Jones v. LSU/EA CONWAY MEDICAL CENTER

46 So. 3d 205, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1137, 2010 WL 3155524
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 11, 2010
Docket45,410-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 So. 3d 205 (Jones v. LSU/EA CONWAY MEDICAL CENTER) 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
Jones v. LSU/EA CONWAY MEDICAL CENTER, 46 So. 3d 205, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1137, 2010 WL 3155524 (La. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

MOORE, J.

| ¶Rodney B. Jones appeals the denial of his motion for new trial arising from the dismissal of his medical malpractice action for failure to comply with discovery. We affirm.

*208 Facts

Jones, at times pertinent to this action, was an inmate at the Dixon Correctional Center (“DCC”) in Jackson, Louisiana. 1 On October 1, 2007, he filed a medical malpractice lawsuit against LSU/E.A. Conway Medical Center, the Louisiana DPSC, Dr. John Doe, an employee of the orthopedic staff at E.A. Conway and Dr. Pam Hearn, the medical director at David Wade Correctional Center (“DWCC”). He subsequently amended his petition to name Dr. George Belchic as the unidentified “Dr. John Doe” in the original petition. Jones alleged that the defendants deliberately failed to provide him with the medical care he needs and incorrectly treated him for injuries to his left elbow. Jones appears pro se and in forma pauperis.

Jones alleged that on March 25, 2006, he hyperextended his elbow and injured it on a cement drain. He believed that he had been deprived of medical treatment because the attending orthopedist did not find anything wrong with his elbow and refused to perform arthroscopic surgery or request an MRI. 2

|2Jones initially filed a request for an administrative remedy. This was denied on grounds that Jones had been examined numerous times at DWCC; he had received physical therapy and was still being followed for treatment. Jones requested a review of the ruling by stating that the “numerous ‘examinations’ were an affront to adequate medical care.” He requested a review of the ruling, which was denied on grounds that his claims were without merit.

After Jones’s petition for damages was served on the defendants, LSU/E.A. Conway Medical Center (“LSU/EACMC”) filed a motion on December 8, 2008 to take Jones’s deposition at the DCC at 1:00 p.m. on Thursday, December 11, 2008, in Jackson, La. The motion was granted on the same day (December 8).

Jones showed up for the deposition and protested that he received notice of the deposition only the night before, ie., December 10, 2008, and complained that he was not served with a court order granting the motion to take his deposition. Jones demanded that he be allowed to make a statement. When he was told that he was not there to make statements but to answer questions posed to him, he refused to answer questions.

LSU/EACMC filed a motion to compel deposition on February 17, 2009, and the court signed an order the next day ordering Jones to appear and submit to a discovery deposition under oath “on a date and at a time of which Plaintiff shall be given notice by the Defendants”, under penalty of sanctions for his refusal “up to and including dismissal of his lawsuit.”

|sThe defendants sent two notices of deposition scheduled for May 28, 2009, by letters postmarked March 16 and 17 respectively. The letters were returned unopened with various endorsements and markings that the recipient (Jones) was released or had refused the letters. After learning from prison officials that Jones was still incarcerated at the same address, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss on April 16, 2009. In the motion, the defendants alleged that, pursuant to the Febru *209 ary 18 order compelling Jones to submit to a deposition, it had sent new notices of deposition by mail, and the notices were returned, unopened, with endorsements that the letters were refused and also the handwritten word, “released.” The motion further alleged that, after further inquiry, the defendants learned that Jones was, in fact, still an inmate at the facility, and that he had refused to accept the mail. They alleged that Jones placed the false endorsement noted above on the notice himself. The defendants requested that the plaintiffs lawsuit be dismissed for refusal to comply with the court’s discovery order compelling his deposition. The defendants attached their exhibits to a supporting memorandum instead of their motion.

The motion to dismiss was set for a contradictory hearing on May 11, 2009, and served on Jones on April 28, 2009. Jones filed nothing in opposition to the motion to dismiss. There is no transcript of the hearing in the record, and the court minute entry reflects that Jones was not present. The record contains a judgment dated May 11, 2009, granting the motion to dismiss with prejudice. There were no written reasons for judgment and the minute entry does not indicate that any oral reasons were given by the court.

_[jF oil owing the dismissal, Jones filed a motion for new trial alleging that the dismissal was contrary to the law and evidence. He attached a “Motion for Issuance of An Order to Appear” dated April 27, 2009, with an unsigned order directing the warden or his designee to transport him to the Ouachita Parish Courthouse on May 11, 2009. Jones argued that he had been present and ready to give his deposition on the previously scheduled dates of February 19 and April 18, 2009, but that the defendants cancelled them. Jones contended that, for reasons unknown, his motion to be transported to the May 11 hearing was not granted or that prison officials refused to comply with it. Jones admitted that he did receive mail from Mr. Verlan-der, defense counsel, on March 11, 2009, as verified by the affidavit of Robertson, and he signed the privileged/certified mail log on that date. However, Jones alleged that the letter he received from Mr. Verlander on March 11, 2009, was not a notice of deposition, and the two letters containing the notices of deposition were not sent until March 16 andl7, 2009, as the postmarked envelopes indicate. Accordingly, Robertson’s affidavit did not show that Jones received the letters containing the notices. Jones submitted a sworn affidavit that he never received those letters and the evidence of the unopened letters was not proof to the contrary.

The motion for new trial was taken up on July 22, 2009, Judge Harrison sitting pro tempore. Jones was present this time and called Captain Robertson, the defendants’ affiant in its motion to dismiss, as a witness. Robertson testified that he and another inmate delivered the mail to the inmates, depending on who was working the particular shift. It was | ¡^established that the letters containing notice of the deposition sent on March 16 and 17 were not, in fact, the letter or letters that Jones signed for on March 11, about which Mr. Robertson gave his affidavit. However, Mr. Verlander now argued, contrary to his prior argument in the motion to dismiss, that he was not introducing Robertson’s affidavit and log into evidence to prove that the letters he received that day (March 11) were the March 16 and March 17 letters, but instead to show that Jones routinely received his mail when it was properly addressed. Mr. Verlander contended that the unopened, marked letters of the notices of the deposition were sufficient evidence themselves to show that the letters were received by Mr. Jones and he refused them.

*210 The court took the matter under advisement. It subsequently ruled that the prior judgment of dismissal was not contrary to the law and evidence, and there was no grounds for a new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 3d 205, 2010 La. App. LEXIS 1137, 2010 WL 3155524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-lsuea-conway-medical-center-lactapp-2010.