Rebecca McMurry v. Metro Government of Nashville

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 26, 2003
DocketM2000-02902-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Rebecca McMurry v. Metro Government of Nashville (Rebecca McMurry v. Metro Government of Nashville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rebecca McMurry v. Metro Government of Nashville, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE September 5, 2001 Session

REBECCA MCMURRY v. METROPOLITAN GOVERNMENT OF NASHVILLE AND DAVIDSON COUNTY

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 99C-1572 Hamilton V. Gayden, Jr., Judge

No. M2000-02902-COA-R3-CV - Filed February 26, 2003

This appeal is brought by an employee of the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County who slipped and fell while working and, as a result, injured her knee. The employee brought suit pursuant to the Tennessee Governmental Tort Liability Act to recover damages for her lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, and expenses. Prior to this suit, Metro paid the employee’s medical expenses and compensated her for the work that she missed during her recovery. The trial judge awarded the employee $24,000, finding that Metro was at fault, but that the employee’s injury was merely the exacerbation of a previous knee injury. The trial court also awarded the employee $2,858.30 in discretionary costs, but disallowed a $900 charge for the trial preparation fee of the employee’s expert. The employee appeals the trial court’s final order. We affirm the trial court in all respects.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed and Remanded

PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BEN H. CANTRELL , P.J., M.S., and WILLIAM B. CAIN , J., joined.

Richard W. Mattson, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Rebecca McMurry.

John L. Kennedy, Rita Roberts-Turner, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County. OPINION

Rebecca McMurry filed a complaint against the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County (“Metro”) and the Davidson County Sheriff’s Office (“DCSO”),1 in which she alleged a cause of action against Metro pursuant to the Tennessee Governmental Tort Liability Act (“GTLA”). Ms. McMurry claimed that she slipped on water while working at the Criminal Justice Center in Nashville on September 14, 1998, and that, as a result of this fall, she suffered a knee injury. Ms. McMurry prayed for $130,000, which included money for her past and future damages resulting from her injury including pain and suffering, lost earning capacity and money for psychological treatment. Ms. McMurry also sought $3,758.30 in discretionary costs.

A non-jury trial was held, after which the trial judge awarded Ms. McMurry $24,000 for her damages and $2,858.30 in discretionary costs. Ms. McMurry appeals that award to this court. For reasons stated herein, we affirm the trial court’s decision.

I. Facts

The Appellant, Ms. McMurry, was forty-five years old and employed by Metro at the time of the accident. Ms. McMurry was working at the Criminal Justice Center and did not know that the hallway floor beyond the security door had just been mopped. After Ms. McMurry came through the security door she slipped and fell on the wet floor. When Ms. McMurry fell she landed in a seated position with her left knee twisted under her. Ms. McMurry testified that she heard a pop as she fell and that her left knee became so swollen that her pant leg had to be cut off of her leg by the emergency technician. Ms. McMurry was transported by ambulance to the emergency room at Nashville Meharry Hospital or General Hospital.

Since the September 14, 1998, accident, Ms. McMurry testified that she has seen four different doctors and tried 20 kinds of pain medication in addition to enduring physical therapy. Ms. McMurry was not satisfied with the treatment that she received from the first two doctors that she saw. Therefore, she contacted the doctor who had performed surgery on her knee in 1988, Dr. Huber, and he referred her to Dr. McLaughlin. Dr. McLaughlin performed arthroscopic surgery on Ms. McMurry’s knee and eventually determined she had reached her maximum medical improvement.

Ms. McMurry missed 130 days of work while recuperating from her injury and had to take six (6) days of leave without pay to attend doctor appointments. Ms. McMurry testified that she still suffers from pain and that she sleeps in an inflated leg brace. She also testified she cannot stoop, squat, climb or run up and down steps and that she has a hard time reaching or doing excessive walking.

1 The Court subsequently dismissed DCSO as a defendant because it is not an entity capable of being sued. Metro was the only remaining defendant.

-2- Prior to the fall at issue in this appeal, Ms. McMurry had injured her left knee in 1988. As a result of that injury she had extra-articular reconstructive surgery on her knee for a torn anterior cruciate ligament. The surgery was performed by Dr. Huber. After this surgery, Ms. McMurry underwent physical therapy to rehabilitate her knee. For about four months after this surgery, Ms. McMurry remained under her doctor’s care. There was some reference to a 22% disability rating to her lower extremity and a 9% rating to her body as a whole resulting from this prior injury.2

When describing her prior injury, Ms. McMurry stated that after the surgery she suffered few limitations. Her doctor gave her a brace after the surgery, but did not set any limits for her. He told her to wear the brace on her left leg until she was comfortable with the strength of her knee. Ms. McMurry testified that after her first surgery she could ride a bike, but could not run. Ms. McMurry testified that she started working herself out of the brace between 1995 and 1996. Further, that the last time that she wore the knee brace before the September 14, 1998, accident was in February of 1996.

Ms. Joyce Jordan, a co-worker of Ms. McMurry’s since 1995, said that prior to the 1998 accident Ms. McMurry had a limp and wore a brace. Ms. Jordan testified that she saw Ms. McMurry in the brace “all the time” and that she had never seen Ms. McMurry without her knee brace prior to the 1998 accident. Mr. James McIllwain testified that he also noticed that Ms. McMurry had a limp and that Ms. McMurry complained about her knee injury prior to the 1998 fall. Mr. Bauder testified that he had seen Ms. McMurry in a knee brace and that she had a slight limp prior to the 1998 fall.

Dr. McLaughlin testified that when she first visited him, Ms. McMurry’s situation was that she had fallen, had been treated conservatively, but still reported pain. She was still wearing a knee immobilizer because of her sensation of instability and was taking medications for her knee. Upon his initial examination, Dr. McLaughlin determined that Ms. McMurry had atrophy or loss of muscle bulk, which was attributable to decreased use of the left leg. Wearing a knee brace for a long period of time, as Ms. McMurry had, would promote atrophy. She had no effusion or swelling in the knee at that point, but reported tenderness around the knee. An MRI performed September 29, 1998, showed:

some mild amount of fluid in the joint and showed some thinning of the anterior cruciate ligament, which may be chronic or acute. It may be at least a partial injury at one time in her past. I feel that that finding was secondary to her 1988 injury. Also showed some strain in the medial collateral ligament, which I felt that that was likely a portion of her new injury, the strain in the medial collateral ligament which is something that I would have anticipated to improve with conservative treatment over a reasonable period of time. The fact that I saw her approximately six months

2 Dr. Sieveking, Ms. McM urry’s witness, testified that Dr. Huber’s medical records reflected that Dr. Huber observed that Dr. Spangler had given Ms. M cMurry the disability rating.

-3- after her injury and she had not improved, raised the concern of, you know, why is she not improving.

Dr.

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