Thrash v. Maerhofer

745 So. 2d 1238, 1999 WL 1037945
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1999
DocketNo. 99-375
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 745 So. 2d 1238 (Thrash v. Maerhofer) 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
Thrash v. Maerhofer, 745 So. 2d 1238, 1999 WL 1037945 (La. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

|1AMY, Judge.

The plaintiff and her husband filed suit against her chiropractor and the chiropractic clinic at which he practiced alleging injury sustained as a result of malpractice. The jury determined that the chiropractor was negligent, but that the chiropractic clinic was not. Damages were awarded and then increased by the trial judge pursuant to a Motion for Judgement Notwithstanding the Verdict filed by the plaintiff. The Louisiana Patients’ Compensation Fund appeals asserting that insufficient evidence of malpractice was presented, that the jury should have been given the opportunity to apportion fault to actors other than the defendants, that the defendants’ motion for JNOV or new trial should have been granted, and that damages awarded were excessive. We affirm.

| ¡¿Factual and Procedural Background

This malpractice action stems from treatment the plaintiff, Stephanie Thrash, received from the defendant chiropractor, Dr. Bruce Maerhofer. Mrs. Thrash testi[1241]*1241fied that two days prior to her initial visit with Dr. Maerhofer, she began experiencing stiffness in her neck and pain in her shoulder and arm. She further testified that she may have had some leg pain as she had irritated a “knot” on her lower back. Mrs. Thrash explained that Dr. Maerhofer did not examine her, but began a course of treatment that included chiropractic manipulations. She testified that these manipulations were very painful, that her condition became worse after the manipulations began, and that Dr. Maer-hofer continued this course of treatment even after she told him that she was in pain and nauseated. After receiving approximately seventeen manipulations, she ceased her treatment with the chiropractor. She testified her symptoms continued to worsen after stopping these treatments. Mrs. Thrash stated she had trouble performing her housework, difficulty climbing steps, and that she began “throwing up all the time and had bad migraines.”

The record reveals that approximately four months after she ceased treatment with Dr. Maerhofer, Mrs. Thrash sought help from Dr. Nick Pomonis, a family practitioner and osteopathic physician trained in manipulation techniques. Dr. Pomonis testified that Mrs. Thrash complained of pain in the right side of her body, particularly in the arm and neck. He also ordered an MRI on that date, the result, he reasoned, of complaints of lower back pain. He testified that the MRI revealed a herniated disc at the L5-S1 level. Subsequently, Mrs. Thrash was referred to a neurosurgeon and orthopedic surgeon. In an effort to relieve her complaints of Dongoing pain, she first underwent a mi-crolaminectomy at the L5-S1 level, and then a stabilization procedure which required the implementation of rods. She also underwent additional procedures to remove rods used in the stabilization surgery and an implantable bone stimulator.

The record indicates that a complaint was filed regarding the treatment and a medical review panel convened. This panel, which consisted of three chiropractors, determined that although Dr. Maerhofer breached the applicable standard of care, this breach was not a factor in the plaintiffs condition.1 After the panel’s decision was rendered, this medical malpractice action was instituted when Mrs. Thrash filed a petition alleging that Dr. Maerhofer took an inadequate history from her, failed to properly examine her, and then performed manipulations which resulted either in a herniated disc or caused further complications related to these discs. She alleged that 14due to Dr. Maerhofer’s negligent treatment, she has “suffered extreme pain, anguish, as well as additional and unnecessary expenses, past, present, and future lost wages, and past, present, and future medical expenses.” Mrs. Thrash’s husband, Greg Thrash, also sought damages for loss of consortium. Finally, Mrs. Thrash also named Oak Park Chiropractic Clinic, the clinic at which she sought treatment from Dr. Maerhofer, as a defendant.

After the matter proceeded to trial, a jury returned a verdict finding that Dr. [1242]*1242Maerhofer had breached the standard of care and that the breach was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs injuries. The jury found no breach of the standard of care owed by Oak Park and one hundred percent of the liability was assigned to Dr. Maerhofer. The following damages were awarded by the jury:

Past Medical Expenses: $150,000.00
Future Medical Expenses: $35,000.00
Loss of Past Earnings: $65,000.00
Loss of Future Earnings or Earning Capacity: $50,000.00
Past, Present and Future Pain and Suffering, Both Physical and Mental, Including Loss of Enjoyment of Life, and Disability: $50,000.00

No award was made to Greg Thrash for loss of consortium.

A motion for JNOV was subsequently filed by the plaintiffs seeking an increase in the damages awarded. The motion was granted, in part, by the trial judge which resulted in the following awards of damages:

Past Medical Expenses: • $222,500.03
Future Medical Expenses: $35,000.00
Loss of Past Earnings: $67,119.00
Loss of Future Earnings or Earning Capacity: $209,598.00
Past, Present and Future Pain and Suffering, Both Physical and Mental, Including Loss of Enjoyment of Life, and Disability: $175,000.00

Additionally, the trial court awarded $20,-000.00 to Greg Thrash for loss of consortium. The trial court also denied a Motion for JNOV or New Trial filed by the Louisiana Patients’ Compensation Fund on behalf of Dr. Maerhofer.

We further note that the record contains the court’s approval of Dr. Maerhofer’s offer of $100,000.00, plus interest, in settlement of his personal exposure pursuant to the Medical Malpractice Act. The Louisiana Patients’ Compensation Fund (LPCF) remains as the defendant on appeal and assigns the following as error:

1.The Trial Court erred in denying the Fund’s Motion for a New Trial and/or Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict where the jury obviously interpreted a bad result as malpractice.
2. The Trial Court erred in fading to instruct the jury that fault could be apportioned to persons other than the defendant.
3. The Trial Judge erred in granting plaintiffs’ Motion For A Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict and increasing the amount of damages.
4. The amount of damages awarded were excessive.

| ^Discussion of the Merits

Liability

In its first assignment of error, the LPCF contends that the trial court erred in failing to grant a new trial or JNOV. The LPCF argues that the evidence presented does not indicate that Dr. Maerhofer’s treatment was a cause-in-fact of Mrs. Thrash’s injuries.. Specifically, the LPCF contends that “[n]one of the doctors who testified on behalf of Mrs. Thrash qualified to testify on the issue of whether the injury was caused by chiropractic treatment.” It contends that the experts presented by the plaintiff were not qualified to testify as to chiropractic treatment, since they were medical doctors instead of chiropractors or that testimony indicated that chiropractic manipulations could not cause damage to a disc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
745 So. 2d 1238, 1999 WL 1037945, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thrash-v-maerhofer-lactapp-1999.