Littlefield v. United States

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedNovember 6, 2020
Docket4:19-cv-00027
StatusUnknown

This text of Littlefield v. United States (Littlefield v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Littlefield v. United States, (E.D. Ark. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS CENTRAL DIVISION

SHELTON LITTLEFIELD PLAINTIFF

v. Case No. 4:19-cv-00027-LPR

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA DEFENDANT

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION On January 11, 2019, Plaintiff Shelton Littlefield filed a Complaint against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), alleging that he was injured in a fall due to the negligence of the nursing staff at a Veterans Affairs hospital. On August 17, 2020, the Court held a bench trial. The Parties submitted their proposed findings and conclusions of law to the Court by email on September 15, 2020. In accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), and after reviewing the Parties’ post-trial proposals as well as the entire record, the Court now makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law. I. FINDINGS OF FACT 1. During the bench trial, seven witnesses provided testimony. Mr. Littlefield’s witnesses were Sandra Littlefield,1 Alan Littlefield,2 Nurse Luanne Trahant,3 Shelton Littlefield Jr.,4

1 Sandra Littlefield is Mr. Littlefield’s wife. Tr. of Bench Trial (Doc. 30-1) at 3. 2 Alan Littlefield is Mr. and Mrs. Littlefield’s son. Id. at 19, 27. 3 Nurse Trahant testified as the Plaintiff’s expert regarding the standard of care for nurses. Id. at 41-42. Nurse Trahant has practiced nursing, including rehabilitative nursing, in hospitals and nursing homes in central Louisiana. Id. at 40. Nurse Trahant did not personally evaluate Mr. Littlefield or practice nursing at the facility where Mr. Littlefield was treated. 4 Shelton Littlefield Jr. is Mr. and Mrs. Littlefield’s son. Id. at 19, 70-71. and Nurse Cindy Carlat.5 The Government’s witnesses were Dr. Larry Johnson6 and Nurse Holly Langster.7 The Court found all of the witnesses’ testimonies to be credible. 2. Mr. Littlefield is a 92-year-old man.8 3. Mr. Littlefield is married to Sandra Littlefield. They have been married 42 years. Mrs. Littlefield is 72 years of age.9

4. Mr. Littlefield is a World War II-era veteran10 who receives medical care through the Veterans Affairs’ (VA) healthcare system.11 5. Prior to July 2009, Mr. and Mrs. Littlefield owned and operated a daycare center. Mrs. Littlefield supervised the children, while Mr. Littlefield’s responsibilities included driving a van to pick up the children at school, bookkeeping, and maintaining supplies like groceries.12 6. In 2009, Mr. Littlefield’s health began to decline. Mr. Littlefield visited doctors because he was suffering from severe fatigue, but the doctors could not identify the cause.13

5 Nurse Carlat testified as a fact witness regarding the circumstances surrounding Mr. Littlefield’s fall and injury. Id. at 81-82. 6 Dr. Johnson was the medical director of the VA’s Community Living Center at the time the injury occurred. Id. at 111. He is now a volunteer “Physician Ambassador” at the Center. Id. at 109. Dr. Johnson was not “identified as a nursing standard of care expert.” Id. at 126. His testimony was “based on his perception of what he has seen in the unit.” Id. 7 Nurse Langster testified as the Defendant’s expert regarding the standard of care for nurses. Id. at 161. Nurse Langster has practiced nursing at hospitals in various locations in central Arkansas, including North Little Rock. Id. at 155. Nurse Langster has experience in treating “[f]rail patients and dementia patients,” as she has “dealt with them as their bedside caregiver, and then as the overseer of the nurses.” Id. at 156. Nurse Langster did not personally evaluate Mr. Littlefield or practice nursing at the facility where Mr. Littlefield was treated. 8 Id. at 76. 9 Id. at 4. 10 Id. at 112. 11 Id. at 5. 12 Id. at 7. 13 Id. at 8. 7. In July 2009, Mrs. Littlefield found Mr. Littlefield “sitting in the van with his heavy coat on and the heat running [because] he was so cold.” Mrs. Littlefield called their son, and they took Mr. Littlefield to a hospital emergency room. At the hospital, Mr. Littlefield was diagnosed with lymphoma.14 8. Mr. Littlefield’s health declined severely after his lymphoma diagnosis. He was “in a coma

on life support for a couple of months.” When he was finally released from the hospital and went back home in April 2010, he was bedridden.15 9. Between 2010 and 2015, Mr. Littlefield gradually recovered to the point that he could walk with a cane. The Littlefield family was able to take Mr. Littlefield along when they went out to eat, to church, and to other events.16 10. Between 2010 and 2015, Mr. Littlefield would suffer urinary tract infections approximately “once every two or three months.”17 When these infections occurred, “his mental status would decline. He would start stumbling around. He couldn’t control how he walked.”18 He would also get “agitated real easy.”19 After Mr. Littlefield received antibiotic treatment for these infections, he would “go right back up . . . and everything would be okay.”20

11. Mr. Littlefield “fell a couple of times” at home after his 2010 release from the hospital.21

14 Id. 15 Id. at 9. 16 Id. 17 Id. 18 Id. 19 Id. at 10. 20 Id. at 9-10. 21 Id. at 10. 12. “One time he fell and hit his bed and cut his head” and “had to have staples.”22 This injury appears to have occurred on July 11, 2015.23 It also appears that he was suffering from a urinary tract infection at this time.24 Mr. Littlefield was hospitalized.25 13. When Mr. Littlefield was hospitalized in July 2015, he was suffering from an “altered mental status.”26 He was “quite ill with the delirium. He had hallucinations. He was very

confused and the suspicion was he had another infection.”27 14. When Mr. Littlefield “was in a strange place” like a hospital “at night when [Mrs. Littlefield] wasn’t there, he would holler because he didn’t know where he was at. He was scared. Usually if somebody could go in and talk with him, he would be okay.”28 15. Mr. Littlefield’s “mental status” eventually “improved, oriented to person and place.”29 However, he would still become “easily agitated with staff during his hospitalization,” and he needed “constant redirecting.”30 There were concerns about whether he had recovered to the point where Mrs. Littlefield would be able to care for him at home.31

22 Id. 23 Id. at 117. 24 Id. at 11. 25 Id. at 11, 118. 26 Id. at 118. 27 Id. 28 Id. at 11. 29 Id. at 119. 30 Id. 31 See id. at 11-12 (“[T]he head of geriatrics . . . called [Mrs. Littlefield] in her office and she said [Mr. Littlefield] is wearing you out. She said we’re going to keep him downstairs at the Community Living Center and get him back on his feet, because like he had been in the hospital.”), 120 (“The day before [Mr. Littlefield] was admitted to the GEM, he came into the geriatric clinic, and the wife said she is overwhelmed and she can’t care for him well at home at this very moment. And so we offered—we, as the geriatricians and the service, said we can bring you into the GEM unit today and see what we can do to help you help your husband improve.”). 16. In early August of 2015, Mr. Littlefield was admitted to the VA’s Community Living Center for rehabilitation.32 17. It is useful to set out a general timeline of Mr. Littlefield’s stay at the Community Living Center. Upon admission, he was assigned to the geriatric evaluation and management unit (or “GEM unit”).33 During his time in the GEM unit he was enrolled in physical therapy.34

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Bluebook (online)
Littlefield v. United States, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/littlefield-v-united-states-ared-2020.