Maribel Imamovic v. Robert Milstead and Texford Battery Company Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 2015
Docket01-13-01030-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Maribel Imamovic v. Robert Milstead and Texford Battery Company Inc. (Maribel Imamovic v. Robert Milstead and Texford Battery Company Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maribel Imamovic v. Robert Milstead and Texford Battery Company Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 5, 2015

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-13-01030-CV ——————————— MARIBEL IMAMOVIC, Appellant V. ROBERT MILSTEAD AND TEXFORD BATTERY COMPANY, INC., Appellees

On Appeal from the 270th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2012-46761

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is a car-wreck case. Appellant Miribel Imamovic appeals the trial

court’s judgment, entered on the jury’s verdict, awarding her zero damages. We

affirm. BACKGROUND

Appellee Robert Milstead,1 while driving a truck owned by appellee Texford

Battery Company Inc., rear-ended the Toyota Prius Imamovic was driving.

Appellees admitted fault, and trial was held only on the issue of personal-injury

damages. Imamovic argues that the jury’s awarding zero damages was against the

great weight of the evidence and manifestly unjust. Accordingly, she requests that

we reverse and remand for a new trial.

A. Trial Testimony

Maribel Imamovic

Imamovic was 42 years old at the time of the 2013 trial. She works as a

vehicle-for-hire inspector for the City of Houston in its Administration Regulatory

Affairs Department. In this position, she travels around Houston to inspect

vehicles like taxicabs, limos, and private school buses. She testified that she was

stopped in her City-owned Toyota Prius at a red light on July 5, 2011, when she

was struck from behind. She testified that the force made her “want[] to black out”

and “overwhelmed.” The police report was admitted into evidence and stated the

investigator’s conclusion that Milstead and Imamovic were both stopped at the red

light before Milstead moved forward and struck the back of Imamovic’s car.

1 Robert Milstead died before trial, and his son Robert John Milstead was substituted as heir. 2 Imamovic told the police officers that responded that she did not need

medical treatment, and she drove the Prius from the scene. She testified, however,

that the following day she starting feeling sore and that her neck pain was

unbearable by the third day. It constantly felt like sharp needles were stabbing her

neck.

Imamovic made an appointment at Kelsey-Seybold, which is her primary

medical provider. Her regular doctor, Dr. Kelly Cajahuaringa, was not available,

so she instead saw Dr. Xavier Castillo on July 7, 2011. She was unimpressed with

Castillo, as he did not appear concerned. He prescribed her anti-inflammatory and

pain medications and—at Imamovic’s request—ordered x-rays. According to

Imamovic, Castillo also ordered physical therapy for her, although there is no

reference to that in Castillo’s notes. Castillo’s notes from his July 7 appointment

reflect that he “placed her on light transitional duty” and asked her to make a

follow-up appointment within two weeks. She testified that she went to physical

therapy at Focus Physical Therapy after her first visit with Castillo, but did not

return to work. Imamovic instead waited almost two months before returning to

see Castillo on August 31, 2011. She first testified did not return to the doctor

before then because she had plenty of pain medication and did not believe that

Castillo would do anything helpful for her. She later testified that she did not

3 return earlier because she did not control when Kelsey Seybold scheduled

appointments.

Imamovic also testified that, at the August 31, 2011 follow-up appointment

with Castillo, she asked for a release to return to work because she was concerned

that the City was laying off employees and did not want her employment to be

adversely impacted by her being out with an injury. Castillo’s notes from that

follow-up appointment state that Imamovic told him that “she has an attorney for

her worker’s comp case” and that an outside doctor had referred her to physical

therapy. Castillo’s records also reflected that he told Imamovic that she had a “soft

tissue injury” and “degenerative arthritis” in her neck.

Her physical therapy records also show that her physical therapy had ended

by August 31, 2011, but that a Dr. Roberts, who works at Focus Physical Therapy,

had referred her for an MRI at Memorial MRI, which Imamovic testified was

because she was still complaining about neck pain.

In September 2011, Imamovic was in another wreck in which she rear-ended

another vehicle. She testified that was a minor accident in which she was not

injured.

Imamovic testified that, in January 2012, a co-worker recommend that she

see a Dr. Berliner. “New patient” forms she filled out at Dr. Berliner’s office,

however, were dated November 2011. Although she testified that she was still in

4 pain and taking painkillers and muscle relaxers when she went to see Berliner, the

intake paperwork she filled out for her first visit with Berliner reflected that she

was not taking any medications. She testified at trial that was because she did not

remember the names of any of the medication she was taking. Berliner’s records

reflected that Imamovic did not tell Berliner about the September 2011 wreck and

that she specifically denied suffering any injuries prior to the July 2011 accident.

Contrary to what she told Berliner, Imamovic testified at trial to having

suffered a previous lost-time on-the-job fall and a previous rollerskating injury.

And, although she testified to never having previously had shoulder pain, medical

records were introduced at trial showing that, in 2009, x-rays were ordered of her

shoulders based upon her complaint about severe pain in both shoulders. Medical

records also reflected that, when she was injured on the job in March 2011, she

took several weeks off work and made a workers’ compensation claim

complaining of lower back pain and her arm tingling.

Imamovic testified to being much more impressed with Berliner than

Castillo, as Berliner seemed to listen to her and be very knowledgeable. She

testified that Berliner looked over her MRI results and told her that she has bulging

discs in her back that put pressure on her spinal cord. Berliner treated her with an

epidural steroid injection, but that did not help her pain. She has the option to have

surgery to have two disc in her neck fused. She first testified that she had not yet

5 had the surgery because the defendants refused to pay for it. On cross-

examination, she conceded that she could have filed for workers’ compensation or

used her private insurance for the surgery. She did not avail herself of those

options because she did not think the City should have to pay for her surgery

because the accident was not her fault.

Imamovic testified that she was still in significant pain at the time of trial.

Her neck injury also makes daily driving with her job challenging, as she has to

move her neck a lot. She had hoped to become a police officer and has passed the

written exam, but her neck injury prevents her from being able to perform the

physical examination part of the test. She also used to exercise regularly, which

she cannot do any more.

On cross-examination, Imamovic agreed that she had a physical examination

with her regular doctor, Dr. Cajhuaringa, two months before trial, and that she did

not mention to Cajhuaringa that she had any neck or back pain, and did not list

painkillers as medication that she was taking at the time of the physical.

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