Shirley Pegues v. Lester Graves

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 30, 2001
DocketW2000-02831-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Shirley Pegues v. Lester Graves (Shirley Pegues v. Lester Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shirley Pegues v. Lester Graves, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON August 30, 2001 Session

SHIRLEY PEGUES, ET UX. v. DR. LESTER R. GRAVES, JR., ET AL.

A Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. 52737 T.D. The Honorable Kay S. Robilio, Judge

No. W2000-02831-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 14, 2001

Plaintiffs, husband and wife, sued physician when wife became pregnant after physician had performed a pregnancy avoidance procedure and allegedly guaranteed the results thereof. Defendant moved for a directed verdict which the trial court granted, but plaintiffs contend that it was granted after plaintiffs took a nonsuit. Plaintiffs appeal. We reverse.

Tenn.R.App.P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Reversed and Remanded

W. FRANK CRAWFORD , P.J., W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ALAN E. HIGHERS, J. and DAVID R. FARMER , J., joined.

Fred M. Ridolphi, Jr., Memphis, For Appellants, Shirley and Curtis Pegues

William H. Haltom, Jr., Memphis, For Appellees, Dr. Lester R. Graves, Jr.,and Drs. Graves, Sanford, Cox & Aycock, P.C.

OPINION

Plaintiffs, Shirley Pegues and husband, Curtis Pegues, filed a complaint against defendants, Dr. Lester Graves, Jr., Drs. Graves, Sanford, Cox and Adcock, P.C. The complaint alleges claims for professional negligence and for breach of contract, and by amendment to the complaint, an allegation of fraudulent misrepresentation in that Dr. Graves, acting for the P.C., allegedly represented to the plaintiffs that the procedure he would perform would be 100 percent effective. The complaint alleges that Mrs. Pegues became pregnant subsequent to the procedure, and plaintiffs incurred substantial expenses and other damages as a result thereof, all of which was caused directly and proximately by the actions of Dr. Graves. Defendants’ answer denied the material allegations of the complaint and joins issue thereon. The answer further avers that the defendants complied with the recognized standard of care for their specialty in this community, and that they did not cause any damages to the plaintiffs.

Summary judgment was granted by the trial court on all plaintiffs’ causes of action except for the cause of action for fraudulent misrepresentation. A jury trial was commenced on this action and at the close of plaintiffs’ proof, the trial court granted defendants a directed verdict.

Plaintiffs have appealed and present two issues for review as stated in their brief:

1. Did the Trial Court err in not allowing Plaintiffs to take a voluntary dismissal pursuant to Rule 41 T.R.C.P. which was announced prior to the Court’s final ruling on Defendants’ Motion for Directed Verdict.

2. Did the Trial Court err in granting Defendants’ Motion for Directed Verdict by ruling that Plaintiffs’ proof failed to establish that damages sustained were causally connected to the Defendants’ alleged wrongful conduct.

In plaintiffs’ first issue for review, they assert that the trial court erred in not allowing them to take a voluntary dismissal pursuant to Tenn.R.Civ.P. 41.01 (2001), which provides in pertinent part:

[T]he plaintiff shall have the right to take a voluntary nonsuit to dismiss an action without prejudice . . . by an oral notice of dismissal made in open court during the trial of a cause; or in jury trials at any time before the jury retires to consider its verdict and prior to the ruling of the court sustaining a motion for a directed verdict.

Plaintiffs assert that they announced a voluntary dismissal prior to the trial court ruling on defendants’ motion for a directed verdict. To make this determination, we must review the transcript of the proceedings.

At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ proof, defendants moved for a directed verdict based upon lack of any causation testimony. Extended colloquy was conducted between the court and the two lawyers, the pertinent part of which we quote:

THE COURT: Now, Mr. Ridolphi?

MR. RIDOLPHI: Yes, ma’am.

-2- THE COURT: The aspect that I’m looking at is as a result of the concealment of the fact, the plaintiff sustained damage. And what Mr. Haltom is saying is that the proximate cause that’s always necessary to show that the plaintiff sustained damage is not available here. And I hadn’t thought about that aspect of it, if she could just as easily or perhaps more easily gotten pregnant with the IUD. The fact that she would have changed her behavior, of what significance could that be?

MR. RIDOLPHI: Ms. Pegues went in to have – what she testified to– That’s where we are in this case.

THE COURT: I know.

MR. RIDOLPHI: To have a 100 percent fail safe procedure.

THE COURT: But it wasn’t available. It wasn’t available. All the testimony is is that there’s no such thing that exists.

MR. RIDOLPHI: All right.

THE COURT: So even though that was her goal, that wasn’t what she could hope to get no matter what –

MR. RIDOLPHI: She didn’t know that. That’s the whole point. She said, I didn’t know that. That’s the whole thing. She relied upon the fact that he said it was 100 percent. That’s the whole point that this....

MR. RIDOLPHI: Your honor, she changed her pregnancy avoidance procedure based upon his reliance.

THE COURT: Exactly right. And if you could show that that made any difference at all, you’d be in the ballpark, but you –

MR. RIDOLPHI: How can I show – how can I show – how can I show that if she had kept using the IUD –

THE COURT: Because it’s not true, and so you can’t show it. And that’s why we’re not getting anywhere it looks like to me. You can’t show that. You can’t. It’s Mr. Haltom’s unassailable reasoning on this. It’s got to have consequence. It has to make a difference what he said. There has to be a result. In other words, it had to make some kind of difference, and according to the proof, it just doesn’t make

-3- any difference. She could just as well have gotten pregnant if she hadn’t had the procedure and was using the IUD. And that’s the proof before the Court, and there’s no other proof before the Court. And that being so –

MR. RIDOLPHI: Then why wouldn’t Dr. Graves say, look, lady, keep with the IUD. It doesn’t make any difference. There’s nothing I can do.

THE COURT: Because he believed that the procedure, I’m sure, was – had some value. And the proof is that the one he did was – or maybe we don’t have any proof on that. But at any rate, the only proof before the Court is that there were several births born according to these surveys when this particular procedure that Dr. Graves did was done. And there was further proof that – I mean, I think if you want to get to where you want to be, you’d have to have somebody take the stand and say that – medical proof that a woman using an IUD over a period of time – whatever time Mrs. Pegues was using her IUD – and was finding that it worked for her and that she had no pregnancies was a better insurance to her than having the operation that Dr. Graves performed. And there’s no evidence to sustain that.

MR. RIDOLPHI: The other side of the coin is I don’t think I need that, because that’s what in fact he told her according to her. It’s 100 percent. That’s what he told her.

THE COURT: Well, suppose he told her that. It’s still – even if he told her that, it’s not true, and it wouldn’t have any consequence. Suppose he told her that –

MR. RIDOLPHI: That’s up to this jury to decide what was told.

MR. HALTOM: Your Honor --

THE COURT: I’m assuming arguendo that everything the plaintiff says is true. I’m assuming that what she says is true. But Mr. Haltom’s argument is it doesn’t make any difference if he did say that, because it wouldn’t matter because she could still get pregnant whether she had the IUD or didn’t use the I – you know, use the procedure that Dr.

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Shirley Pegues v. Lester Graves, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shirley-pegues-v-lester-graves-tennctapp-2001.