Peters v. Wooten

297 S.W.3d 55, 2009 Ky. App. LEXIS 111, 2009 WL 2059085
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 17, 2009
Docket2007-CA-001955-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 297 S.W.3d 55 (Peters v. Wooten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peters v. Wooten, 297 S.W.3d 55, 2009 Ky. App. LEXIS 111, 2009 WL 2059085 (Ky. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

MOORE, Judge.

Norman Peters appeals a verdict and judgment for the defense after a jury trial in a personal injury case in the Warren Circuit Court. The issues before this Court are whether the circuit court erred in: (1) ordering Peters to execute a release allowing Wooten access to his application and medical records from the Social Security Administration and allowing Wooten’s counsel to mention Peters’s application to a “government agency” during the trial; (2) deciding that testimony by Peters regarding his medical condition on direct examination and testimony by Peters’s wife on cross-examination opened the door to the reference to collateral source benefits; (3) not giving the jury instruction Peters requested regarding awarding damages if a pre-existing injury was found; and (4) denying Peters’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

After a careful review of the record, we affirm because: (1) the decision by the trial court in ordering discovery of Peters’s social security disability application, while in error, does not provide a basis for relief sought by Peters; (2) testimony by Peters, as well as testimony by Peters’s wife, his witness, opened the door to allow the admissibility of the collateral source evidence; (3) the jury instruction given by the trial court substantially conformed with similar jury instructions appellate courts have approved; and (4) there is no evidence in the record that the jury’s verdict was flagrantly against the evidence or a result of passion or prejudice.

*58 I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

While stopped in traffic in Bowling Green, Kentucky, Peters was involved in an automobile accident when his pickup truck was struck from behind by Katherine Wooten. The force of the accident caused Peters to strike the back of his head against the glass in the back of the truck cab. Paramedics arrived at the scene of the accident, but Peters appeared uninjured and refused treatment. Peters was able to drive his truck away from the accident scene, but Wooten’s vehicle was totaled.

Soon after the accident, Peters claimed that he suffered from a severe headache, pain in his neck and extremities, and tremors. Subsequently, Peters filed a complaint against Wooten and litigation ensued, resulting in a jury verdict for Wooten. 3

The first issue on appeal originated during discovery, when Peters noted at his deposition that he had filed a claim for application for social security disability benefits. Wooten moved the court to compel Peters to sign an authorization allowing the release of any records relating to this application, claiming a right to examine the records because Peters put his physical condition into controversy and these records were material to the personal injury action.

Peters responded to Wooten’s motion on two fronts. First, he argued that he did not waive his privacy rights by filing his complaint. Second, Peters asserted that the information regarding the application for benefits was beyond the scope of CR 4 26.02, 5 as Wooten had already obtained medical records regarding his injuries.

The circuit court ordered Peters to execute an authorization form so his counsel could obtain Peters’s application and records from the Social Security Administration. Peters’s counsel was then to produce the records to Wooten. 6 Peters, moving in limine, again argued that these records were inadmissible as irrelevant. The court denied this motion.

The circuit court’s having denied Peters’s motion in limine, Wooten introduced at trial employment information contained in Peters’s application to a “government agency.” Wooten’s counsel did not reference that the application was for social security disability benefits. Rather, Wooten’s counsel referred to employment information Peters had provided on an application to a government agency that was inconsistent with Peters’s prior testimony. 7 Peters’s counsel timely objected to this, *59 but his objection was overruled. He now asks our Court to find error in this ruling.

A central issue at trial was whether Peters’s condition, medical bills, and damages for pain and suffering were related to the accident. 8 Peters did not immediately seek medical treatment after the accident. Two days after the accident, he visited Dr. Doshi; x-rays and an MRI were performed at that time. 9 After this, Peters did not receive any treatment or visit any doctors for approximately three months although he complained of neck pain and headaches which he blamed on the accident.

The video depositions of two physicians who treated Peters after the accident were played for the jury. Dr. Walter Warren indicated that based on reasonable medical probability and Peters’s lack of symptoms before the accident, Peters’s pain and symptoms were caused by the automobile accident. Dr. Phillip Singer, another physician Peters consulted, explained that Peters had a degenerative disc disease. Dr. Singer elaborated that while the accident did not cause the degenerative disease, it was possible that the accident might have triggered symptoms of the condition. Dr. Singer was of the opinion that a discecto-my, a surgery performed on the neck, would be the best course of procedure to alleviate Peters’s pain. Both of the doctors’ opinions regarding Peters’s symptoms were based on them own evaluations and Peters’s verbal description that the pain began after the accident. Neither physician reviewed Peters’s medical history prior to the accident. In response, Wooten tried to demonstrate that Peters’s pain was the product of a pre-existing condition and was not a result of the accident.

Muddying the waters regarding whether Peters’s medical condition was related to the accident and bringing to light the second issue on appeal is the testimony of Linda Reach, Peters’s wife. During Reach’s direct examination, she testified extensively to how much pain Peters was in after the wreck and that she knew something “bad” was wrong with him. So, she encouraged him to seek medical treatment. Despite this, Peters saw only one doctor, Dr. Doshi, two days after the accident and then did not seek treatment for the next three months.

On cross-examination, Wooten’s counsel questioned Reach regarding the reasons that Peters did not seek medical treatment for the three months after the accident when she had testified that Peters was in a great deal of pain at that time. When specifically questioned regarding this three-month period without treatment, Reach first stated that they were waiting on referrals to other doctors. Next, she testified that “we had expended all of our money on doctor’s bills and we were having to use our credit cards....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.3d 55, 2009 Ky. App. LEXIS 111, 2009 WL 2059085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-wooten-kyctapp-2009.