Levi v. District of Columbia

697 A.2d 1201, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 180, 1997 WL 414341
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 17, 1997
Docket94-CV-894
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 697 A.2d 1201 (Levi v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levi v. District of Columbia, 697 A.2d 1201, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 180, 1997 WL 414341 (D.C. 1997).

Opinion

TERRY, Associate Judge:

Appellant Bernard Levi, now a prisoner at the Allenwood Federal Penitentiary in Pennsylvania, filed an action for negligence against the District of Columbia based on injuries he suffered while he was incarcerated at the Occoquan Facility, part of the District’s correctional complex at Lorton, Virginia. Mr. Levi was injured when he slipped and fell on a wet floor at Occoquan. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the District, and the trial court later denied Mr. *1203 Levi’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. On appeal he argues that the court erred in denying that motion. He also claims that the court violated his rights by allowing him to testify by videotape instead of requiring him to be transported from his place of imprisonment in Pennsylvania to testify in person. We reject both arguments and affirm the judgment.

I

Levi was a prisoner at the Occoquan Facility when he slipped and fell in the prison dining hall. His complaint alleged that the District of Columbia had been negligent in failing to take reasonable steps to prevent water from leaking and accumulating on the floor, in failing to warn the prisoners of the danger posed by this standing water, and in failing to provide him with adequate medical care after he fell. Mr. Levi claimed that as a result of his fall, which occurred in December 1992, he sustained debilitating injuries for which he sought $200,000 in damages.

At the time of trial, Levi was incarcerated at the federal prison in Allenwood, Pennsylvania, serving sentences for a series of nine bank robberies. 1 A few weeks before the trial began, the court granted an unopposed motion, filed by Levi’s counsel, for leave to take Levi’s deposition by videotape at the prison for use at trial. Before the deposition was actually taken, however, the court received a petition from Mr. Levi himself for a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum, in which he asked to be transported from Pennsylvania to the District of Columbia so that he could be present at the trial and personally testify before the jury. The court denied the motion on two grounds. First, it ruled that because Levi was represented by counsel, it was “inappropriate” for him to file his own pro se habeas corpus petition. Second, addressing the merits of Mr. Levi’s request, the court noted that it had already granted Levi the right to present his testimony through a videotaped deposition, and thus it refused to require the United States Marshals Service to bear the cost of transporting him from Pennsylvania. The deposition took place as planned, and soon thereafter the case went to trial.

The evidence of negligence was presented by Levi and two former inmates at Occo-quan. Vernon Ray, one of the two former prisoners, testified that he was sitting in the dining hall at Occoquan when he saw Mr. Levi slip on some water that had been leaking from a hole in the ceiling. Levi fell to the floor and, according to Ray, was so badly injured that he had to be carried away on a stretcher. Ray said that the authorities at Occoquan knew the ceiling had serious leaks in it, but took no action to warn the inmates of the danger. Warren Youmans, another prisoner at the time of the incident, testified that neither buckets, to catch the falling water, nor warning cones, to mark the wet area, had been placed in the dining hall because the prison authorities feared that such objects might be used as weapons in a fight. Youmans said that when Mr. Levi slipped on the wet floor, his feet “went right up from under him,” and he “landed straight on his buttocks_” Youmans also stated that Levi lay on the floor for five to ten minutes before a stretcher was brought to remove him.

In his own videotaped testimony, Mr. Levi stated that after he slipped and landed on his back, he was immediately in such pain that he could not even get up. After lying on the wet floor for several minutes, he was taken to the prison infirmary, where he was given Motrin, an analgesic. In the weeks following his fall, his pain became more and more intense, radiating into his lower legs and making it difficult for him to walk. Levi testified that although an orthopedist had given him medication, a back brace, and a bed board, he still suffered from back pain “all the time.”

During his testimony, Mr. Levi acknowledged that in 1983 he had been in an automobile accident, which caused such severe pain that he was forced to undergo surgery to remove two ruptured disks from his spinal column. The pain continued, however, so *1204 that in 1985 he went back to the hospital for further tests and treatment. His back condition was not helped by his work as an animal technician, “taking care of the laboratory animals for the scientists” at the National Institutes of Health, where he was required to engage in “a lot of physical activity, you know, a lot of lifting and walking and standing and moving around.”

Dr. John Lossing, a neurologist, testified as an expert witness on Mr. Levi’s behalf. 2 Dr. Lossing acknowledged that Mr. Levi had been diagnosed as having a herniated disk in January 1985, a condition that would “cause pain which would radiate in a shooting fashion down the leg.” In addition, he had injured his back when he fell from the top bunk in his prison cell in May 1992. Despite this history of lumbosacral injury and other back problems, 3 Dr. Lossing opined that Mr. Levi’s fall at Occoquan was the likely cause of his present pain. After reviewing the medical records which documented Levi’s more frequent treatments for back pain after he fell in the dining hall, Dr. Lossing said, “My opinion is that the injury he suffered involving a slip and fall, landing on his back, probably worsened his pre-existing condition of lumbosacral injury.”

The District’s only witness was Dr. William Peterson, a physician at District of Columbia General Hospital who was accepted by the court as an expert in neurology. After an extended review of the relevant medical records, Dr. Peterson testified that Mr. Levi’s back problems, including his herniated disks and arthritis, were already substantial before he fell in the dining hall at Occoquan, and that it was unlikely that this fall worsened his condition. Specifically, Dr. Peterson said that Levi’s medical records revealed that in 1983 he had a laminectomy, which the doctor described as a procedure in which the lamina (the bone-like housing of the spinal cord and accompanying nerve roots) “is actually removed from the spine itself ... [in order to relieve pressure] on the spinal cord or nerve roots.” In addition, a lumbar mye-logram in 1985 showed that Mr. Levi suffered from a deviation of the nerve root in the L-5 and S-l area of his back and had a herniated disk in that same area. In 1990, Dr. Peterson testified, Mr. Levi went to the emergency room at D.C. General Hospital complaining of severe back pain, but with no immediately preceding trauma. The doctor explained that with a back condition such as Mr. Levi’s, no trauma is necessary to induce pain; activities as seemingly harmless as sitting, twisting, or lifting a child can cause the type of severe pain that brought him to the emergency room. Then, in May 1992, Mr.

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

Related

Cosio v. District of Columbia
940 A.2d 1009 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2008)
Shi Mui Liu v. Allen
894 A.2d 453 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2006)
In re E.T.A.
880 A.2d 264 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2005)
Newsome v. District of Columbia
859 A.2d 630 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2004)
In the Interest of Doe Children
76 P.3d 578 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2003)
Green v. North Arundel Hospital Association, Inc.
785 A.2d 361 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
697 A.2d 1201, 1997 D.C. App. LEXIS 180, 1997 WL 414341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levi-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1997.