Scott v. Hosp. Service Dist. No. 1

484 So. 2d 168
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 30, 1986
Docket85-CA-501
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 484 So. 2d 168 (Scott v. Hosp. Service Dist. No. 1) 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
Scott v. Hosp. Service Dist. No. 1, 484 So. 2d 168 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

484 So.2d 168 (1986)

Maudie Scott, Wife of/and Curtis E. SCOTT
v.
HOSPITAL SERVICE DISTRICT NO. 1 OF ST. CHARLES, State of Louisiana and All Risk Corporation of Louisiana.

No. 85-CA-501.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

February 13, 1986.
Rehearing Denied March 17, 1986.
Writ Granted May 30, 1986.

*170 Weidemann & Fransen, Lawrence D. Wiedemann and C. Scott Carter, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Watson, Blanche, Wilson & Posner, Peter T. Dazzio, Baton Rouge, for Hosp. Service Dist. No. 1 of Parish of St. Charles, State of La., d/b/a The St. Charles Parish Hosp., and Southern American Ins. Co., defendants-appellants.

Before BOUTALL, CHEHARDY and CURRAULT, JJ.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

Maudie Scott and her husband Curtis E. Scott instituted this suit for personal injuries, damages and loss of consortium resulting from a slip-and-fall accident of Mrs. Scott at the St. Charles Parish Hospital in Luling.

Named defendants were the Hospital Service District No. 1 of the Parish of St. Charles, State of Louisiana, and its insurers Southern American Insurance Company and Mead Reinsurance Corporation, the excess carrier.

The matter was tried by a jury which awarded Mrs. Scott $330,000 and her husband $50,000 for a total judgment of $380,000. She was found to be 60% at fault and the Hospital 40% at fault. Therefore, in accordance with the jury verdict, judgment was rendered in her favor for $132,000, and her husband for $20,000, after the reduction for comparative negligence, against all defendants.

Thereafter plaintiffs filed motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and/or a new trial or an additur. Defendant Mead filed a motion for a new trial and/or to amend the judgment recognizing that their policy issued to Hospital Service District No. 1 for the Parish of St. Charles was excess insurance, over and above that coverage provided by defendant Southern American Insurance Company which has a policy limit of $500,000. The other defendants filed an application for a new trial, or alternatively judgment notwithstanding the verdict, or remittitur. After a hearing on these motions the trial court granted plaintiff's motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict on both the issue of liability and quantum. It increased the percentage of the fault of the hospital from 40% to 100% and increased the award to plaintiffs from $380,000 to $500,000, and amended the judgment to reflect that Mead Reinsurance Corporation was the excess carrier and that the judgment was not effective as against Mead unless the final judgment should exceed or exhaust the limits of the Southern American Insurance Company coverage.

The Hospital and Southern American have appealed.

The record reflects the following facts:

On October 27, 1982 Mrs. Scott went to Room 220 in the St. Charles Parish Hospital to visit her daughter who had undergone back surgery at 7 a.m. that morning. The daugther was returned to her room about 8:30 a.m., at which time the nurses checked her pressure and got her settled. Her daughter was not fully conscious when the nurses left the room, and Mrs. Scott was asked to contact the nursing station as soon as her daughter started to awaken because it would be necessary to turn the patient to prevent pneumonia.

Mrs. Scott's version of the accident is as follows:

When her daughter started to awaken about 10:45 a.m. she went out the door of her room, turned left and started to walk toward the nurses' station. She was dressed in pants, a blouse and slippers.

There was furniture along that wall: a cart, bed, chairs and a night stand. A man was in the hall using a buffing machine. Because of the furniture lining the hall she *171 had only a 2- to 3-foot passageway. When she passed Room 225 she slipped on the floor right at the doorway, did a split, and landed hard on her left knee. She never saw any signs in or near the doorway and did not know the floor was wet until she fell and her pants were wet from the knee down.

Mrs. Scott stated she got up, limped to the nurses' station and informed the nurse she had fallen in water in front of Room 225. The nurse put her in a wheelchair, took her back to where it happened and talked to the men (who were working on that room stripping the floor), and then took her to the emergency room where she was x-rayed, her knee wrapped in an ace bandage, and she was given something to relieve the swelling.

There were no eye witnesses to the accident, but the testimony of the two men who were on the scene, and the nurse who assisted Mrs. Scott shortly thereafter, are important in determining the issue of liability. Those witnesses are Mrs. Celia Holmes, the nurse, and Johnny Pierre and Warren Bourgeois, two hospital employees who were stripping the floor of Room 225 at the time of the accident.

Mrs. Holmes testified she was the charge nurse (supervisor) on duty at the time of the accident. She stated the nursing station is about four rooms down from Room 225, the scene of the accident, and that Mrs. Scott came to the desk and told her she had slipped on the floor wet with soap and hurt her left knee. Plaintiff told her she knew the floor was wet, but the witness was unable to state whether plaintiff knew it was wet before she fell, or only discovered it was wet after the accident.

Mrs. Holmes put plaintiff in a wheel chair as soon as she told her what happened and they went to look at the area where she fell. The nurse saw a red sign with yellow lettering that said "Wet Floor" about a foot wide and 2 feet high near the door of the room. The sign stands on metal legs. Two maintenance men were working there cleaning the floor inside the room. There was equipment in the hallway, but half of the hallway was empty.

The nurse then took Mrs. Scott to the emergency room and filled out the emergency room record. This report indicated what Mrs. Scott had told her about the accident, and was the first written report made. Mrs. Scott had told her she had stepped across wires and cords from the equipment. The nurse said these were located behind the "wet" signs, but that plaintiff had not tripped on the cords, but slipped on the wet floor. The equipment was in front of Room 225.

In Mrs. Holmes' opinion there was sufficient room to walk in the hall on the other side of the "Wet Floor" sign because the whole other side of the hall was empty. She indicated the furniture in the hall—a bed, dresser, and a big chair—were much farther down the hallway on the end, but the equipment wire was inside of Room 225 and there was a little bit of water in the hallway because they do strip a small area outside of the doorway.

Johnny Pierre testified he was stripping the floor in Room 225 on the day of the accident. He had put some of the furniture in the bathroom and the rest of the furniture (the bed on the opposite side of the hall) at the very end of the hall. He saw plaintiff after she fell, about one-half foot from a "Wet Floor" sign right at the door to the room. He went to ask her if he could be of help. She said it was nobody's fault, she was not hurt, and she left. He said she was in a hurry. She came walking back with the nurse who took his name and then they left. He admitted his buffer, wax cart and cleaning cart were on the opposite side of the hall from Room 225 but said 3 feet of the hall in that area was unobstructed.

At the time of the incident Mr. Pierre was putting the strip cart on the opposite side of the hall and he was not in the room. He did not see plaintiff fall, but when he turned around she was on her knees.

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484 So. 2d 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-hosp-service-dist-no-1-lactapp-1986.