Thibodeaux v. St. Joseph Hospital

276 So. 2d 703, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 6490
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 19, 1973
Docket9264
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 276 So. 2d 703 (Thibodeaux v. St. Joseph Hospital) 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
Thibodeaux v. St. Joseph Hospital, 276 So. 2d 703, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 6490 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

276 So.2d 703 (1973)

Ennissie A. THIBODEAUX et ux.
v.
ST. JOSEPH HOSPITAL et al.

No. 9264.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

March 19, 1973.
Rehearing Denied May 14, 1973.

E. Kelleher Simon (Sessions, Fishman, Rosenson, Snellings & Boisfontaine), New Orleans, Edward P. Lobman and Jack Alltmont, New Orleans, for appellants.

E. L. Deramee, Jr. (Deramee & Deramee), Thibodaux, for appellees.

Before LANDRY, TUCKER and PICKETT, JJ.

LANDRY, Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment awarding plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Ennissie A. Thibodeaux, damages for personal injuries and related medical expense sustained and incurred when Mrs. Thibodeaux was struck by a door opening into a patient's room in St. Joseph Hospital, Houma, Louisiana. *704 Named defendants are: (1) St. Joseph Hospital (Hospital); (2) Argonaut Insurance Company and Argonaut-Southwest Insurance Company (Insurers), liability insurer of Hospital; (3) Call Arthur Treacher Service Systems of New Orleans (Arthur); an independent contractor providing janitorial service for Hospital; (4) The Millers Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Texas (Millers), Arthur's insurer, and (5) Emelda Rogers (Maid) a maid in the employ of Arthur.

The trial court rejected plaintiffs' demands against Hospital and Insurers, but rendered judgment against Arthur, Millers, and Maid, in solido, in favor of Mrs. Thibodeaux in the sum of $22,000.00, and in favor of Mr. Thibodeaux for special damages aggregating $2,559.70. All defendants cast have appealed. We reduce the awards to plaintiffs.

The accident occurred on the morning of October 29, 1969, as Mrs. Thibodeaux was removing bags of clothing from a closet in the room of her 8 year old son in preparation for the boy's return home following hospitalization for a broken arm. The closet was adjacent to the door which provided ingress and egress to the room. Mrs. Thibodeaux was standing, with arms upstretched, in front of the closet, the door of which she had opened to her right against the door leading into the room. When the maid opened the door to enter, the entrance door struck the closet door which in turn struck Mrs. Thibodeaux on her right side. Following the accident, X-rays taken of Mrs. Thibodeaux's right side disclosed the presence of a straight pin in her lower right lung.

Appellants maintain the lower court erred in: (1) holding that plaintiffs bore the burden of proving the Maid negligent, and also of proving that plaintiff's injuries were a foreseeable result thereof; (2) finding that plaintiff either gasped for breath and sucked the pin into her lungs when she was struck by the door or that the blow aggravated a pre-existing condition it the pin were already in plaintiff's lung, and (3) awarding Mrs. Thibodeaux damages for pain and suffering for injuries beyond a sore chest which caused pain for only a few days, which was the only injury sustained in the accident. Appellants also contend the trial court erred in accepting the testimony of Mrs. Thibodeaux in preference to that of the Maid, notwithstanding glaring inconsistencies in Mrs. Thibodeaux's testimony.

In substance, Mrs. Thibodeaux testified she was in her son's room when the Maid entered to clean up. The Maid performed certain chores and left. Believing the Maid was through, Mrs. Thibodeaux went to the closet to get her son's clothing which was in two or three paper bags on the closet shelf. As she reached into the closet, the Maid again entered the room and, without knocking, forcibly opened the entrance door which struck plaintiff on the right side. She gasped for breath and felt immediate pain. She unsuccessfully attempted to obtain help from someone passing in the hallway. Finally a priest appeared and summoned another party who took her blood pressure, and escorted plaintiff to the hospital emergency room. After X-rays disclosed the presence of the pin in her lung, she requested the attending physician to hospitalize her overnight because of her pain. Despite this request, she was sent home. On returning home, she continued to feel intense pain and difficulty in breathing. On October 31, 1969, she consulted her family physician, Dr. Andrew Hoffman, who referred her to Dr. Claude C. Craighead, thoracic surgeon. On her initial visit to Dr. Craighead, she was still in intense pain and so informed the doctor. Dr. Craighead eventually removed the pin by surgery. After being hospitalized about ten days for surgery, she returned home. She experienced pain after the operation, but recovered in about six weeks. On Dr. Craighead's orders, she wore a neck brace to alleviate pain in that area, which device she wore for about a year. Thereafter, she again began seeing Dr. Hoffman for *705 pain, but was forced to discontinue the visits because of financial reasons. For this same reason, she did not return to Dr. Craighead. In August, 1971, her chest pains became so intense she was again hospitalized for four or five days and was administered pills and injections. At the time of trial, she was improved somewhat, but was still bothered by pain in her arm and side and was unable to sweep or mop her home. Mrs. Thibodeaux was most emphatic to the effect she did not have a pin in her mouth or on her person at the time of the incident. She could not explain how or when the pin entered her body. She was also most insistent she did not keep pins in her home, did not sew for either her husband or children, and had never even replaced a button on clothes for herself or any member of the family.

Defendant Rogers testified she first entered the room after parking her cleaning cart in the hall and knocking on the room door. She observed plaintiff seated near the window away from the door. She performed part of her chores and left the room to get supplies from her cart. She did not close the door. Upon reentering, she found the door partly closed and again knocked. As she pushed the door open, it contacted the closet door. She reached inside, pushed the closet door, then opened the hall door and entered the room. At this time, plaintiff was standing near her son's bed, and did not mention being struck by a door. Miss Rogers then continued her chores, and again returned to her cart leaving the room door open. When she reentered the third time, plaintiff was still standing by the patient's bed, and it was at this time that plaintiff complained of having been struck by the door. She stated she did not open the door violently on any occasion, and that when she reached inside to close the closet door, she felt nothing. She was certain the door did not hit anyone. Miss Rogers also testified that plaintiff did not appear to be in pain, and that it was she and not plaintiff who reported the incident to the floor nurse.

Immediately following the accident, plaintiff was seen by Dr. James Jackson. Upon noting the history given, Dr. Jackson ordered X-rays to check for possible rib fractures. At the time, plaintiff was complaining of constant chest pain. He detected a round head straight pin in plaintiff's lower right lung, but no evidence of rib fracture. He received a negative answer to his inquiry whether plaintiff had a pin in her mouth when the accident occurred. He referred plaintiff to her family physician for further treatment. In Dr. Jackson's opinion, an object of the nature involved could enter a person's body only by either being inhaled or as a projectile. He was also of the opinion that such an object could remain unnoticed for a considerable time, but that entry by inhalation should cause considerable coughing.

Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 So. 2d 703, 1973 La. App. LEXIS 6490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibodeaux-v-st-joseph-hospital-lactapp-1973.