Roach v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.

969 So. 2d 724, 7 La.App. 3 Cir. 352, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 2000, 2007 WL 3170758
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 31, 2007
DocketNo. 07-352
StatusPublished

This text of 969 So. 2d 724 (Roach v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.) 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
Roach v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 969 So. 2d 724, 7 La.App. 3 Cir. 352, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 2000, 2007 WL 3170758 (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinions

AMY, Judge.

_JjA passenger in a vehicle claimed that she suffered injury to her neck when the driver attempted to avoid a collision with another vehicle. Suit was filed against the plaintiffs’ automobile liability insurer. Following a trial, the jury found that although the driver was negligent, the passenger’s injury was not caused by the accident. The plaintiffs appeal this finding as well as the trial court’s denial of their directed verdict on liability and causation. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

This dispute involves an accident that allegedly occurred on October 21, 2000. According to Larry Roach, Jr., he, his wife, Leslie Roach, and their two children, Linsey and Larry A. Roach, III, were traveling to a football game in Natchitoch-es, Louisiana. Mr. Roach, the driver of the vehicle, testified that as he was approaching an intersection, he turned around to the rear of the vehicle, where Mrs. Roach was seated, and asked her to get him a drink from the back of the vehicle. He stated that when he returned his attention to the roadway, he did not notice that the traffic signal had turned red. Consequently, he began proceeding through the intersection before noticing that an eighteen-wheeler was entering the intersection as well. Mr. Roach testified that because he did not have ample time to apply his brakes, he “swerved very hard to the left, basically through the corridor into a skid. And [he] was able to avoid the front of the 18-wheeler.”

As a result of this evasive maneuver, Mr. Roach stated that his vehicle was in danger of colliding with another vehicle on the other side of the road. He explained what transpired next:

I had to throw the car to the right. When I did, the car went into a skid and starting rotating turning in a rotation sideways. And then I, you know, I hit the brakes. And we ended up sliding through the intersection and up against, what I would say is about a six-inch [726]*726straight | ?curb and then a concrete embankment that went up like this (indicating). So the car slid side — skidded sideways, tires hit against that curb, jerked very violently, and then kind of bounced up on the curb and stopped up against the embankment.

Mr. Roach testified that “everybody was kind of shaken up. My wife told me that her neck popped and was burning.” He explained that because they thought that the injury to Mrs. Roach’s neck was just “a strain or sprain type thing[,]” the family decided to continue their trip. Mr. Roach testified that they left the scene before anyone could stop and offer assistance and that he did not feel the need to report the accident.

Mrs. Roach maintained that not only was she in pain for the rest of the day but that she “had neck pain and a headache for about one or two weeks.” She testified that because of her nursing background, she became alarmed when:

all of a sudden, the pain from the neck started progressing down to my shoulder and then down into my elbow, right elbow. And it was not getting better with, you know, just trying to take some Advil, taking a warm shower, those things, and it wasn’t getting any better.

According to Mrs. Roach’s testimony, she contacted her family doctor, Dr. Arthur Primeaux, two to three weeks after the accident occurred. Mrs. Roach testified that she engaged in a telephone conversation with Dr. Primeaux in which she “told him that we had been involved in a little accident, but I was having neck pain radiating down my shoulder into my arm.” She explained that Dr. Primeaux ordered a stress test “to rule out a cardiac problem. And then we also discussed doing cervical x-rays to check my neck.” Mrs. Roach subsequently met with Dr. Primeaux to discuss the test results and the best course of treatment. According to her testimony, the x-rays and the stress test came back normal, and Dr. Primeaux gave her an order |sfor physical therapy. The record indicates that Mrs. Roach attended physical therapy for approximately three weeks.

Mrs. Roach testified that in December 2000, Dr. Primeaux ordered an MRI on her cervical spine which showed that there were some abnormalities. He, therefore, referred her to Dr. Alan Sconzert, a neurologist, whom she first visited on May 24, 2001. According to a report for that visit, Dr. Sconzert examined the December 2000 MRI and opined that she had herniated discs at the C4-C5, C5-C6, and C6-C7 levels. Nerve conduction studies and an EMG were performed on May 29, 2001. According to the record, Dr. Sconzert found that there was “evidence of a moderate left carpal tunnel syndrome and mild chronic right C5-C6 radiculopathy.” He recommended that Mrs. Roach meet with a neurosurgeon in regard to the cervical radiculopathy.

The record shows that Mrs. Roach first met with Dr. John Raggio, a neurosurgeon, on August 10, 2001. Dr. Raggio testified that during that initial visit, Mrs. Roach complained of “intermittent pain in her neck radiating to the right shoulder and elbow with weakness of the grip in that right hand, after her neck was popped while she was riding in a passenger car.” He further testified that he “reviewed an MRI scan that showed a disc abnormality at C5-6 on the right side with x-ray abnormalities on the regular x-ray showing narrowing and deterioration of the disc at C4-5.” According to Dr. Raggio, he informed Mrs. Roach that she was a candidate for surgery, but she stated that her symptoms were not severe enough to warrant that option.

According to her medical records, Mrs. Roach did not seek any medical treatment [727]*727specifically for her neck for the next four years. When asked why she did not visit any doctors in that time period, Mrs. Roach explained:

14Well, because, again, through physical therapy they showed me different exercises I could do, home treatments I could do, again, like a warm shower, soaking in the warm tub, applying a warm heating pad, sometimes an ice pack. Also, Dr. Raggio had showed me about the traction. Taking over-the-counter medications like Advil, Tylenol _I had also been ... prescribed Bextra and Celebrex, of which I work for Drs. Brown, Chua, and Prestía at that time. And with their permission, I got my samples for free which didn’t cost me any medicine [sic], so I was able to access that.

Mrs. Roach stated that during this period, she was never completely pain free in that she had what she called-“flare ups,” where she would experience a lot of pain in her neck that would eventually subside. However, she remarked that around June 2005, she had a flare up that “just wasn’t easing up. Everything that I had been trying in the past was not giving me any relief, or not substantial relief. It just increased with time.”

Upon seeing Dr. Primeaux in September 2005, Mrs. Roach was once again referred to Dr. Raggio, whom she saw in November 2005. Dr. Raggio reaffirmed his position that surgery was the most viable solution to Mrs. Roach’s problems. Mrs. Roach testified that in February 2006, she underwent surgery and that since then, she is “[a] hundred percent better” in that she no longer has pain in her neck, shoulder, or arm.

Mrs. Roach filed suit against State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company, her automobile liability insurer, for the injury she sustained in the October 21, 2000 accident, as well as for her children’s loss of consortium claims. A jury trial was held in October 2006. At the close of the evidence, the plaintiffs moved for a directed verdict on liability and causation.

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Bluebook (online)
969 So. 2d 724, 7 La.App. 3 Cir. 352, 2007 La. App. LEXIS 2000, 2007 WL 3170758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roach-v-state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-co-lactapp-2007.