Tracey L Rudder v. Jackie Easter

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 2017
Docket330165
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tracey L Rudder v. Jackie Easter (Tracey L Rudder v. Jackie Easter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tracey L Rudder v. Jackie Easter, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

TRACEY L. RUDDER, UNPUBLISHED January 10, 2017 Plaintiff-Appellant,

v No. 330165 Genesee Circuit Court JACKIE EASTER, LC No. 14-103078-NI

Defendant-Appellee.

Before: BOONSTRA, P.J., and CAVANAGH and K. F. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff appeals by right an order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10) in this third-party no-fault action. We affirm.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On November 8, 2011, plaintiff was stopped at a red light at the intersection of East Bristol Road and South Grand Traverse Boulevard in Burton, Michigan when she was rear-ended by defendant. Three months before the accident, plaintiff had been referred to a specialist, Dr. Rama Rao, by her primary care physician, Dr. John Stoker, for help with the management of severe neck and lower back pain. As of August 9, 2011, plaintiff reported to Dr. Rao that she had been “experiencing persistent severe lower back pain and cervical neck pain since an accident at home” in June 2011, and that her pain level on that date was a 10/10 on a 0-10 pain scale. Dr. Rao assessed plaintiff as having lumbar degenerative disk disease, lumbar spondylosis, cervical degenerative disk disease, and cervical spondylosis, among other things. Dr. Rao treated plaintiff with epidural steroid injections in her lumbar and cervical regions in August 2011. On November 3, 2011, five days before the accident, plaintiff again saw Dr. Rao and reported “severe persistent cervical neck pain that radiates to shoulders associated with numbness” and “persistent severe low back pain.” Dr. Rao ordered a CT scan of plaintiff’s cervical spine, and prescribed additional injections and physical therapy. On November 11, 2011, three days after the accident, plaintiff underwent the CT scan of her cervical spine that Dr. Rao had ordered. This scan revealed no acute fractures or dislocations and found only “mild degenerative changes” in parts of plaintiff’s spine. Plaintiff saw Dr. Rao twice in November and twice in December 2011 for injections; the records reveal no mention of the accident that had occurred on November 8, 2011.

-1- Dr. Stoker took X-rays of plaintiff’s spine the day after the accident; the X-rays also did not reveal any fractures or dislocations. Plaintiff visited a chiropractor as well; he informed her that she had suffered whiplash and referred her to physical therapy. Ultimately, plaintiff’s attorney1 referred her to the Michigan Head & Spine Institute (MHSI). Records from late 2012 and early 2013 indicate that MHSI physicians concluded that plaintiff suffered from severe neck and lower back pain, disc spurs and herniations in various vertebrae, and nerve root irritations. In her October 30, 2012 initial MHSI patient information form, plaintiff reported that her pain, and the problem for which she was being seen, started on “11/8/11” as the result of the auto accident. Plaintiff saw Dr. Robert Farhat (an interventional pain management physiatrist) of MHSI on that date, and Dr. Farhat took a medical history that indicated that plaintiff was experiencing “neck and low back pain,” that she had been “involved in a motor vehicle accident on 11/08/11,” that “[s]ince that time she has had severe neck pain, headaches, and upper extremity pain,” that she “did have issues prior to this incident with her low back,” but that “the accident made her symptoms worse.” She later saw Dr. Fernando Diaz (a neurosurgeon) of MHSI, whose records reflect a medical history indicating that plaintiff developed “the onset of neck and back pain radiating” to both her upper and lower extremities, and that these were symptoms “[r]esulting from the accident.”

Plaintiff underwent two independent medical examinations, one by Dr. Robert Levine and one by Dr. Paul Drouillard. After both a physical examination and a review of plaintiff’s medical records, Dr. Levine opined that plaintiff’s spondylosis was not related to the accident. Instead, Dr. Levine stated that plaintiff’s cervical and lumbar conditions were

slowly progressive, it is an ongoing degenerative process that involves the spine. This patient has spondylosis in both her cervical and lumbar spine. She has disease at multiple levels. There is also literature that shows a rear-end impact does not cause ruptured discs. I do feel that in review of the records, she was in a minor crash and that there is no problem that I can directly attribute to the crash.

Similarly, before viewing the results of plaintiff’s post-accident MRIs, Dr. Drouillard opined, “from a clinical standpoint, I see no evidence of a functional impairment or injury related to the event of November 8, 2011.” After viewing plaintiff’s MRI films, Dr. Drouillard did not change his opinion.

On June 17, 2013, Dr. Diaz stated in a letter written to plaintiff’s attorney, and in response to Dr. Levine’s independent medical evaluation, “Resulting from the accident, [plaintiff] developed the immediate onset of neck and back pain, which was not preexisting.” Further, he opined that plaintiff’s “cervical spondylitic changes and the [cervical and lumbar] herniated discs were either caused or significantly aggravated by the motor vehicle accident on November 8, 2011.” He indicated that he arrived at this conclusion based on his understanding that plaintiff did not have back and neck symptoms before the accident. Specifically, he stated:

1 The referring attorney was not the attorney who represented plaintiff during her deposition and at the summary disposition hearing.

-2- I do not believe that [plaintiff’s] problem is a degenerative problem in the strict sense, since she was completely asymptomatic prior to the motor vehicle accident and her symptoms have all occurred as a direct result of the motor vehicle accident on November 8, 2011.

The following day, June 18, 2013, plaintiff underwent surgery on her cervical spine. Dr. Diaz performed the surgery. On the same day, Dr. Farhat wrote a letter directed To Whom It May Concern, also in response to Dr. Levine’s independent medical evaluation, opining that plaintiff’s preexisting condition, namely issues with both her neck and lower back, were exacerbated by the accident. He noted that “as far as I understood [plaintiff] really did not seek consistent treatment for any cervical spine pain prior to this auto accident,” that her “cervical spine was not an issue until the accident,” and that her preexisting back symptoms had returned to their “previous baseline” before the accident, and concluded that “[t]here was definitely a functional change since the automobile accident that required consistent treatment and again ultimate surgery.”

Plaintiff filed suit in 2014, alleging that defendant had negligently operated her vehicle, causing her injury or aggravation of preexisting physical conditions. After discovery, defendant moved the trial court for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10). Defendant argued, relevant to this appeal, that plaintiff had significant neck and back issues before the accident, and that Drs. Diaz and Farhat were not given plaintiff’s full, accurate medical history and thus their opinions concerning the cause of plaintiff’s condition should not be given weight. Plaintiff argued that, conflicting medical testimony at least created a question of fact for the jury.

The trial court initially issued an order granting summary disposition in favor of defendant without prejudice, but providing that the order would be effective 45 days after the hearing, thereby allowing for additional discovery in the interim.

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Tracey L Rudder v. Jackie Easter, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tracey-l-rudder-v-jackie-easter-michctapp-2017.