Millet v. Evangeline Health Care, Inc.
This text of 839 So. 2d 357 (Millet v. Evangeline Health Care, Inc.) 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
Gloria Millet, Wife of/and Walter MILLET
v.
EVANGELINE HEALTH CARE, INC.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*358 John J. Rabalais, Janice B. Unland, Robert T. Lorio, Laurie W. Maschek, Covington, LA, for Defendant-Appellant, Evangeline Health Care, Inc.
christopher T. Grace, Jr., Metairie, LA, for Plaintiffs-Appellees, Gloria Millet and Walter Millet.
Panel composed of Judges JAMES L. CANNELLA, SUSAN M. CHEHARDY and CLARENCE E. McMANUS.
SUSAN M. CHEHARDY, Judge.
This is a slip-and-fall personal injury case. The defendant appeals a judgment that awarded the plaintiff general damages in the amount of $100,000.00, reduced by forty percent for comparative fault. We affirm.
The accident occurred on August 10, 2000. Gloria Millet (hereafter "Millet") *359 was visiting her brother at Evangeline of Ormond, a nursing home in which he was a patient. As Millet walked out of her brother's room, she fell and injured her knee, fracturing her left patella. This resulted in two surgeries, a lengthy recuperative period, and residual injury.
Millet filed this suit against Evangeline Health Care, Inc., owner of the nursing home (hereafter "Evangeline"). Her husband, Walter Millet, joined as plaintiff to recover for loss of consortium. After trial without a jury, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, awarding Gloria Millet $100,000.00 in general damages and $14,185.35 in special damages, a total of $114,185.35, reduced by her forty percent comparative fault to $68,478.51. The judgment also awarded Walter Millet $3,000.00 for loss of consortium, as well as giving the plaintiffs legal interest from date of demand and sixty percent of all costs.
Pursuant to Evangeline's post-trial request for written reasons for judgment, the trial judge read his findings of fact and conclusions of law into the record in open court. Evangeline appealed.
On appeal Evangeline asserts the trial court erred in finding that Millet sustained her burden of proving negligence on Evangeline's part and in finding Millet entitled to $100,000.00 in general damages.[1]
FACTS
On August 10, 2000, Gloria Millet was visiting her brother, a resident of the defendant's nursing home, Evangeline of Ormond. After approximately 20 minutes Millet exited her brother's room into the hallway. As she was leaving the room, Millet was looking back towards her brother, who was lying in his bed; apparently she was talking to him while she was going out the door. Millet slipped and fell on a wet floor near or adjacent to her brother's room. As a result of her fall, Millet sustained a transverse comminuted fracture of her left patella, i.e., she shattered her left kneecap.
In lengthy and thorough reasons for judgment, the trial court found the evidence established that one of Evangeline's employees had mopped the floor in the hallway of the nursing home prior to Millet's slip-and-fall. There were "wet floor" signs down the hallway from Millet's brother's room 20 to 25 feet away, near the nurse's station, but not in the area where Millet fell.
The trial judge specifically stated he found Millet's testimony credible. He referred to Millet's testimony that the floor was "very wet" and that there were no "wet floor" warning signs either in the area where she fell or nearby that would have put her on notice to take special precautions and to be more careful.
The judge also believed Millet's testimony that one of Evangeline's employees (a nurse named Rowena Jones who came to assist plaintiff after she fell) said, "Where are my warning signs?" The judge noted that Evangeline did not call Rowena Jones to testify and that Millet's testimony regarding Jones' statement was not refuted by any other witness called by the defense. The judge concluded that the warning signs were not placed in a strategic area near enough to have effectively warned Millet that the floor was wet. The judge also believed that warning signs shown in photographs entered into evidence as defense exhibits had been placed by Evangeline's employees after Millet fell. He also *360 found that the warning signs were located down the hallway near the nurse's station, which was not close enough to effectively warn Millet of the wet area of the hallway.
The judge referred to testimony of John Convoy, the nursing home's administrator, that the janitor had recently mopped the hallway floor. The judge pointed out that fact is verified by the accident report filed in evidence. Although Convoy testified that he saw warning signs in place when he arrived, the judge found that the warning signs had been placed in position after Millet's fall rather than before.
The judge also stated he heard no evidence that any of Evangeline's employees verbally notified Millet that the hallway had been recently mopped while she was visiting in her brother's room. The judge concluded that Millet "had no effective notice either by warning sign or by verbal announcement or notice from one of Evangeline's employees that the hallway was wet before she walked into it."
The trial judge concluded that Evangeline was sixty percent at fault because Evangeline created an unreasonable risk of harm by failing to warn Millet of the recently-mopped wet floor in the hallway next to her brother's room. The judge found it was "reasonably foreseeable that Millet might slip and fall and injure herself while walking into the hallway if she had not been properly and effectively notified that the hallway was wet due to being recently mopped."
The judge found Millet had forty percent contributory fault, however, because she was looking back into the room talking to her brother as she was walking into the hallway. The judge noted that if she had been looking ahead of herself, she probably would have noticed the wet floors and would have entered the hall floor more carefully.
ANALYSIS
Liability
Evangeline contends the trial court committed legal error when it determined that Millet sustained her burden of proof under La.R.S. 9:2800.6. Evangeline asserts there is "absolutely no evidence" that it either created the condition, had actual or constructive notice of the condition, or failed to exercise reasonable care. Evangeline argues there is nothing more it could have done to prevent the accident. Assuming that it was aware of a wet floor condition, Evangeline argues the trial testimony established there were "wet floor" signs in place. Alternatively, assuming there were no wet floor signs, Evangeline asserts there is no evidence that it knew or should have known a hazardous condition existed at the time Millet fell or that it was negligent.
First, we find no merit to Evangeline's argument about the lack or presence of "wet floor" signs. The trial court's findings regarding the presence and location of "wet floor" signs were based on credibility determinations, which may not be reversed in the absence of manifest error. We find no manifest error and, hence, we find no error in the court's determination that there were no wet floor signs in the area where plaintiff fell. Arceneaux v. Domingue, 365 So.2d 1330, 1333 (La.1978); see also, Lirette v. State Farm Ins. Co., 563 So.2d 850, 852 (La.1990); Rosell v. ESCO, 549 So.2d 840, 844 (La.1989).
We adopt the recent statement of the fourth circuit regarding hospital slip-and-fall liability:
[T]he burden of proof that LSA-R.S.
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839 So. 2d 357, 2003 WL 191434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millet-v-evangeline-health-care-inc-lactapp-2003.