clinic or called to make another appointment.

Holloway’s Testimony

Holloway testified that immediately following the automobile accident with

Vallier she was in pain and wondered whether her baby was okay. An ambulance

was called to the scene, but Holloway was not bleeding and refused to be transported

to the hospital by ambulance. According to Holloway, later that day she went to the

hospital and a triage nurse attended to her, but after waiting a few hours in the

emergency room lobby, she went home. The next day she returned to the hospital

complaining of pain in her lower stomach, left side, lower back, and neck. The

hospital performed X-rays and an ultrasound that showed no acute abnormality with

her pregnancy, and she was released after a couple of hours. Holloway gave birth to

her baby with no complications, and then sought treatment at Dickerson Pain Clinic

5 for pain in her left side, neck, shoulder, and lower back, and for tingling in her hands.

Holloway recalled that on the initial visit she was examined by Dr. Dickerson and

afterwards she saw LaBorde and other nurse practitioners at the clinic. According to

Holloway, LaBorde referred Holloway for an MRI and therapy, and she received

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