Moore v. Healthcare Elmwood, Inc.

582 So. 2d 871, 1991 WL 101472
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 1991
Docket91-CA-41
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 582 So. 2d 871 (Moore v. Healthcare Elmwood, 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.

Bluebook
Moore v. Healthcare Elmwood, Inc., 582 So. 2d 871, 1991 WL 101472 (La. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

582 So.2d 871 (1991)

Kimberly S. MOORE
v.
HEALTHCARE ELMWOOD, INC. and Lee R. Domangue, M.D.

No. 91-CA-41.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

June 5, 1991.

*872 C.A. Fleming III, Boggs, Loehn & Rodrigue, New Orleans, for Lee R. Domangue, defendant-appellant.

Ronald W. Morrison, Metairie, for Kimberly S. Moore, plaintiff-appellee.

Jeffery P. Lozes, Lozes & Cambre, New Orleans, for Haydee DeLorimier, third-party defendant/appellee.

Before KLIEBERT, and DUFRESNE, JJ., and FINK, J. Pro Tem.

ELORA C. FINK, Judge Pro Tem.

This is a medical malpractice suit in which the plaintiff sued a hospital and an emergency room physician, claiming the physician was negligent in removing a cast from her arm. The plaintiff asserted the doctor cut her skin with the cast-cutting instrument, resulting in two wounds on her right forearm that left noticeable and unsightly scars. After malpractice review panel proceedings were stymied by the panel's inability to reach a conclusion, the plaintiff filed suit. The physician filed a third-party suit against the plaintiff's nonphysician friend who had applied the cast to the plaintiff's arm.

The hospital settled prior to trial. After a bench trial, the district court awarded judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Kimberly Moore, who was awarded damages in the amount of $8,500 plus interest, costs and expert fees. The remaining defendant, Dr. Lee R. Domangue, appeals; the plaintiff has answered the appeal, seeking an increase in quantum.

The issues on appeal are, first, whether the trial judge erred in finding Dr. Domangue's care and treatment of the plaintiff deviated from the requisite standard of care; second, whether the trial judge erred in failing to find fault on the plaintiff's part and/or on the part of the third-party defendant, Haydee DeLorimier; third, whether the damages award was inadequate.

FACTS

Kimberly Moore

At the time of her injury Kimberly Moore was an 18-year-old junior college student. On Saturday, September 12, 1987, she attended a high-school dance with her boyfriend. During the course of the evening she imbibed from five to seven drinks containing alcohol. When she awoke the next morning, she discovered her right wrist was limp—she could not keep it raised. She felt no pain, but she could feel some hot/cold sensations and felt something like a numbness.

Assuming the problem would correct itself, Moore wrapped the wrist with an elastic bandage to immobilize it. Thereafter she pursued her planned activities for the day, which included competing in a mixeddoubles tennis tournament. In order to play, however, she had to tape her hand, wrist and forearm to the tennis racket.

By 8:00 that evening the problem had not resolved itself. Moore asked her boyfriend's mother, Haydee DeLorimier, to help her because Mrs. DeLorimier worked at a hospital. (Although DeLorimier had worked as a nurse's aide in the past, at the time of this incident she was employed as a hospital clerk.)

DeLorimier told Moore she should see a doctor but, after some coaxing, she agreed to help Moore. She wrapped Moore's arm with several thin strips of plaster-impregnated gauze bandage, covering the area from the knuckles almost to her elbow. Moore promised to see a physician the next day after class and promised to watch for swelling, discoloration or discomfort. DeLorimier instructed Moore to soak the cast off in the event it started to create problems.

*873 Moore testified the cast was loose enough for her to put a finger under it and DeLorimier tested its looseness several times as the cast hardened.

The following day, after attending classes from eight a.m. until past noon, Moore walked from her school to nearby Elmwood Medical Center to find out what was wrong with her wrist. In the Emergency Room she gave admission information to a nurse, stating her symptoms had appeared when she woke up Sunday morning. She denied telling anyone she received the injury after a fall.

She was examined by Dr. Lee Domangue, who asked her where the cast came from, but not how it had been applied. He did not test her fingers. He decided to remove the cast by cutting it off. Moore testified she asked him if he could soak it off with warm water, but he told her no, it would be too messy and he would still have to use the cutter.

Using a cast-cutting machine, Domangue sliced a longitudinal line through the plaster on either side of the arm, in line with the pinkie and the thumb, respectively. Moore testified he told her that the cutter would create heat and noise but was designed not to cut skin; he did not warn her the cutter could penetrate her skin. Consequently, although she began to feel a lot of heat while the cast was being removed, she did not tell the doctor. She testified she felt some pain and grimaced, but did not ask him to stop cutting because she did not think the process could be halted. The doctor never inquired whether she was uncomfortable.

After the cast was removed, the doctor told Moore to wash the excess plaster off her arm at a washbasin, at which time she discovered long cuts on either side of her arm along the pathway of the cast-cutter. Moore stated she began to cry upon seeing the cuts, but the defendant neither responded to this discovery nor did he do anything to treat the wounds, although he did manipulate her fingers.

Domangue then sent Moore for X-rays and, when she returned, he informed her he had made an appointment for her to see Dr. David Aiken, an orthopedic surgeon, the following day. Domangue then set her arm in a splint (a half-cast) and discharged her, without telling her what was wrong with her arm. Moore stated her arm's condition did not improve after the cast was taken off.

Moore went to Dr. Aiken as scheduled. When he removed the splint to examine her arm the cuts began to bleed because the skin had adhered to the bandage portion of the splint. Aiken suspected nerve damage and ordered more X-rays; he then applied a new splint and scheduled her for another visit. Moore did not return to Aiken, however, because she had decided to see Dr. Donald Faust, another orthopedist, who had been recommended by some of her friends who were tennis players.

She saw Dr. Faust several days later, but failed to return to him also because he also failed to make a diagnosis and she could not afford more X-rays.

Moore testified her wrist problem cleared up by itself in approximately ten weeks, but the scars from the cast removal remained. She did not seek surgical revision of the scars until 1990 because she was unaware such treatment was available.

On cross-examination, Moore admitted she knew that DeLorimier was not a nurse when she asked her to help, but said she thought DeLorimier was some type of supervisor at the hospital. Moore insisted that the cast was not tight after it hardened, stating that she could slide a finger under it to scratch and she could move her fingers up and down slightly. She reiterated that there was no improvement after Domingue removed the homemade cast or, for that matter, after she went to the specialists. She stated that after the cast was cut open it did not stick to her skin but only left a residue of plaster dust on her arm. She said, in addition, that there was no one else waiting in the Emergency Room when she arrived and she was seen promptly.

Haydee DeLorimier

Haydee DeLorimier's testimony regarding her application of the cast to the plaintiff's *874 arm was essentially the same as Moore's.

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582 So. 2d 871, 1991 WL 101472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-healthcare-elmwood-inc-lactapp-1991.