Martin v. Weatherford

31 So. 3d 1252, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 590, 2009 WL 2857151
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedSeptember 8, 2009
DocketNo. 2007-CA-01990-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 31 So. 3d 1252 (Martin v. Weatherford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Weatherford, 31 So. 3d 1252, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 590, 2009 WL 2857151 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IRVING, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. Tammy Weatherford filed an action in the Washington County Circuit Court to recover damages for injuries she sustained when Mary Martin rear-ended a vehicle in which Weatherford was a passenger. Martin did not contest liability. After a bench trial to determine damages, the trial judge awarded Weatherford $28,058.86 in medical expenses and $368,550 in past and future pain and suffering.1 Aggrieved, Martin appeals and asserts that the trial judge’s findings, in several respects, are not supported by substantial evidence. She also asserts that the trial judge erred in admitting into evidence life expectancy tables because they were not tendered to her prior to trial pursuant to the rules of discovery.2

¶ 2. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 3. On January 9, 1998, Martin rear-ended a vehicle in which Weatherford was a passenger. Weatherford was not wearing her seatbelt at the time.3 Shortly after the accident, Weatherford sought treatment for head and neck pain at Delta Regional Medical Center (Delta Regional) in Greenville, Mississippi. While at the hospital, X-rays were taken of Weather-ford’s skull and facial series, and a study was made of her cervical spine. All of those test results were normal. However, she was diagnosed with a left scalp hema-toma and multiple sprains and strains.

¶ 4. A few days later, Weatherford visited Dr. Joe Pulliam, complaining of increasing spasms in her neck, as well as occasional numbness and tingling in her fingers and hands. Dr. Pulliam’s notes indicate that Weatherford’s neurological examination was normal. He recommended that she continue taking medications that she had been prescribed on the day of the accident. Weatherford saw Dr. Pulliam again in February 1998. On this visit, Dr. Pulliam concluded that the spasms in her [1255]*1255neck had decreased significantly and that she had full range of motion. Weather-ford also had full range of motion again on March 17, 1998. At that time, Dr. Pul-liam noted that, due to her “chronic intermittent low back pain,” he planned to refer Weatherford to a specialist for further evaluation.

¶ 5. On April 13, 1998, Weatherford saw Dr. Michael Steuer, a pain management specialist. During this visit, Weatherford primarily complained of occasional headaches, shooting pain in her shoulders, and pain in her neck that radiated down into her lower back. Dr. Steuer diagnosed Weatherford with cervical and thoracic whiplash injury, myofascial syndrome, and mixed headache disorder. He also noted that Weatherford had trigger points located in the muscles adjacent to her thoracic spine. Weatherford saw Dr. Steuer on several occasions and exhibited only minimal improvement; therefore, Dr. Steuer decided to perform trigger point injections to see if Weatherford would receive any relief. Weatherford received her first trigger point injection on May 11 and returned for a follow-up visit with Dr. Steuer on May 19. On her return visit, she expressed that her lower back pain had decreased by sixty percent and did not complain of headaches on this visit. However, she complained of slight tension across the back of her shoulder blades.

¶ 6. Weatherford returned to Dr. Steuer on June 1,1998, complaining of upper back pain. As a result, Dr. Steuer performed trigger point injections in Weatherford’s right rhomboid muscle and her right shoulder blade. Dr. Steuer saw Weather-ford again on June 5, 1998. During this visit, Weatherford reported that her pain was essentially unchanged and that she was often awakened by it. Dr. Steuer increased her medication and suggested that she try physical therapy.

¶ 7. Then, on June 15, Weatherford reported that her back pain had improved by approximately fifty percent. Also, during this visit, she denied suffering from headaches. Weatherford reported significant improvement as it related to her back pain during a visit on July 21. Dr. Steuer recommended that she continue with physical therapy for another month and continue taking medications that he had previously prescribed.

¶ 8. Dr. Steuer did not see Weatherford again until September when she stated that the pain in her back had been reduced by approximately fifty percent but she also complained of right shoulder pain. Dr. Steuer prescribed her the same medications that she had previously been taking and recommended that she return in three weeks for trigger point injections. Thereafter, on October 1, 1998, Weather-ford reported that the pain in her back and shoulder had decreased by approximately sixty to sixty-five percent. On October 27, Weatherford complained of increased pain in the evenings but declined further trigger point injections, instead opting to continue physical therapy. Dr. Steuer last saw Weatherford on November 12, 1998. At this visit, her complaints remained the same as they had been on October 1 and October 27.

¶ 9. Dr. Steuer testified via deposition. He stated that he did not order any MRIs, CT scans or the like, because he elected “instead to treat her symptomatically [sic] and [would] only ... order an MRI if she failed considerably [sic] to treatment.” According to Dr. Steuer, Weatherford’s symptoms, if left untreated, would worsen.

¶ 10. Dr. Steuer was presented with Dr. Winston T. Capel’s medical notes, [1256]*1256whom Weatherford saw on October 7, 2003.4 Dr. Steuer testified that Dr. Ca-pel’s notes indicate that, based on Weath-erford’s history and physical examination, he diagnosed her with cervical spondylitic myelopathy and recommended that she undergo a cervical myelogram and post-mye-logram CT. When Dr. Steuer was asked whether he agreed with Dr. Capel’s findings, Dr. Steuer stated that “[i]t is a diagnosis that I might make.”

¶ 11. Further, Dr. Steuer stated that Weatherford’s problems were not caused by weight and that her symptoms developed immediately following “the trauma.” As for his opinion as it relates to Weather-ford’s X-rays taken immediately after the accident, he stated that they were essentially useless as a “diagnostic modality” because they are “non-sensitive for making a diagnosis of cervical disk [sic] and/or facet pathology.” Dr. Steuer also stated that he thought that Weatherford’s complaint of right shoulder pain “is very likely related to the cervical spinal pathology” and that Weatherford’s headache disorder, whiplash injury, and myofascial syndrome are all casually related to the accident.

¶ 12. After leaving Dr. Steuer’s care, Weatherford presented herself at King’s Daughters Hospital and Delta Regional on numerous occasions over the years that followed for pain that she claimed was associated with the accident as well as for injuries and conditions that she did not relate to the accident. For example, on September 23, 2000, she went to King’s Daughters complaining of back and right arm pain and then on November 5, 2000, she went to Delta Regional after she was hit in the jaw with a fist while attempting to break-up a fight.5

¶ 13. On March 28, 2003, Weatherford had an MRI taken of her cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spine. The cervical spine MRI results revealed the following: “suboptimal evaluation of the lower cervical cord secondary to motion artifact, an element of mild spinal stenosis must be considered at C5-6 and C6-7 levels.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 So. 3d 1252, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 590, 2009 WL 2857151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-weatherford-missctapp-2009.