Reece v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.

217 S.W.3d 226, 2007 Ky. LEXIS 62, 2007 WL 858754
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 2007
Docket2005-SC-000079-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 217 S.W.3d 226 (Reece v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reece v. Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co., 217 S.W.3d 226, 2007 Ky. LEXIS 62, 2007 WL 858754 (Ky. 2007).

Opinion

SCHRODER, Justice.

The primary issue in this appeal is whether the' plaintiff in a personal injury case must present specific evidence of how her earning power was permanently impaired in order to submit the issue of permanent impairment to the jury. We hold that the plaintiff need only prove with reasonable probability that the injury is permanent in order to obtain an instruction on permanent impairment of earning power. We also adjudge that it was error to allow in evidence of the medical license suspension of one of appellant’s treating physician witnesses.

On October 20,1997, Appellant, Shannon Reece, was injured in an accident as a passenger in an automobile owned and operated by Kathleen Opal. It was undisputed that Opal was solely at fault in the accident, and her insurance carrier, GEI-CO, paid Reece the full $10,000 in PIP benefits, as well as the policy limits of $25,000. Nationwide, the insurance carrier for Reece’s father, provided underin-sured motorist coverage for Reece under two policies, for a total of $50,000 in coverage. Reece brought the , action herein against Nationwide to collect the underin-sured motorist benefits. The parties stipulated to coverage, hence the only issues for trial were the extent and duration of Reece’s injuries caused by the 1997 accident. .

At trial Reece sought to prove that she suffered neck and back sprain/strain injuries as a result of the 1997 auto accident, claiming damages for past and future med *228 ical expenses, past and future pain and suffering, “permanent injury”, and for permanent impairment of her power to earn money. Evidence was presented at trial that Reece had pre-existing disc hernia-tions from 1996, and that she suffered subsequent back/neck injuries in a 1998 cheerleading accident and in another auto accident in 2000. Reece presented the testimony of Dr. David Thurman, a pain management specialist, who treated her for neck and back pain after the 1997 accident. Dr. Thurman testified that Reece sustained a permanent strain/sprain injury to her lumbar spine as a result of the 1997 accident. During his treatment of Reece, Dr. Thurman placed no restrictions on her activities until after the 1998 cheerleading accident.

Reece took Dr. Thurman’s deposition on October 2, 2003, and that deposition was ultimately read into the record at trial on October 30, 2003. On October 16, 2003, two weeks after Dr. Thurman’s deposition was taken, the Kentucky Medical License Board entered an emergency order suspending Dr. Thurman’s license to practice medicine for improperly prescribing Oxycontin which allegedly caused the death of a patient. Nationwide thereafter supplemented its witness list to include a representative of the Kentucky Medical License Board to testify regarding the license suspension. Through a motion in limine, Reece asked that this testimony be suppressed as irrelevant. The trial court denied the motion. At trial Nationwide did not call the intended witness, or present any evidence concerning the license suspension. However, Reece preemptively apprised the jury of the license suspension during voir dire, and mentioned it in her opening statement and closing argument.

Dr. Thurman referred Reece to Dr. George Raque, a neurosurgeon, for further evaluation. Dr. Raque testified via deposition that Reece had sustained injuries to her discs and lumbar spine at the L4-L5 level and that such injuries were permanent. It was Dr. Raque’s opinion that the 1997 accident significantly enlarged one of the pre-existing disc herniations and was two-thirds responsible for Reece’s back/ neck pain and the permanency of her condition.

Reece testified that as a result of the back/neck injuries from the 1997 accident, she is unable to lift any significant weight and cannot sit for long periods of time. Reece stated that she attended Western Kentucky University for a semester, but had to leave because she could not go to class due to back pain and doctors’ appointments. Thereafter, she attended Jefferson Community College (JCC) until she was placed on academic suspension. Reece stated that she ultimately wanted to finish college, become a registered nurse and work in a position that did not require heavy lifting. While attending JCC, Reece worked a data entry job at UPS for over a year, but was miserable because she had to sit and look up at a computer screen the whole time. After leaving UPS, Reece was employed in a secretarial position at Baptist East Hospital until she was asked to resign because of missing so much work. At the time of trial, Reece was not employed.

At the close of evidence, Nationwide moved for a directed verdict on Reece’s claims of “permanent injury” and permanent impairment of her earning power. The court granted the directed verdict as to those two claims. The jury awarded Reece: $8,000 for past and future pain and suffering; $7,000 for past medical expenses; and $15,000 for future medical expenses. Reece appealed, arguing it was reversible error to deny the motion in limine to suppress the evidence of Dr. Thurman’s license suspension, that the *229 court improperly limited her voir dire, and that it was error to direct a verdict for Nationwide on her claims for “permanent injury” and permanent impairment of earning power. The Court of Appeals affirmed on all issues raised. This Court granted discretionary review.

We shall first address the directed verdict for Nationwide on the claims for “permanent injury” and permanent impairment of earning power. The Court of Appeals correctly recognized that the two claims were not separate claims because the damages for permanent injury are measured by one’s permanent impairment of power to earn money. The court then found that Reece failed to present sufficient evidence of a permanent injury to warrant an instruction thereon because she failed to offer specific evidence of how her earning power had been diminished because of the permanent injury. Relying on Herndon v. Waldon, 243 Ky. 312, 47 S.W.2d 1047 (1932), the court ruled that to create a submissible issue on permanent injury, the injury must “be of the nature that a permanent impairment to earn money would naturally follow therefrom, or the permanent injury must produce permanent or irremedial pain.” The court then concluded that Reece’s injury did not meet that standard because the disabling effects of Reece’s injury were not obvious and a permanent impairment to her earning capacity was not readily apparent.

The question before us is whether the evidence submitted by Reece in this case was sufficient to warrant an instruction on permanent impairment of earning power, or whether Reece was required to present specific evidence, presumably in the form of an expert, of how her earning power was permanently impaired by the injury. Reece argues that no specific evidence of permanent impairment of earning power is required, only proof that the injury is permanent which she presented through the testimony of Dr. Thurman and Dr. Raque. Nationwide contends that the Court of Appeals correctly set out the standard which would require specific evidence of permanent impairment of earning power in the present case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 S.W.3d 226, 2007 Ky. LEXIS 62, 2007 WL 858754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reece-v-nationwide-mutual-insurance-co-ky-2007.