Swann v. City-Parish

492 So. 2d 1225
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1986
DocketCA 84 1034
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 492 So. 2d 1225 (Swann v. City-Parish) 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
Swann v. City-Parish, 492 So. 2d 1225 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

492 So.2d 1225 (1986)

Lois B. SWANN, Garland Swann, Jr., and Glenda P. Swann
v.
CITY-PARISH, James C. Moore, and Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York.

No. CA 84 1034.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

April 28, 1986.
Rehearing Denied July 17, 1986.

*1226 Alexis A. St. Amant, Baton Rouge, for Lois B. Swann.

Peter T. Dazzio, Baton Rouge, for James C. Moore and Fidelity and Cas. Co. of New York.

Frank Gremillion, Asst. Parish Atty., Baton Rouge, for City of Baton Rouge-Parish of East Baton Rouge.

Before EDWARDS, SHORTESS, SAVOIE, LANIER and JOHN S. COVINGTON, JJ.

JOHN S. COVINGTON, Judge.

This suit arises out of a vehicular accident involving plaintiff Lois Swann's automobile and a utility trailer owned by defendant City of Baton Rouge-Parish of East Baton Rouge, hereafter City-Parish, and insured by Casualty Company of New York. Pior to trial, liability was conceded and the bench trial was limited to the amount of damages each of the injured persons in the car was entitled to receive.

The trial was held on October 24, 25 and December 12, 1983, and the case was taken under advisement. On April 12, 1984, the trial judge's written reasons for judgment were filed in the record. The court awarded Lois Swann $50,000 as general damages, $34,898.50 as "past loss of wages" for the period May 12, 1981, the date of the accident,[1] to August 4, 1982, the date she attained the age of 60 years, $12,933.49 as medical and drug expenses, and $257.94 as property damages. Lois Swann's daughter and grand-daughter were awarded nominal damages. Additionally, the court set the expert witness fees of ten doctors, two of whom are not medical doctors, and taxed the fees as costs and assessed all costs against "the defendant." (sic) The formal judgment, signed April 24, 1984, was devolutively appealed by Lois Swann only.

ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR

Plaintiff-appellant assigns as error by the trial judge his findings that: (1) she was not entitled to an award of future loss of wages beyond her sixtieth birthday; (2) her physical and mental disabilities at the time of the trial were not the result of the injuries sustained in the accident; and (3) an award of $50,000 as general damages was adequate.

ISSUES

The issues presented by this appeal are whether (1) the trial judge committed manifest error in finding as a fact that Lois Swann intended to retire at age 60 and based the loss of wages award on that finding; (2) he committed manifest error in finding that her disabilities precluding employment at the time of the trial were not the result of the accident; and (3) an award of $50,000 as general damages is so low as to constitute an abuse of the trial judge's discretion.

DISABILITIES

The trial judge, in written reasons for judgment stated briefly, as follows:

Mrs. Swann contends that her most serious injury was to her head. The accident rendered her unconscious for a while and later she was incoherent and unaware of her surroundings. AN EEG *1227 indicated an irregularity in the brain waves. She was diagnosed by Dr. Guy Riche [an Internal Medicine specialist] as suffering from "possible post traumatic syndrome." Dr. Michael DeJohn [an Internal Medicine specialist] recommended her retirement for a multiplicity of reasons.
Dr. Thomas Flynn, a neurosurgeon, could find no [objective] evidence of organic [brain] problems. This examination was done on August 9, 1983. (The date of the accident was May 12, 1981.) However, he referred her to the Runnymeade Clinic for a neuropsychological examination. Mrs. Swann's tests were evaluated by Dr. Cary Rostow. Dr. Rostow was of the opinion that Mrs. Swann was suffering from a severe degree of brain impairment and that this impairment primarily results from injury to the brain. He said she could not work and that her condition is permanent.
Mrs. Swann was examined by Dr. James Poche, a neurosurgeon, who testified his examination was negative. He read the report of Dr. Rostow and said that the massive area of the brain which was found by Dr. Rostow [a clinical psychologist with a subspecialty in neuropsychology] to be impaired would cause additional occurrences, such as prolonged unconsciousness, blurred vision and slurred speech. His opinion was that Mrs. Swann was undergoing the normal aging process.
This Court finds that the symptoms Mrs. Swann is now suffering from are the result of the normal aging process. We take particular note that Dr. Rostow's evaluation comes some twenty-six plus months after the accident. The opinion of Dr. Poche carries great weight with the Court. (Bracketed material supplied.)

Dr. Poche was requested by defendant insurer's counsel to examine and evaluate plaintiff. A neurological evaluation, including the taking of Mrs. Swann's medical history, was done on May 3, 1983 and it consumed approximately 30 minutes. Dr. Rostow's initial consultation with Mrs. Swann on August 2, 1983 lasted an hour and the battery of tests, administered in September, 1983 on two other visits to Runnymeade Clinic, consumed an additional six hours. The testing was done under Dr. Rostow's supervision by Ryan Bernard, a masters prepared psychologist and, at the time the tests were administered, "a candidate for the Ph.D. in both physiological and clinical psychology at LSU."

Dr. Rostow opined that: (1) the test results "indicate that there are several general systems in the cerebral cortex responsible for certain behaviors established by research which are not functioning properly in Mrs. Swann"; (2) "she appears to have extreme difficulty in processing information centrally, ..., in making sense out of incoming and outgoing information, using it to her advantage and allowing her to adapt to demands of her environment"; (3) "her abstraction, reasoning and logical analysis seem to have some very specific deficiencies"; (4) "her sense of the external environment particularly when under pressure appears to be impaired"; and (5) she suffered from several disorders of "her functional personality." The foregoing opinions were based on Mrs. Swann's complete neuropsychological evaluation. Further, Dr. Rostow concluded that "such findings are not uncommon with individuals who have sustained central nervous system injury or impairment" and measurable impairments of the type measured in Mrs. Swann are consistent with known cases of brain damage. The "best time to conduct [a neuropsychological] evaluation" is approximately two years after the trauma to the head because "there are certain transitory phenomena associated with post concussion syndrome, ..., the immediate blow to the head" and "these transitory phenomena ought to pass before one administers a neuropsychological battery." Furthermore, he opined that the lapse of approximately two years post-trauma before the neuropsychological evaluation lends credence to the results obtained.

Dr. Rostow opined that Mrs. Swann's other health problems predating the accident, *1228 and which continued after the accident, e.g., obesity, hypertension, and venous insufficiency, had no bearing on his diagnosis and opinions because those physical problems "are essentially peripheral,..., they're outside of the central nervous system." He also opined that "the normal aging process" could not account for his findings that (1) Mrs. Swann's Brain Age Quotient (BAQ) of 82 "indicates that her functional intelligence is considerably lower than her overall intelligence which includes ...

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492 So. 2d 1225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swann-v-city-parish-lactapp-1986.