Thomas v. SISTERS OF CHARITY OF INCAR. WORD

870 So. 2d 390, 2004 WL 541111
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 19, 2004
Docket38,170-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 870 So. 2d 390 (Thomas v. SISTERS OF CHARITY OF INCAR. WORD) 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
Thomas v. SISTERS OF CHARITY OF INCAR. WORD, 870 So. 2d 390, 2004 WL 541111 (La. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

870 So.2d 390 (2004)

J. Ray THOMAS, Plaintiff-Appellee
v.
SISTERS OF CHARITY OF THE INCARNATE WORD d/b/a Schumpert Medical Center and XYZ Insurance Company, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 38,170-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

March 19, 2004.
Rehearing Denied May 6, 2004.

*392 Mayer, Smith & Roberts, L.L.P., by Mark A. Goodman, Kelly J. Workman, for Appellant.

Modica, Dowden & Cascio, by Guy A. Modica, Sr., Baton Rouge, for Appellee.

*393 Before BROWN, GASKINS & CARAWAY, JJ.

GASKINS, J.

In this wrongful death action, the decedent, a hospital patient, fell three stories to his death after he became locked out on the hospital roof and sat on a ledge in an apparent attempt to attract assistance. Following a bench trial, the trial court found that the fire exit configuration which allowed the patient access to the roof created an unreasonable risk of harm that was the cause-in-fact of his death. The hospital was assigned 65% of the fault for the accident, and the patient, who was found to be alert and oriented, was assessed 35%. The hospital appealed the liability determination, while the plaintiff answered the appeal to request additional damages and a reduction in the fault allocation. Finding that the risk encountered by the patient on the edge of the building was within the scope of duty of the hospital, we affirm.

FACTS

After the death of his 82-year-old father, Isaac Hardman, Jr. ("Hardman"), J. Ray Thomas ("Thomas") instituted this wrongful death and survival action against Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word d/b/a Schumpert Medical Center ("Schumpert").[1] On the morning of the accident, March 8, 1992, Hardman was a pneumonia patient at Schumpert. He had been in the hospital for over a week and was expecting to go home in the near future. Vickye Backus, the attending nurse, described Hardman as being short of breath and requiring the assistance of oxygen early that morning; however, he was able to walk without assistance and was alert and oriented. In her initial visit with her patient at 7:15 a.m., Nurse Backus assisted him from the bathroom to his bed. He was able to walk on his own and maintain his own weight. At that time, Hardman requested that a nursing assistant clean his room because he was going to have visitors that day.

Nurse Backus recalled that she visited with Hardman at least four times that morning. She described him as alert and oriented, exhibiting no expressions of depression or suicide. The medical records show that Hardman had previously expressed a desire to go home and that he was concerned that he might have leukemia; however, his tests for that disease had come back negative on March 2, 1992.[2] At 8:00 a.m., Hardman received a breathing treatment. Nurse Backus administered cough medicine to Hardman at 9:00 a.m., and intravenous penicillin at 10:00 a.m. which she disconnected at 10:30 a.m. At 10:55 a.m., a radiology employee located Nurse Backus at the nurses' station and informed her that Hardman was not in his room and could not be located for transport to a scheduled procedure.

In the meantime, Hardman was spotted on the roof of the hospital. A support technician, Leroy Smallwood, Jr., and a hospital physician, Dr. Alan Borne, gained entry onto the roof in an effort to assist him. As the two sought to reach Hardman, who was seated on a ledge of the hospital roof, the patient raised his hand and thereafter fell from the roof ledge onto a lower loading dock roof. Subsequent attempts to save Hardman's life were unsuccessful *394 and he died from the injuries sustained in the fall.

In the effort to reconstruct the course taken by Hardman from his room and to show the layout of the building and the fire exit onto the roof, the parties introduced numerous exhibits at trial including photographs, the hospital policy manual and applicable building codes. The stipulation of facts, evidence and testimony generally established that on the day of the accident, Hardman's south-wing, fifth-floor hospital room was near the end of a hallway, situated two doors from a fire exit door. The undisputed photographs admitted into evidence show that the emergency fire exit door was marked only by a traditional exit sign located in the hallway above the door. Immediately past the exit, at the very end of the hall, were two windows which looked out upon the hospital roof. As one looked down the hallway from the nurse's station toward the windows, both Hardman's room 542 and the fire exit door would have been on the right.

Sometime between 10:30 and 10:55 a.m. on the morning in question, Hardman dressed himself and exited his room turning right. He then apparently opened the fire exit door which swings inward into the hallway. On the back of this door is a sign indicating the fifth floor level. Photographs show that a ten-step stairway leading up to the next floor is located directly in front of the door. To the left is a three-step stairway and landing which Hardman utilized to get to a door leading to a catwalk on the Schumpert roof. The roof is flat and is on top of the hospital's fourth floor which extends well beyond the fifth floor wing of the hospital where Hardman's room was located. The parties do not dispute that no other signs or markings directed or explained the purpose of the stairs or doors or gave directions inside of the stairwell or on the catwalk on the roof.

The record shows that renovations to the hospital in 1989 required a change in the stairwell, which originally allowed access from the fifth to the fourth floor. At that time, the exit down to the fourth floor was eliminated and the three-stair landing and catwalk were added as part of the emergency exit onto the roof.

After Hardman turned left and climbed the three stairs, he encountered an unmarked door which contained a push bar. Hardman then opened the door to the outside and exited onto the catwalk on top of the roof. The door shut behind him and locked. The fire escape catwalk on which he would have found himself was encased by 42 inch hand railings on both sides. It traversed approximately 130 feet across the roof to a door that opened into another stairwell that led down five flights to an exit from the building. For purposes of fire protection, that door at the end of the catwalk could be opened from the outside on the roof, but would lock once an individual shut it and was inside the fire escape stairwell.

Instead of walking the length of the catwalk, Hardman climbed over the left rail onto the roof of Schumpert in a direction toward the fifth floor hall windows that looked out onto the roof. The plaintiff's expert surmised that Hardman chose this path because the other direction, 130 feet across the roof, appeared to offer no option for obtaining assistance.

It is unknown whether Hardman climbed off the catwalk onto the roof itself to seek the attention at the windows of anyone in the hallway on the fifth floor. Nevertheless, he apparently traveled across the roof and descended approximately three-and-one-half feet to a lower sub-roof level. Then he descended again another two-and-one-half feet to a second *395 sub-roof which brought him to an edge of the building. At the edge, there appears to be a marble ledge extending slightly above the level of the roof. There, Hardman would have stooped down and sat with his feet dangling over the side of the roof. At that location, Hardman was three stories above the roof of the loading dock area of the hospital upon which he ultimately fell.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
870 So. 2d 390, 2004 WL 541111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-sisters-of-charity-of-incar-word-lactapp-2004.