Marshall v. Duncan

542 So. 2d 691, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 629, 1989 WL 35068
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 1989
DocketNo. 88-CA-2022
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 542 So. 2d 691 (Marshall v. Duncan) 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
Marshall v. Duncan, 542 So. 2d 691, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 629, 1989 WL 35068 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

BARRY, Judge.

Pearl Marshall appeals a jury verdict which denied any recovery for alleged injuries she received in an automobile accident.

On June 7, 1982 Marshall was in her automobile when Ernest Duncan backed a tractor trailer truck into her automobile. Marshall, her husband Irvin, and their minor Michele, sued Duncan and Ryder Truck Rental, Inc., owner of the truck, which third partied NORDAP, Inc., the trdck’s lessee.

A supplemental petition requested a jury trial. A second supplemental petition deleted Irvin Marshall because he and Pearl were legally separated, changed Michele’s status to reflect that she was no longer a minor, and requested damages were increased to $2,350,000. A third supplemental petition named as defendants NOR-DAP, Inc. and its insurer Carolina Casualty Insurance Company, and amended the petition to state that NORDAP had leased the truck and Duncan was acting as NOR-DAP’s employee at the time of the accident.

Prior to trial Marshall dismissed all defendants except Carolina Casualty which stipulated liability. The only issues were causation and damages. Ten of twelve jurors answered “No” to the first question on the verdict form: “Did Pearl Marshall suffer any injury in the accident of June 7, 1982?”

[692]*692Marshall specifies two errors: (1) the jury disregarded the evidence and testimony of medical experts; (2) the judge erred by reading to the jury a prior allegedly inconsistent statement in a deposition by Marshall’s medical expert.

TRIAL TESTIMONY

The jury heard two plaintiff and two defense medical experts plus Marshall's testimony. The report of Dr. Gordillo, Marshall’s general practitioner, was stipulated.

Dr. Gordillo first saw Marshall on April 6, 1982 (the transcript states 3/6/82) after she had been rearended in an auto accident on March 24, 1982. Her medical history noted a 1976 auto accident in which she injured her lower back. Dr. Gordillo’s report indicated Marshall had a decrease in neck motion and pain in the right side of her neck. He found severe muscular spasms in the right paravertebral area of the back. Marshall was able to reach mid-thigh bending forward and straight leg raising was painful at 45 degrees on the right and 55 degrees on the left. Neurological symptoms were normal and x-rays of the cervical spine showed no fracture, dislocation or disease. X-rays of the lumbar spine showed a very slight scoliosis, but no evidence of fracture or disease. He prescribed anti-inflammatory medication, muscle relaxants and physical therapy. Dr. Gordillo saw Marshall on May 24, 1982 when she was having neck and back pain and he referred her to Dr. Jose Garcia Oiler, a neurosurgeon.

Dr. Gordillo saw Marshall on June 11, 1982, four days after the subject accident. Neck and back pain continued. He noted the results of her physical examination were unchanged. On July 2 she continued to have neck and back pain and on August 2, 1982 she was feeling slightly better.

Marshall had another auto accident on August 16, 1982. She saw Dr. Gordillo on August 25, 1982 and had severe pain in the mid thoracic vertebrae with spasm and tenderness.

During subsequent visits on September 24, October 25, November 16, December 14, 1982, January 11, February 8, March 11, 1983, Marshall continued to improve. By March 25, 1983 there were no objective findings. Dr. Gordillo’s diagnosis was a musculoligamentous tear in the left trapezi-us muscle. The prognosis was excellent for full recovery. It was stipulated that Dr. Gordillo would have testified that Marshall’s injuries were the result of the three ,1982 auto accidents.

Dr. Oiler, a neurological expert, testified that he first saw Marshall on May 28, 1982 when she complained of severe neck and back pain and headaches. She had a 15 degree rotation instead of 80 degrees and a limitation of extension to 25 degrees (instead of 50 degrees). There was spasm in the neck muscles. Marshall could not stand straight and Dr. Oiler ordered a hard neck collar. He saw Marshall on June 7, 1982 just before the subject accident.

Dr. Oiler said that by July 2, 1982 her neck problem had not worsened because she was wearing a collar at the time of the June 7 accident. Marshall complained of severe pain and stiffness in the spine. The neck had improved, but the vertebral column was rigid. She could move 10 degrees forward and had 15 degrees extension.

Dr. Oiler felt the June 7 accident caused severe thoracic lumbar pain. On July 20, 1982 the cervical spine continued to improve and she had a normal range of motion. Marshall still had spine pain from the middle of the chest to the belt line. Extension improved to 25 degrees. She complained of persistent headaches.

When Dr. Oiler saw Marshall on September 3, 1982 she had been in a fourth accident in which a car hit the left front door and fender of her vehicle. Marshall’s left leg was numb and she had pain in the chest. An EKG was normal. Marshall’s bending improved to 30 degrees and flexion to the side was 15 degrees. There was tenderness in the chest.

On September 24, 1982 the chest pain was gone, the neck was better, but low back pain remained. Dr. Oiler saw no sign of sciatic nerve or compression problems and ordered a corset. His diagnosis was a [693]*693contusion and stretch injuries of the left hip, thoracic and lumbar muscles, a ligament of the spine, left shoulder, and a ligament of the chest muscle. She had severe back pain and limitation of motion and Dr. Oiler concluded she had deep muscle and ligament injuries.

By December 3, 1982 Marshall wore a brace and was able to drive, although she could not work. She complained of pain in the buttocks and left lateral calf which indicated a nerve was affected. There was no palpable spasm and no deviation of the spine on standing.

Dr. Oiler saw Marshall on April 2, 1984. She told him she had gone back to work a year earlier as a terminal controller with Alabama Great Southern Railroad [Norfolk and Southern Railroad] although she wore a corset and could not sit for long. Her remaining symptoms were tenderness over the lower back vertebrae and mild neck discomfort.

Not until Dr. Oiler’s examination on March 3,1986 did Marshall inform him of a fifth auto accident on February 4, 1984. She was a passenger in her sister’s car when it was hit from the left. She continued to work after the accident although she had a problem sitting for long periods of time, her neck would stiffen, and she had pain in her low back and left leg. Marshall’s neck had recovered except for minimal tenderness. The dorsal spine (chest portion) had very mild tenderness of certain spinous processes. She had full range of motion except at 75 degree flexion there was a moderate spasm. Bending forward she had a spasm in the left lumbar region. Examination of the lower extremities was normal except for some pulling at straight leg raising of 75 degrees. He did not think surgery was necessary and concluded her condition was permanent.

Marshall had a CAT scan and MRI (magnetic reasonance imaging) study on October 9, 1986. At trial Dr. Oiler read the report of Dr. Daniel Johnson, an x-ray specialist of the head, neck and spine. Dr. Johnson found no vertebral body deformity or compression, no unusual expansion of the spinal cord, and no mass lesion. Dr.

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Related

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Landry v. Doe
582 So. 2d 242 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1991)
Marshall v. Duncan
544 So. 2d 410 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
542 So. 2d 691, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 629, 1989 WL 35068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-duncan-lactapp-1989.