Oliveaux v. St. Francis Medical Center

889 So. 2d 1264, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 3048, 2004 WL 2889764
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 2004
DocketNo. 39,147-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 889 So. 2d 1264 (Oliveaux v. St. Francis Medical Center) 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
Oliveaux v. St. Francis Medical Center, 889 So. 2d 1264, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 3048, 2004 WL 2889764 (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinions

1 .MOORE, J.

The plaintiff, Loyd Donald Oliveaux (represented by his sister, Jennifer 0. Berry, and referred to herein as “Oliveaux”), appeals a jury verdict that rejected his wrongful death claims against St. Francis Medical Center, Dr. Camille Perkins, and the State of Louisiana, Department of Social Services, Child Protection Service (“CPS”), for the death of his 23-month-old daughter, Haley. Oliveaux urges that the jury charge and other procedural errors tainted the jury’s consideration of the case, mandating a de novo review of the record. For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual Background

Haley was born in January 1992. By late 1993, her father, Oliveaux, was separated from her mother, Allison Oliveaux (“Allison”), and was in the Ouachita Correctional Center on a probation violation. Haley was spending part of her time with Allison’s parents, the Laytons, and the rest with Allison and her boyfriend, Jimmie Christian Duncan. Haley had to spend considerable time with Duncan, as he apparently stayed at the couple’s West Monroe apartment while Allison was at work.

On November 29, 1993, Duncan took Haley to her pediatrician, Dr. Bulloch, with a swollen scalp and forehead. Duncan said that while trying to reach a piggy bank placed on a chest of drawers, Haley had stepped on the open bottom drawer and the whole chest fell over; the child had landed on the floor with the chest on top of her. Dr. Bulloch immediately sent Haley to St. Francis, where CT scans showed she had fractures on three different parts of her skull and a subdural he-matoma. At trial, several physicians testified that injuries this severe could not have been accidental, |2and were in fact more consistent with “shaken infant syndrome.”

Haley spent four days in the St. Francis pediatric intensive care unit (“PICU”) and then two more on the pediatric floor. During this time, family members grew suspicious of Duncan’s account of the injuries; on December 2, Allison’s father, Bill Layton, related their concerns to Dr. Perkins, director of the PICU. Dr. Perkins called a St. Francis social worker, Sister June Myer, who in turn called CPS and requested an investigation. Apparently Sr. June failed to report, or the CPS intake worker failed to record, that Haley had three skull fractures, because CPS designated the case a “Level III” priority, “unspecified physical abuse,” rather than “Level I” or “high priority.” CPS assigned the case to a case worker, Connie Griffon (now known as Connie Pace), on the afternoon of December 2.

The next day, December 3, Ms. Pace and West Monroe Police Detective Tim Zeigler held several interviews at St. Francis. Sister June told them Duncan’s version of the accident, but said she had noticed no “inappropriate conduct” at the hospital by either Allison or Duncan; the Laytons were irritated because they were not allowed in PICU while Duncan was. Dr. Perkins told them that Haley had three skull fractures and numerous bruises, but that these were consistent with the history; she suspected not child abuse, but friction between Duncan and the Laytons. Ms. Pace and Det. Zeigler also interviewed two PICU nurses, neither of whom voiced any concern about child abuse; one of them, Nurse Strickland, said Haley called Duncan “daddy.” They also interviewed Mr. Layton, who admitted he was “not crazy about” Duncan and did not see how the child |scould be so seriously hurt by a falling chest of drawers, but did not say he suspected Duncan of child abuse. Allison’s sister, Carole Gwin, told them there was much violence between Allison and Duncan, but she had never seen any marks on Haley.

[1269]*1269Later that afternoon, Ms. Pace and Det. Zeigler interviewed Allison and Duncan at the West Monroe Police Department. Allison said she was not at home when the accident occurred; Duncan gave a slightly different account of the chest-of-drawers incident. Ms. Pace and Det. Zeigler then went to Allison and Duncan’s apartment on Copley Street and examined the chest of drawers. Det. Zeigler noted that the bottom drawer was “cocked” just as Duncan had said, and felt that this corroborated the story. Finding that the injuries could have been accidental, he did not pursue criminal charges.

On December 4, Haley was discharged from St. Francis; she spent a few days with her grandparents, the Laytons, and then returned to Allison and Duncan.

The following’ Monday, December 6, Ms. Pace interviewed Haley’s grandmother, Julie Layton, and a daycare operator, Cathy Reed, and concluded she did not have enough evidence to substantiate a claim of child abuse. She did not call another daycare operator, Debra Craighead, whose name Allison had provided. On December 8, she sent a request to St. Francis for Haley’s medical records. These showed that Haley had been admitted to the emergency room three times in the preceding month; however, CPS did not receive the records until December 17. By that time, |4Ms. Pace and her supervisor, Linda Foster, had invalidated the case for unspecified physical abuse.

On Saturday, December 18, an ambulance carried Haley to the emergency room of Glenwood Regional Medical Center in West Monroe, with the report that she had drowned in a bathtub. When she arrived she was blue and could not be revived. After she was pronounced dead, doctors noticed that her anus and rectum were abnormally distended. Dr. Norwood, director of the emergency room, testified that she had multiple tears and scars, some fresh and some older, suggesting that she had been sexually abused over a period of time. The coroner, Dr. Hayne, confirmed the presence of injuries but did not feel that any were “old.”

Oliveaux filed this wrongful death and survival action in December 1994 against Duncan, St. Francis and CPS. Oliveaux was killed in a train accident in late 1996, and his sister was substituted as party plaintiff. By amended petitions, Oliveaux added Dr. Perkins as a defendant and dismissed Duncan, noting the latter had been convicted of capital murder in Haley’s death and was on death row. The matter proceeded to an eight-day jury trial in December 2003.

In response to a special verdict form, the jury declined to find (1) that any employee of CPS was grossly negligent and that this gross negligence was a cause of Haley’s injuries; (2) that Dr. Perkins breached the standard of care for pediatricians and that her breach was a cause of Haley’s injuries; (3) that the nurses at St. Francis breached the standard of care for nurses, and that their breach was a cause of Haley’s injuries; and (4) that any social | ¡^service worker at St. Francis was negligent and that this negligence was a cause of Haley’s injuries. The jury further found that the fault of a non-party was the legal cause of Haley’s injuries, assessing that fault at 100%. Finally, the jury found that Dr. Perkins was not an employee of St. Francis at the time of the events in question. The district court signed judgment in due course dismissing all claims.

Oliveaux has appealed, raising five assignments of error. He does not contend that the verdict was plainly wrong; thus the issue of manifest error is not properly preserved for appeal. URCA Rule- 1-3; Steed v. St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, 31,521, p. 6 (La.App. 2 Cir. 2/24/99), 728 So.2d 931, 938, writ denied, 99-0877 (La.5/7/99), 740 So.2d 1290.

[1270]*1270 Discussion: Qualified Immunity

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Bluebook (online)
889 So. 2d 1264, 2004 La. App. LEXIS 3048, 2004 WL 2889764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliveaux-v-st-francis-medical-center-lactapp-2004.