Meany v. Meany
This text of 631 So. 2d 14 (Meany v. Meany) 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.
Opinion
Linda Forte MEANY
v.
Lawrence G. MEANY.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*15 Raymond C. Burkart, Jr., Kendra LaNata Van Dalen, New Orleans, for plaintiff/appellee.
Anthony J. Clesi, Jr., Lynn H. Frank, Ward & Clesi, New Orleans, and John Y. Kennedy, Metairie, for defendant/appellant, Lawrence G. Meany.
Before BYRNES, WARD, and PLOTKIN, JJ.
PLOTKIN, Judge.
Defendant Larry Meany appeals a trial court judgment awarding his ex-wife, plaintiff Linda Meany, $125,000 in damages based on a jury finding that Mr. Meany negligently transmitted genital herpes to Mrs. Meany. We reverse and render.
Facts:
The parties to this action were married on March 25, 1974. Prior to her marriage, Ms. Meany admits that she had three sexual partners.
Mr. and Mrs. Meany lived together continuously from the date of their marriage until they separated in October 1980; during that period they had two children. The parties were then separated until June 1981, when they reconciled. At the time of their reconciliation, Mr. Meany told Mrs. Meany that he had had sex with at least one other woman during their separation. She claims that he specifically told her he'd only been with one woman; he says he does not remember saying one woman and admits that in fact he had sex with four or five different women during that period.
After the reconciliation, Mr. Meany claims that the parties resumed a sexual relationship, although they did not "act like honeymooners." Mrs. Meany claims that she and her husband had sex only one time after the reconciliation, on March 1, 1985, when their third child was conceived. Both parties agree that they did not engage in sexual activity after that date, although they continued to live together for some unspecified period after that. They eventually divorced in May of 1988.
During the time the parties lived together after the initial separation, they were members of a religious group which believed in faith healing and which therefore discouraged its members from seeking medical attention. For example, Mrs. Meany attempted to have her third child at home without medical assistance, despite the fact that her first two children were born by caesarian section. After three days of labor with her third child, Mrs. Meany was rushed to the hospital for an emergency C-section.
Shortly after the birth of that child, Mrs. Meany claims that she first began to notice an irritation in her genital area. She claims that the irritation was recurring, usually manifesting itself around the time of her *16 monthly cycle. She finally sought medical treatment for this condition in October 1987, when her doctor diagnosed a yeast infection and possible urinary tract infection. She mentioned the problem to the doctor again in May 1988, when she consulted her gynecologist about a tubal ligation to be performed in conjunction with a "tummy tuck." Then, in June of 1988, she had a culture taken, which tested positive for genital herpes. About a year and a half later, in November of 1989, Mrs. Meany consulted a different doctor, who diagnosed venereal warts, a different sexually-transmitted disease. Later that month, Mrs. Meany underwent laser surgery for removal of the warts.
Since the breakup of her marriage, Mrs. Meany has consulted two counselors to help her deal with the problems caused by her divorce and the surrounding circumstances, including the discovery of her contraction of the two sexually-transmitted diseases.
After learning about his ex-wife's conditions, Mr. Meany underwent a blood test which tested positive for genital herpes, although he claims that he has never experienced an outbreak of the disease. Although he underwent a visual exam for venereal warts, he had not undergone an internal inspection. One of Mrs. Meany's other lovers, Donald Heron, testified at trial that he has been completely tested for both genital herpes and venereal warts, and he was negative for both. There is no evidence concerning Mrs. Meany's other two previous lovers.
Mrs. Meany filed suit against her ex-husband, claiming that he negligently infected her with the viruses which cause genital herpes and venereal warts. The jury found in favor of the plaintiff, awarding her a total of $125,000, itemized as follows:
Past and future pain and suffering $ 7,500
Past and future mental anguish 50,000
Permanent disability 10,000
Past and future medical expenses 50,000
Loss of society and enjoyment of
life 7,500
________
TOTAL $125,000
Mr. Meany appeals, making the following assignments of error:
1. Mrs. Meany failed to carry her burden of proving that he infected her with the sexually-transmitted diseases.
2. He had no duty to avoid transmitting a sexually-transmitted disease which he did not know he had.
3. The damages were excessive.
4. The judgment should be reduced by the limits of his homeowner's insurance policy.
5. Any recovery by Mrs. Meany should be prohibited by public policy.
Because we find error which requires reversal based on Mr. Meany's second assignment of error, we pretermit discussion of the other issues raised by the appellant.
Lack of duty
By his second assignment of error, Mr. Meany claims that the trial court erred in finding that he had a duty to either warn Mrs. Meany of the possibility of contacting venereal diseases from him or protect her from contraction of the diseases, because he was unaware of the fact that he had the diseases at the time of his last sexual encounter with his ex-wife in March of 1985. He cites jurisprudence from other states holding that a person cannot be held liable for spreading a contagious disease which he did not know that he had. He claims that holding him liable under the circumstances would make him strictly liable for transmitting a disease of which he was unaware. By his reply brief, Mr. Meany claims that the general contagious disease law developed in the cases from other states is supported by Louisiana's duty/risk analysis. He also alleges that lack of knowledge of a risk on the part of an alleged tortfeasor precludes a finding of negligence because a person has no duty to prevent a risk that he does not recognize.
Mrs. Meany counters by saying that Louisiana law imposes a duty on Mr. Meany to warn and protect her from transmission of the diseases, if he knew or should have known that he had the diseases. She cites LSA-R.S. 40:1062, which makes it unlawful to infect another person with a venereal disease, which she says signifies the state's intention to impose a duty on people not to infect others with venereal diseases. Given *17 the "nature of his extramarital affairs, and the symptoms he exhibited,"[1] Mrs. Meany claims that Mr. Meany should have known that he might have genital herpes and venereal warts.
Generally, in order to be entitled to recover damages based on a negligence cause of action, a plaintiff has the burden of presenting the following:
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631 So. 2d 14, 1993 WL 539868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meany-v-meany-lactapp-1993.