Williamson v. Baptist Health Med. Ctr.

2016 Ark. App. 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 10, 2016
DocketCV-15-45
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2016 Ark. App. 78 (Williamson v. Baptist Health Med. Ctr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williamson v. Baptist Health Med. Ctr., 2016 Ark. App. 78 (Ark. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 78

ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION II No. CV-15-45

ELIZABETH ANN WILLIAMSON, Opinion Delivered: FEBRUARY 10, 2016 as Administrator of the Estate of Cynthia Frazier, Deceased, and on Behalf of the APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI Wrongful Death Beneficiaries of Cynthia COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT, Frazier THIRD DIVISION APPELLANT [NO. 60CV-2012-930]

V. HONORABLE CHRISTOPHER L. PALMER, JUDGE BAPTIST HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER AFFIRMED APPELLEE

ROBERT J. GLADWIN, Chief Judge

This appeal arises out of a pedestrian-vehicle collision that resulted in the death of

the pedestrian. Cynthia Frazier was walking across Emergency Drive, a public roadway on

the Baptist Health Medical Center (Baptist) campus, to reach her place of employment when

she was struck and killed by a vehicle driven by Cassandra Johnson. Elizabeth Ann

Williamson, Cynthia Frazier’s daughter and the administrator of her estate, sued Baptist for

negligence and sought to prove that it negligently failed to protect its employees. The jury

rendered a verdict against Baptist. On appeal, Williamson challenges the judgment entered

after the jury verdict and the subsequent denial of her motion for a new trial. We affirm.

I. Facts and Issues on Appeal

Prior to her death, Cynthia Frazier was an employee at Baptist Health Breast Center

in the Hickingbotham Outpatient Center (HOC) on the Baptist campus. Baptist required Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 78

that employees working in the HOC park their vehicles in designated employee parking

areas. Emergency Drive, a public roadway, separates the employee parking area from the

HOC, and the closest employee parking area to the HOC is Lot 13. Although there is a

marked crosswalk on Emergency Drive, there is not one near Lot 13.

On February 15, 2011, at approximately 6:27 a.m., Frazier was walking from Lot 13

to the HOC without utilizing a marked crosswalk. While crossing Emergency Drive,

Frazier was struck by a vehicle driven by Cassandra Johnson, another employee of Baptist

who had just completed her overnight work shift. Frazier sustained grave injuries and was

taken to the emergency room at Baptist for treatment. She was pronounced dead at 7:13

a.m. that morning.

In February 2012, Cynthia Frazier’s husband, William Frazier, filed this wrongful-

death lawsuit in his capacity as administrator of Cynthia Frazier’s estate and on behalf of her

wrongful-death beneficiaries. Baptist answered and cross-claimed against Cassandra

Johnson, contending that her negligence proximately caused Frazier’s death. In May 2014,

appellant Elizabeth Ann Williamson was substituted as administrator of her mother’s estate.

Shortly thereafter, she filed a first amended wrongful-death complaint.

The case proceeded to a jury trial. During voir dire, Williamson’s counsel informed

the jury that she had settled her claims against Cassandra Johnson for $10. Thus, the case

centered on whether any negligence by Baptist proximately caused Frazier’s death. The

essence of Williamson’s case against Baptist was that it had breached its duty of care to

Frazier by failing to meet and use ordinary care in maintaining its premises. Specifically,

Baptist should have taken measures to make the mandatory crossing of Emergency Drive

2 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 78

safe for its employees. Alternatively, Baptist attempted to prove that it was actually the

negligence of Cassandra Johnson and Cynthia Frazier that caused Frazier’s death.

The case was submitted to the jury on interrogatories. During deliberations, the jury

posed several written questions to the court. The jury expressed confusion regarding

whether it was assessing damages against all parties or merely Baptist. Nevertheless, the jury

ultimately rendered a verdict and apportioned fault for Cynthia Frazier’s death between

Baptist, Cassandra Johnson, and Cynthia Frazier. The jury determined that they were 20%,

62%, and 18% at fault, respectively. It awarded the estate of Cynthia Frazier $72,400, and

it awarded each of her three daughters and wrongful-death beneficiaries $250,000. The

effect of the jury’s answers to interrogatories was such that Baptist was responsible for 20%

of the damages awarded by the jury. The jury’s verdict was memorialized in a judgment

entered on August 15, 2014.

Following the entry of the judgment, Williamson filed a motion for a new trial on

August 25, 2014. Attached to her motion were the affidavits of four jurors attesting that

they intended for the amounts listed on the verdict forms to represent Baptist’s share of the

liability as opposed to the total amount of damages to which Williamson was entitled.

Williamson also attached a photograph of the whiteboard from the jury-deliberation room,

which she contends showed that the jury did not consider all elements of damages when

awarding damages to Frazier’s estate. Baptist opposed the motion for a new trial. On

September 24, 2014, Williamson’s motion was deemed denied, and her timely notice of

appeal followed.

3 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 78

On appeal, Williamson challenges the circuit court’s judgment and its denial of her

motion for a new trial. She contends that (1) the jury improperly omitted loss-of-life

damages in its award to Frazier’s estate, (2) the jury’s award was inadequate considering the

loss-of-life damages sustained by Frazier’s estate, (3) the circuit court abused its discretion

by substituting its own verdict in place of the jury’s verdict, and (4) the judgment entered

grants Baptist an unconscionable quadruple reduction in its liability. 1

II. Standard of Review

The issues appealed in this case are primarily issues of damages. Thus, we reverse the

circuit court’s denial of the motion for a new trial only if the court’s ruling was a clear and

manifest abuse of discretion. Depew v. Jackson, 330 Ark. 733, 957 S.W.2d 177 (1997).

III. The Omission of Loss-of-Life Damages For her first point on appeal, Williamson argues that the jury improperly omitted

loss-of-life damages in its award to Frazier’s estate. Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-

62-101(b) (Repl. 2005) establishes that “a decedent’s estate may recover for the decedent’s

loss of life as an independent element of damages.” Our case law provides that loss-of-life

damages are awarded for damages suffered by the decedent and seek to compensate a

decedent for the loss of the value that the decedent would have placed on his or her own

life. See One Nat’l Bank v. Pope, 372 Ark. 208, 272 S.W.3d 98 (2008); Durham v. Marberry,

356 Ark. 481, 156 S.W.3d 242 (2004).

1 Additionally, Baptist cross-appealed several evidentiary rulings made and jury instructions given by the circuit court. Baptist asked this court to consider its cross-appeal only if the case was reversed and remanded for a new trial on direct appeal. Because we conclude that the case should be affirmed on direct appeal, we do not reach the merits of Baptist’s cross-appeal. 4 Cite as 2016 Ark. App. 78

Williamson sought damages on behalf of her mother’s estate for funeral expenses,

medical expenses, disfigurement prior to death, and loss-of–life damages. Cynthia Frazier’s

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Related

Williamson v. Baptist Health Medical Center
2017 Ark. 92 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2017)

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