LADAY v. Doe

59 So. 3d 516, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 1110, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 317, 2011 WL 890715
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 2011
Docket10-1110
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 So. 3d 516 (LADAY v. Doe) 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
LADAY v. Doe, 59 So. 3d 516, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 1110, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 317, 2011 WL 890715 (La. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

GREMILLION, Judge.

|, The Lafayette City-Parish Consolidated Government appeals a judgment in favor of Eileen Laday that awarded her damages for injuries she allegedly sustained in an incident aboard a City-Parish bus, on April 10, 2007. Laday- answered the appeal and asserts that the trial court abuséd its discretion in its award of general damages and future medical expenses and asks that we amend both amounts to award additional damages. For the reasons that follow, we affirm as amended.

FACTS

On April 10, 2007, Laday was a passenger on a bus owned by the City-Parish and driven by Carlos Cormier. The bus had been donated to the City-Parish by a governmental entity in Missouri in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Prior to the donation of the bus, a plexiglass shield or partition located above the modesty panel in front of the first seat, designed to prevent contact between passengers and the opening door, had been removed. The first seats adjacent to the modesty panel were situated such that the passengers faced the aisle rather than the front of the bus. Thus, a natural posture of the passenger in the first seat would be to place her right arm on the bar or rail that held the modesty panel in place. Laday claimed that as the door opened, she was trapped or struck by it. Her accounts of the degree and length of entrapment varied over the course of the litigation, but she never wavered in her claim that some form of contact occurred.

The day after the incident, Laday sought treatment with Dr. Michael P. Kennedy, a general practitioner in Carenero, Louisiana. She was complaining of neck and shoulder pain radiating into her right arm. Dr. Kennedy treated Laday conservatively with prescriptions and a referral for physical therapy. An MRI ordered by Dr. Kennedy demonstrated degenerative cervical disc conditions as well as a disc |2herniation at the C5-6 level.

In June 2008, Laday saw Dr. Louis Blanda, a Lafayette orthopedic surgeon, who ultimately recommended that Laday undergo surgery to relieve her condition. As of the date of trial, she had not had the surgery. Dr. Blanda also related the herniation to Laday being entrapped by the bus door. Dr. Blanda opined that the cost of this surgery would run between $60,492.60 to $61,492.60.

*519 The causal relation was disputed by Dr. Paul Fenn, an orthopedic surgeon who performed an independent medical examination of Laday at the City-Parish’s request. Dr. Fenn’s examination revealed some inconsistency in Laday’s level of effort in muscle strength testing. He also noted that Laday’s muscles had experienced no atrophy as one might expect when a muscle became denervated as a result of a disc herniation and stenosis. However, Dr. Fenn diagnosed Laday with cervical spondylosis (chronic degenerative changes) and a herniated disc. Based upon his review of Laday’s medical history, and in particular the records regarding at least two past incidents in which Laday had complained of lingering cervical pain, Dr. Fenn opined that it would be difficult to pinpoint any particular incident as causing the herniated disc. On the contrary, he opined that the herniated' disc was most likely the result of degenerative changes in Laday’s neck, particularly in light of the fact that in the general population, excluding trauma patients, the C5-6 herniation is the most common disc herniation in the neck. Dr. Fenn did admit that the mechanism of injury Laday described was a possible cause of the disc herniation, but not a probable cause.

Following a bench trial, the trial court found that Laday had been injured by the bus door. The trial court further found that the City-Parish was bound by the high standards imposed upon common carriers and found that the City-Parish was ^negligent in failing to replace the plexiglass barrier. Although Laday’s testimony enlarged the extent and time she was entrapped, the court considered the fact that she was a diagnosed paranoid schizophrenic and found that the exaggerations were explained by her mental illness, but that some contact with the door had occurred that caused or aggravated a disc herniation to the point that it now requires surgery. Laday was awarded $60,000.00 in general damages, $24,084.56 in past medical expenses, and $60,492.60 in future medical expenses to be placed into a rever-sionary trust as per La.R.S. 13:5106. All sums were to carry judicial interest from the date of demand. The City-Parish appeals this judgment. Laday appeals the awards of general damages and future medical expenses as abusively low.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

The City-Parish assigns the following errors:

1. The trial court was manifestly erroneous or clearly wrong in holding that Ms. Laday was injured in the incident at issue when the decision .came down to a credibility determination between Ms. Laday and Mr. Cormier that was resolved in favor of Carlos Cormier.
2. The trial court committed legal error in not placing the interest on Ms. Laday’s award for future medical expenses into the reversionary trust to be established for her future medical expenses.

Laday assigns the following errors: '

1. [The trial court] abused [its] discretion in awarding the Plaintiff general damages in the amount of $60,000.00 which was abusively low.
2. [The trial court] abused [its] discretion in awarding future medical expenses in the amount of $60,492.00 which omitted additional future medical expenses proven at trial.

ANALYSIS

The trial court’s findings of credibility were not as simplistic as the City-|Parish’s4 characterization makes them sound. What the trial court found was that, while Laday certainly magnified the *520 degree to which she was entrapped by the bus door, it did believe that there was contact with the door. The trial court also found that Cormier could not testify that there was no contact; he simply testified that he saw nothing happen. The photographs of the bus certainly allow one to clearly envision that there could be contact between the front seat passenger and the door. Those photographs depict a very slight clearance between the modesty panel and the opened door. A passenger’s arm could well be caught by the door as it opened. The medical experts agreed that Laday’s herniated disc could have been caused by contact with the door, and two medical experts flatly stated that it more probably than not was.

The trial court’s findings are reviewed under the manifest error standard. If the trial court or jury’s findings are reasonable in light of the record reviewed in its entirety, the court of appeal may not reverse, even if convinced that had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence differently. Sistler v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 558 So.2d 1106 (La.1990). We are further admonished by the Louisiana Supreme Court that where there is conflict in testimony, reasonable evaluations of credibility should not be disturbed. Canter v. Koehring Co., 283 So.2d 716 (La.1973).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 So. 3d 516, 10 La.App. 3 Cir. 1110, 2011 La. App. LEXIS 317, 2011 WL 890715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laday-v-doe-lactapp-2011.