Riley v. Maison Orleans II, Inc.

829 So. 2d 479, 2002 WL 31256411
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 2002
Docket2001-CA-0498
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 829 So. 2d 479 (Riley v. Maison Orleans II, Inc.) 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
Riley v. Maison Orleans II, Inc., 829 So. 2d 479, 2002 WL 31256411 (La. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

829 So.2d 479 (2002)

Queenester Banks RILEY, Fredonia Banks Peters, and Sylvia T. Banks Robinson, each Individually, and Jointly on Behalf of the Estate of Lawrence Banks
v.
MAISON ORLEANS II, INC. and XYZ Insurance Company.

No. 2001-CA-0498.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

September 25, 2002.

*481 I. David Warner, III, and Steven J. Rando, Glen A. Woods, The Law Offices of Steven J. Rando, L.L.C., New Orleans, LA, for Plaintiffs.

John B. Dunlap, III, James E. Moore, Jr., Simoneaux Carleton Dunlap & Olinde, L.L.C., Baton Rouge, LA, for Maison Orleans, II, Inc.

John W. Waters, Jr., Bienvenu, Foster, Ryan & O'Bannon, New Orleans, LA, for Maison Orleans, II, Inc.

Emile A. Bagneris, III, David I. Bordelon, Ungarino & Eckert LLC, Metairie, LA, for Scottsdale Insurance Company.

*482 (Court composed of Chief Judge WILLIAM H. BYRNES, III, Judge CHARLES R. JONES, Judge PATRICIA RIVET MURRAY, Judge JAMES F. McKAY, III and Judge MAX N. TOBIAS, JR.).

MAX N. TOBIAS, JR., Judge.

Defendants, Maison Orleans II ("Maison Orleans"), and Scottsdale Insurance Company ("Scottsdale"), appeal the judgment of the district court in favor of plaintiffs, Queenester Banks Riley, Fredonia Banks Peters, and Sylvia T. Banks Robinson, individually and jointly on behalf of the estate of Lawrence Banks ("Mr. Banks"), in the amount of $854,729.00. The plaintiffs have also appealed the district court's granting of the defendants' directed verdict as to the wrongful death claims. For the reasons following, we reverse in part, amend in part, and affirm as amended.

Facts

Lawrence Banks was a resident of Maison Orleans, a nursing home in New Orleans, Louisiana. On 16 February 1993 at approximately 4:30 a.m., Joseph Harris attacked Mr. Banks. Mr. Harris, also a resident of Maison Orleans, suffered from organic brain syndrome and was unable to care for himself or his needs. On this particular morning, Mr. Banks was awaiting his morning paper outside of his apartment when Mr. Harris beat him in the head and face with a steel pipe. At trial, Marquitta Patterson, a phlebotomist for Smith Kline Beecham, testified that she saw Mr. Harris hitting Mr. Banks and screamed. At the time of the incident, the attending aids were asleep in the recreational room near the nursing station and a worker from the other side of the building was the first to assist Mr. Banks. Officer Clay Clement of the New Orleans Police Department immediately investigated the incident. Mr. Banks was taken to Lakeland Medical Center/Humana Hospital for emergency medical care.

Prior to his admission to Maison Orleans, Mr. Harris was evaluated by Dr. Richard Richoux, an expert in general and forensic psychiatry. Dr. Richoux confirmed that Mr. Harris' history did not indicate violent behavior and he observed no violent or hostile propensities during the evaluation.[1]

Dr. Richoux noted that Harris had "organic brain syndrome," a condition affecting 75-80% of all nursing home residents and "is pretty much synonymous" with dementia. Dr. Richoux testified that there was no reason to anticipate violent or aggressive behavior from Mr. Harris in the near future and he had no basis to believe that Mr. Harris did not belong in the nursing home. The fact that Mr. Harris was known to "preach" to walls and talk to nonexistent people did not indicate violent tendencies in the context of his condition. There was no reason to order restraints or confine Mr. Harris. Dr. Richoux testified that when he examined Mr. Harris, Mr. Harris was taking Ativan and Hydergine.[2]

*483 Dr. Richoux testified that "wandering behavior is sometimes a problem" among those suffering from organic brain syndrome, but Mr. Harris had not been known to wander. Dr. Richoux explained that such individuals do not normally require someone following them around twenty-four hours a day:

A. So, probably the most common reason why somebody in a nursing home who has Organic Brain Syndrome might need to be closely observed is more along the lines of, if you have the unlocked facility with easy access to the outdoors, and nobody checks on an individual often enough. There have been incidences where people walked out of the door and gone walking down the street in a disorienting manner, but no other reason than that generally.
Q. Not following them around inside the nursing home?
A. No[t] usually. Not unless there's some access to danger, which of course, in any well designed facility. I'm talking about machinery that a confused individual is going to be subject to machinery that they can hurt themselves with or something of that nature.

On cross-examination, Dr. Richoux explained that the only thing that he wrote concerning what may have been reported to him by others concerning Mr. Harris' behavior at the nursing home was his notation that: "aid who accompanies him reports no agitated or hostile behavior and none is noted."

When asked by the trial judge whether it would be normal for someone in Mr. Harris' condition to strike someone else with a lead pipe, Dr. Richoux responded:

No, Your Honor. I would not consider it to be in a normal range. But I would consider it to be very unusual as a manifestation of what I perceive his psychiatric condition to be. It's not something that one expects of a person because they qualify for a diagnosis of Organic Brain Syndrome or Dementia. So, therefore, there's no way to put someone—if I diagnose Organic Brain Syndrome or Dementia I don't usually say either to a nursing home or to a care taker, for that matter, "Now, people with this condition frequently get violent so you better watch out."

Dr. Richoux conceded that had the nursing home placed Mr. Harris under twenty-four hour supervision, the incident might not have occurred. However, Dr. Richoux also explained that twenty-four hour supervision means that the patient should be checked frequently, not that the patient be literally followed around and/or kept under constant surveillance.

Eric Wilmore, the Assistant Administrator who ran the nursing home at the time of the incident, explained that the notation in Mr. Harris records, "Unable to care for self. Needs 24-hour supervision," refers to the basic reason that people are in a nursing home to begin with; it is meant "to ensure that they bathe, that they eat, that their medication is given...."

Mr. Wilmore testified that the nursing home does not have the capacity to lock people down and restrain them. In fact, he noted that La. R.S. 40:2010.8A(10) mandates that nursing home residents be free *484 from physical and chemical restraints with certain very limited exceptions inapplicable to the instant case. He stated that Mr. Harris was an appropriate resident for the nursing home:

Actually, he was pretty typical of a nursing home patient. He was elderly; he suffered from a certain degree of senility, as a lot of nursing home patients do. He had no history of being violent, being combative or hostile.

Mr. Wilmore testified that Mr. Harris would have been able to get the pipe in the maintenance room and go to where he beat Mr. Banks without being seen by any of the employees even had they been awake. This corroborated Ms. Patterson's testimony that she did not see Mr. Harris pass in the hallway and could not see what was going on some 75 feet down the hallway from the nurses' station where she was. Ms.

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