Reichert v. Bertucci
This text of 684 So. 2d 1041 (Reichert v. Bertucci) 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.
Opinion
Kathlyn C. REICHERT,
v.
Dr. Emile A. BERTUCCI, Jr., d/b/a De La Ronde Medical Center and Evelyn Alzubaidi and Bryan J. Bertucci, M.D.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
*1043 Donna S. Cummings, Cummings, Cummings & Dudenhefer, New Orleans, and Carter B. Wright, Law Office of Carter B. Wright, Covington, for Kathlyn C. Reichert.
Peter E. Sperling, Sidney A. Backstrom, Frilot, Partridge, Kohnke & Clements, L.C., New Orleans, for The Louisiana Patients' Compensation Fund.
Before BARRY, LOBRANO and GULOTTA, JJ.
BARRY, Judge.
The Louisiana Patients' Compensation Fund (LPCF) appeals a lump sum award of $500,000 in favor of plaintiff. The issues are quantum and whether the trial court properly considered the testimony of plaintiff's expert economist. We amend the award by deleting $104,924 for loss of earning capacity and affirm as amended.
Facts
On March 12, 1986, 35 year old Kathlyn Reichert sought treatment from Dr. Brian Bertucci for persistent cold symptoms. It was stipulated that Dr. Bertucci's nurse administered a cortisone injection to Reichert's right buttock. Reichert testified that she immediately felt intense pain from her right hip to her foot. Dr. Bertucci anticipated that the pain would subside within two hours, but Reichert experienced severe pain through the night. She testified that she drove to work late the next morning, having to brake with her left foot, and returned home for lunch. She visited Dr. Bertucci's partner the following morning, 48 hours after the shot. The doctor pressed on the injection site, and Reichert almost collapsed in pain.
That day, Reichert also complained of pain in her groin area when she coughed. Doctors discovered an ovarian cyst which was surgically removed in May 1986. Reichert testified that her leg pain substantially subsided while recuperating following surgery, but intense pain returned when she resumed normal activities in June 1986.
In July 1986 Reichert saw neurosurgeon Dr. Joseph Nadell. A CT scan of her lower spine showed no disc problem and her muscle strength was normal. Dr. Nadell concluded that Reichert "does have sciatic[a], probably due to some perineural scarring." His July 15, 1986 report states that Reichert was experiencing persistent nerve irritation.
On September 16, 1986 Reichert was referred to Dr. David Kline, neurosurgeon, who determined that the injection's impact on the sciatic nerve function was "very, very mild" but that Reichert had an "injection injury" to the sciatic nerve. An EMG, which analyzes the motor function component of the nerves to the muscles, was normal. However, Reichert continued to feel pain. She testified that by the summer of 1987 the pain intensified and she experienced a cold sensation in her right leg. She said her right foot frequently went into spasms for extended periods during which she cried and was incapacitated.
Dr. Toussaint LeClercq, neurosurgeon, testified that an injury to a sensory nerve can cause substantial pain even though the motor nerve is unharmed and the EMG is normal. He concluded that Reichert has chronic pain.
In October 1987 Reichert received a lumbar sensory nerve block which relieved the pain for four days. A second nerve block was administered in November 1987 and a third in April 1988. Her pain subsided each time and she resumed normal activity for four to five months. A fourth nerve block was effective for only six weeks. After each nerve block wore off, intense pain returned from her right buttock to her foot. She said that she attempted acupuncture with minimal results. A fifth nerve block in March 1989 provided relief for six weeks, but that was the last shot because a nerve block cannot be repeated indefinitely.
In July 1989 Reichert had another ovarian cyst and underwent a complete hysterectomy. She missed six weeks of work due to the surgery. She testified that she experienced some relief of the leg pain while recuperating, but intense pain returned when she resumed daily activity and she missed work. On December 1, 1989, Reichert began a leave of absence at her employer's request.
*1044 In January 1990 she underwent surgery to implant an epidural stimulator, a device composed of a battery-operated pack (the size of a small match box) implanted beneath the skin under the rib cage and a wire electrode attached to a spinal nerve. The implant stimulates the nerve and pain is relieved. That surgery (recommended by Dr. Le-Clercq) required a ten day hospital stay, and she was released in April 1990.
The stimulator's battery life is one and a half to six years, and it must be surgically changed. Reichert said the first battery lasted until November 1994, but the next battery was not expected to last as long because the stimulator is now set at a higher voltage due to increased pain. Reichert testified that the stimulator substantially decreased her pain, although she suffers pain of varying degrees, foot spasms, and a cold sensation in her leg. She said the pain is excruciating when the stimulator does not have a good battery.
In April 1990 (four months after the implant), Reichert was hired by Methodist Hospital, where she is Assistant Director of the computer department. She testified that the increased setting on the stimulator allows her to fulfill her duties (at the time of trial Reichert was working sixty hours per week), but she tires easily and suffers pain daily. The more she uses her right leg, the more intense the pain.
Reichert sued Dr. Bryan Bertucci, his nurse who administered the injection, and De La Ronde Medical Center. Liability was stipulated, and Reichert settled with Dr. Bertucci's insurer, Physicians' National Risk Retention, retaining her rights against Dr. Bertucci as a nominal defendant and against the LPCF. In a prior appeal, this Court affirmed summary judgment in favor of St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, the professional liability insurer for the owner of De La Ronde Medical Center, Dr. Emile Bertucci, Jr. and an organization called "De La Ronde Family Practice." Reichert v. Bertucci, 94-1445 (La.App. 4 Cir. 1/31/95), 650 So.2d 821.
A bench trial was conducted and Reichert was awarded a lump sum of $500,000. The LPCF argues the award includes an excessive general damage award and the trial court erroneously considered testimony from Reichert's economist concerning loss of earning capacity.
Excessive Damages
LPCF argues the lump sum award is for general damages and is excessive. That argument has no merit.
A lump sum judgment is presumed to award all items of damages claimed, and appellant's burden of proving an abuse of discretion is more difficult because the intent to award a specific amount for a particular item is not readily ascertainable. Boutte v. Nissan Motor Corp., 94-1470, p.12 (La.App. 3 Cir. 9/13/95), 663 So.2d 154, 161. See Matthews v. Ferrer, 95-0266, p.8 (La.App. 4 Cir. 11/30/95), 665 So.2d 1211, 1215, which affirmed a "lump-sum award for all damages, both special and general." Matthews subtracted special damages (proved at trial) from the lump sum and reviewed the remainder as general damages.
Reichert's petition requests damages for medical expenses, lost wages, loss of earning capacity, pain and suffering, and "permanent injuries and disability."
She testified that her medical bills totalled $52,293.01 and LPCF does not contest that amount. The bills in evidence corroborate at least that amount.
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