Joy Richard v. Calcasieu Cameron Hospital Service D/B/A West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 2019
DocketCA-0019-0338
StatusUnknown

This text of Joy Richard v. Calcasieu Cameron Hospital Service D/B/A West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital (Joy Richard v. Calcasieu Cameron Hospital Service D/B/A West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital) 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
Joy Richard v. Calcasieu Cameron Hospital Service D/B/A West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

19-338

JOY RICHARD

VERSUS

CALCASIEU CAMERON HOSPITAL SERVICE D/B/A WEST CALCASIEU CAMERON HOSPITAL, ET AL.

**********

APPEAL FROM THE FOURTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF CALCASIEU, NO. 2015-1395 HONORABLE RONALD F. WARE, DISTRICT JUDGE

PHYLLIS M. KEATY JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Phyllis M. Keaty, and D. Kent Savoie, Judges.

AFFIRMED AS AMENDED.

Jack W. Caskey 704 Ryan Street Lake Charles, Louisiana 70601 (337) 439-8854 Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee: Joy Richard

Robert W. Robison, Jr. Shelby L. Giddings Watson, Blanche, Wilson & Posner Post Office Drawer 2995 Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70821-2995 (225) 387-5511 Counsel for Defendant/Appellant: West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital KEATY, Judge.

Joy Richard was injured in a trip and fall in the parking lot of Calcasieu

Cameron Hospital Service District d/b/a West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital

(WCCH). After a trial on the merits, judgment was rendered in favor of Richard and

against WCCH, awarding her general and special damages. WCCH appeals, and for

the following reasons, we amend the judgment and affirm as amended.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Richard tripped and fell in the parking lot of WCCH on the evening of July 7,

2014. Her adult daughter, Diana Piper, was an employee of the hospital, and Richard

had gone there to pick her up after her shift ended. Richard filed this suit against

WCCH to recover for the damages she allegedly sustained in the accident. The

matter proceeded to a one-day bench trial, following which the trial court issued an

oral ruling, finding that WCCH was negligent and 100% at fault for Richard’s

damages. Written judgment was signed on January 7, 2019, awarding Richard

$50,000.00 in general damages, $6,750.07 in medical special damages, and

$1,500.00 in expert witness fees.

On appeal, WCCH asserts that the trial court erred in finding that Richard met

her burden of proof under La.Civ.Code art. 2317.1; in awarding excessive damages

to Richard; in not assessing fault to Richard; and in awarding Richard special

damages over and above her general damages award as the parties stipulated to a

bench trial on the basis that her claims would not exceed $50,000.00.

DISCUSSION

Richard’s premise liability claims against WCCH are governed by

La.Civ.Code art. 2317.1,1 which provides:

1 This court has held that hospitals do not come under the ambit of La.R.S. 9:2800.6, which governs the liability of merchants. See Harkins v. Natchitoches Par. Hosp., 97-83 (La.App. 3 Cir. 5/7/97), 696 So.2d 19. The owner or custodian of a thing is answerable for damage occasioned by its ruin, vice, or defect, only upon a showing that he knew or, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have known of the ruin, vice, or defect which caused the damage, that the damage could have been prevented by the exercise of reasonable care, and that he failed to exercise such reasonable care.

To prevail under La.Civ.Code art. 2317.1, Richard had the burden of proving that:

(1) that the thing which caused the damage was in the defendant’s custody or control, (2) that it had a vice or defect that presented an unreasonable risk of harm, (3) that the defendant knew or should have known of the vice or defect, (4) that the damage could have been prevented by the exercise of reasonable care, and (5) that the defendant failed to exercise such reasonable care.

Owens v. McIlhenny Co., 18-754, p. 3 (La.App. 3 Cir. 3/27/19), 269 So.3d 839, 842

(quoting Riggs v. Opelousas Gen. Hosp. Trust Auth., 08-591, p. 4 (La.App. 3 Cir.

11/5/08), 997 So.2d 814, 817).

Six witnesses testified at trial. Richard stated that she was seventy-five years

old at the time of trial. Richard explained that Piper worked the 2:30 p.m. to 11:00

p.m. shift at WCCH, and Richard routinely drove her to and from work. On the

night of the accident, Richard had arrived early in order to visit her granddaughter

who was a patient at Cornerstone, an acute-care facility within WCCH. Richard

parked in a handicap spot near the entrance to Cornerstone. She had some items for

her granddaughter which she took out of the back of her car before walking up a

handicap ramp and entering the facility. After Piper’s shift ended, she met Richard

in her daughter’s room, and they left the facility through the same door that Richard

had entered. Richard explained that it was “pitch dark,” and as she stepped down

into the parking lot in front of her car, her foot hit a concrete bar, she fell flat on her

face, and her “head bounced on the concrete.” She explained that “[t]here was a

light further off in the distance, but it did not light up that area” of the parking lot.

On cross-examination, Richard stated that she had been to the same parking

lot and had entered through the same door at WCCH when visiting her 2 granddaughter before the night of the accident. She confirmed that when the hospital

door opened the night of the accident, “there was enough light for [her] to see[, b]ut

when [she] came out, the door was closed; and it was completely dark again.”

Richard acknowledged that she did not walk down the handicap ramp when she and

her daughter left the facility. Richard stated that because her daughter was walking

down the ramp to get to the passenger side of the car, she “just naturally walked to

the driver’s side.” When shown photographs that depicted the parking lot and

building where she fell at nighttime, Richard emphatically stated that on the evening

of her accident, there was no light on the corner of the building to the left of the

entrance, nor under the canopy covering the doorway where she entered and exited

the building.

Richard testified that after she fell, she screamed for her daughter to help her.

Piper ran back into the hospital to get assistance, and four people came out with a

wheelchair. They rolled Richard over onto a sheet, lifted her up into the wheelchair,

and rolled her to the Emergency Room (ER). After X-rays and a CAT scan were

taken, an ER employee gently cleaned her face, which was bleeding and “all skinned

up.” When a physician later came into her room and spoke to her about ordering

some diagnostic tests, Richard told him, “That’s already been done.” That doctor

wrote her prescriptions for antibiotics and pain pills and said he would return after

finding out the results of the X-rays and CAT scan. He never returned to Richard’s

room, however, and she was sent home that evening, never to learn the results of the

tests run in the ER of WCCH.

Richard said that the accident damaged the right side of her nose, explaining

that “[t]he cartilage was shoved over to where it’s almost completely closed.” As a

result, she “would literally panic because [she] wasn’t getting enough air.” Richard

stated that she had experienced trouble with her lungs and with breathing before the 3 accident, but now she requires oxygen around the clock. With regard to her lungs,

Richard stated that she probably had issues with her lungs before she was aware of

them. She said that a Dr.

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Joy Richard v. Calcasieu Cameron Hospital Service D/B/A West Calcasieu Cameron Hospital, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joy-richard-v-calcasieu-cameron-hospital-service-dba-west-calcasieu-lactapp-2019.