Johnson v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.

740 So. 2d 720, 98 La.App. 4 Cir. 2271, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 1990, 1999 WL 410226
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 9, 1999
DocketNo. 98-CA-2271
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 740 So. 2d 720 (Johnson v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.) 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
Johnson v. Louisiana Power & Light Co., 740 So. 2d 720, 98 La.App. 4 Cir. 2271, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 1990, 1999 WL 410226 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

I,WALTZER, Judge.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE

Entergy Louisiana, Inc. and Entergy New Orleans, Inc., formerly known as Louisiana Power & Light Company and New Orleans Public Service, Inc., appeal a judgment of the Civil District Court for the Parish of Orleans rendered on 30 April 1998. The judgment, rendered following a bench trial, awarded damages to Milton Johnson, Jr., for damages sustained as a result of defendants’ negligence. Damages included $150,000 general damages, $50,000 lost past and future earnings, and $12,574.94 medical expenses. We affirm.

STATEMENT OF FACTS

The record shows that on 13 February 1995, plaintiff was hunting in a marsh, contacted an unmarked fallen power line under the defendant’s control, and suffered electrocution. The evidence is uncontro-verted that plaintiff did not see the lines before the barrel of his gun made contact.

Plaintiff testified that a pre-existing back injury had resolved and was asymptomatic prior to the electrocution. Since the age of sixteen, he has worked as a roofer, hammering shingles, laying roofing materials, climbing ladders and | supervising other workers. Prior to the incident, he typically worked an eight to ten hour day.

According to the plaintiff, the electrical injury to his feet scabbed over in about a year, leaving him with no feeling, beyond pressure, in his feet, and with shooting pain around and above his knees. He also complains of shortness of breath. He testified that the medication prescribed by his doctors made him dizzy, weak, irritable and nauseous, and for that reason he now lives in pain. He tires easily, and is able to work as a self-employed roofer for no more than 5 hours a day, including transit time. He complains of personality change and irritability that affects his relationship with his fiancée and with his son. He can no longer roller skate, run and play football and other sports with his son as he used to; he cannot work in his yard or hunt alone. On cross-examination, he testified to weakness in both hands, shooting pain in his right hand and electrical burns on and numbness in his left hand. He is reluctant to climb up and work on roofs because the numbness in his feet causes him to trip and sometimes to stumble and fall.

Plaintiff testified that he was examined by Dr. Amparo Gutierrez of the LSU Medical Center. Dr. Gutierrez told him the tests she performed indicated nothing wrong with his nerves. Her examination revealed a condition similar to carpal tunnel syndrome in his right hand. She told him the problem could be somewhere else in his body that was not being tested.

He testified that he saw Dr. Jeanette M. Lopez, but that although she performed several tests, she did not perform a pinprick test:

Q: You told me she did the pinprick test on you?
A: No. She did several other types of tests.... The physician, as far as checking the strength, the pinprick she had me get up and walk and test my balance, the | ^reflexes and stuff like that and the strength in my hands and arms and legs and knees.

The parties stipulated that plaintiffs testimony would be corroborated by William J. Smith.

Dr. Lopez, an expert in adult neurology, testified that she saw plaintiff when she was employed by NeuroMedical Center in Hammond, Louisiana. She saw him on 24 March 1995, about forty days after the injury, and described him as a non-smoker, non-drinker with no significant past medical history other than the resolved back injury.

[723]*723Dr. Lopez described plaintiffs direct contact injury as having entered his body through his left arm, traveling down through his body, and out through his feet. According to the history he gave Dr. Lopez, and which she testified was consistent with the electrocution injury, he had little or no use of his left arm the first week following the incident. His teeth were extremely sore, which Dr. Lopez related to the electrical injury to the fifth cranial nerve, which affects the teeth and jaws. He suffered significant pain in the left arm, shoulder and hand, could not feel his feet, and had shooting pains up the back of his legs, more severe on the left side. She noted two “blow holes” the size of a fifty-cent piece on either side of his large toes, which formed the exit for the electrical current. He told Dr. Lopez that painful sensation was gradually returning to his feet, but he still experienced numbness and wore shoes at all times to protect his feet. She found the numbness and the shooting leg pains to be consistent with the electrical injury.

Dr. Lopez performed a pinprick test that objectively revealed lack of sensation below the ankles. He was unable to walk on his toes because of the exit wounds. Everything plaintiff told her was consistent with the electrical injury he|4suffered. She also noted a weakness in C8-T1 that she attributed to an underlying mild, early neck problem unrelated to the injury.

Dr. Lopez prescribed Dilantinor plaintiffs pain, but noted its side effects included ataxia, destruction of balance, gum abnormalities and skin sloughing.

Dr. Lopez saw plaintiff again on 24 March and on 18 April, when he told her the medication was not helping. Her examination found him to be improving, although his pain was still sufficiently severe that she discussed using Tegretol. Since its side effects were similar to Dilantin’s, and involved even greater likelihood of loss of balance, he told her he would rather not use the medication, whereupon she prescribed a Motrin/Novocaine gel to be applied topically. She also prescribed a Be-nadryl spray to alleviate itching of his lower limbs. On 18 May she saw plaintiff, who presented with similar complaints. She noted a new tenderness between the first and second toes and consulted with her colleague, Dr. Nyboer, who suggested there might be a focal infection and suggested an orthopedic evaluation. Dr. Lopez prescribed Percocet for plaintiffs pain.

When Dr. Lopez next saw plaintiff on 22 November, his left leg had been numb for two weeks and he complained of radiational pain from the hip or knee up to the back. Her examination revealed a likely herniated disc in the low back and she recommended a low back brace and prescribed Flexeril, muscle relaxants day and night and pain medication. She felt the abnormal sensations in the left foot were probably related to electrocution on top of the old herniated disc. She opined that the electrocution made the old back injury worse.

Two weeks prior to trial she examined plaintiff for a new problem, right hand pain. She noted pain, limited grip and extension of his fingers, but no signs of carpal tunnel syndrome.

| 5Pr. Lopez was asked to review the report of plaintiffs examination by Dr. Gutierrez, an LSU neurologist. According to Dr. Gutierrez’ report, cranial nerves were normal, all four extremities were full strength with no evidence of muscle damage. He had normal reflexes, coordination, and walking; however, the report shows no sensation from below the knees to the toes as well as in his fingertips. Dr. Gutierrez characterized the pinprick test she administered as “subjective”; however, Dr. Lopez opined that it was objective in the sense that it is extremely difficult to deny pain successfully, even if the only indication is by jumping or moving, if pain is felt with the pinprick. According to the report, Dr. Gutierrez checked only the nerves controlling plaintiffs right side, and did not check the nerves that control the [724]

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740 So. 2d 720, 98 La.App. 4 Cir. 2271, 1999 La. App. LEXIS 1990, 1999 WL 410226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-louisiana-power-light-co-lactapp-1999.