Luther v. Lander

373 P.3d 495, 2016 WL 2812728, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 63
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 2016
Docket7103 S-15588
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 373 P.3d 495 (Luther v. Lander) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luther v. Lander, 373 P.3d 495, 2016 WL 2812728, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 63 (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

*497 OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In November 2010 Stevie Lander was unable to complete a right turn on an iey road, and her vehicle slid into a car driven by Bonnie Luther, Although Luther reported no injuries at the seene of the accident, that evening she went to the emergency room for head and neck pain, and within weeks she began to suffer from lower back pain that prevented her from returning to her job as a flight attendant. Luther attributed her pain to the accident and sued Lander for negli-genee in 2012. Lander admitted negligence and made an offer of judgment, which Luther did not accept. The case proceeded to trial in 2014, and the jury awarded Luther a total of $8,259 for past medical expenses, past wage and benefit loss, and past non-economic losses.

The superior court granted attorney's fees to Lander under Alaska Rule of Civil Procedure 68(b) and denied Luther's motion for a new trial, Luther appeals, arguing that the superior court erred by denying her a new trial based on inadequate damages and by excluding evidence of the amount of payments for medical treatment made by Luther's insurer,. She also challenges the superior court's decision to grant attorney's fees based on billing records that were filed under seal, We conclude that it was error to exclude evidence of payments made for Luther's medical treatment by her insurer. But because that error was harmless, we affirm the final judgment entered by the superior court.

II, FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

In November 2010 Bonnie Luther was stopped at a red traffic light, traveling southbound on' Spenard Road in Anchorage. Stey-ie Lander was traveling westbound on Northern Lights Boulevard and attempted to make a right turn. Lander was unable to complete the turn on the icy road, and her SUV slid into the front driver's side of Luther's car. Photographic evidence revealed that the accident caused only minor damage to Luther's car; a small dent above the front driver's side tire, And there was no damage to Lander's SUV. The airbags did not deploy in either vehicle.

At the accident seene, Luther told a police offer that she was "fine" and did not require medical attention. But she went to the emergency room that evening because her head hurt and her neck was feeling "tight." At the hospltal she was diagnosed with a cervical strain, prescmbed pain medlcatmn, and discharged. Luther did not complain of lower back pain on the day of the accident, and no diagnosis was made regarding her back. Luther testified that the symptoms she experienced immediately after the accident-head pain and tightness in her neck and shoulder-subsided within a few weeks to a month.

Luther had worked gs a fllght attendant for Alaska Airlines since 2007, and though she was not working at the time of the accident, as she was recovering from recent surgery, she was scheduled to return to work in December 2010. But two days after the accident, Luther was flying as a passenger on a flight to Hawaii when she first experienced pain in her back and into her left buttock, When she arrived home in Alaska near the end of November, Luther was diagnosed as "likely halving] a musclé and ligament strain of her lower back ... [and having possibly] wrenched the sacrofliae joint." An x-ray showed "no evidence of fracture," and Luther was referred to Orthopedic Physicians Anchorage. Sharon Sturley, a physician assistant at the practice, found no "acute fracture or dislocation" and noted that the x-rays showed evidence of "mild degenerative dise and joint disease."

Luther continued to experience. lower back pain and to see Sturley for. monthly visits through November 2011 with little notable change in her condition, In April 2011, an orthopedic specialist in the same practice as Sturley diagnosed Luther with a "small annular tear and a tiny dise protrusion" but noted that Luther's "bigger symptoms" were due to trochanteric bursitis and irritation of her sacroiliac joint. This doctor did not comment on the cause of either condition and suggested a steroid injection, which Luther declined. Between November 2011 and July 2012 Luther worked for the State of Alaska *498 in Juneau, where she continued to see an orthopedic specialist. She was again diagnosed as having "likely [sacroiliac] joint pain" and "bilateral trochanteric bursitis." The doctor did not state that either affliction was caused by the car accident, and Luther again declined a recommended steroid injection in favor of continued physical therapy. Throughout her treatment, Luther went to physical therapy and received acupuncture treatment, though her attendance at physical therapy was somewhat irregular, Both Stur-ley and the orthopedic specialist in Juneau provided Luther with monthly "work status reports" to be submitted to Alaska Airlines so that Luther could remain employed while on medical leave.

In July 2012 Luther returned to Anchorage and continued her work for the State. Luther was evaluated by James Glenn, another physician assistant in the orthopedic practice, in December 2012. (Glenn reported that he was "somewhat perplexed" as to why Luther was still pursuing treatment two years after the accident without seeking "more aggressive" measures. He suggested various treatment options including injections, a new MRI, and x-rays, and he noted that Luther might consider a dise replacement in order to return to work as a flight attendant. CGlenn refused to provide Luther with a work status report to indicate that Luther had a "full disability" that prevented her from returning to work. After her appointment with Glenn, Luther appéars to have stopped seeking medical treatment, and in December 2012 she resigned from her position with Alaska Airlines.

B. Proceedings

In October 2012 Luther filed a complaint in the superior court alleging that Lander was negligent and that her negligence had caused Luther to incur injuries resulting in ongoing medical expenses, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Lander admitted negligence and in December 2018 served an offer of judgment for $28,500 plus prejudgment interest, allowable Alaska Civil Rule 79 costs, and Alaska Civil Rule 82(b)(1) attorney's fees, Luther did not accept the offer, and the case proceeded to trial in March 2014.

At trial, Luther testified that the accident had left her unable to perform her duties as a flight attendant, but she did not call any of her own doctors or other expert medical witnesses. Instead, Luther relied on her own testimony about her treatment and on her medical records. In support of her claim for damages for past medical expenses, Luther introduced evidence of the treatment she received after the accident, Some of the evidence she sought to introduce revealed that Luther's insurer, GEICO, paid some of Luther's medical expenses after the accident. The superior court granted Lander's request that the evidence be excluded. The superior court also excluded all evidence of the costs of the various treatment charges paid for by GEICO. But Luther was permitted to introduce evidence of the treatments themselves.

Luther testified that her total unpaid medical expenses amounted to $6,745.86. Lander, relying on the report and testimony of Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
373 P.3d 495, 2016 WL 2812728, 2016 Alas. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luther-v-lander-alaska-2016.