Yaffee v. Skeen

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 26, 2024
DocketC097746
StatusPublished

This text of Yaffee v. Skeen (Yaffee v. Skeen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yaffee v. Skeen, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 11/25/24 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Sacramento) ----

DAVID YAFFEE, C097746, C097988

Plaintiff and Respondent, (Super. Ct. No. 34-2016- 00204039-CU-PA-GDS) v.

JOSEPH SKEEN et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County, James P. Arguelles, Judge. Reversed in part and affirmed in part.

Locke Lord, Susan A. Kidwell and Rory S. Miller; Martenson, Hasbrouck & Simon and Stephen W. Robertson for Defendants and Appellants.

Demas Law Group, PC, John N. Demas and Brad Adam Schultz; and C. Athena Roussos for Plaintiff and Respondent.

A jury awarded plaintiff, David Yaffee, $3,299,455 in damages for past and future economic earnings and noneconomic loss for injuries he received when his vehicle was

1 hit from behind in 2015 by a truck driven by defendant Joseph Skeen while Skeen was driving for his employer KLS Transportation, Inc. (KLS). National Liability & Fire Insurance Company (National) appeared on behalf of KLS in the litigation. We hereafter refer to National and Skeen as defendants. On appeal, defendants challenge, (1) the award for past medical damages; (2) the award for future medical damages; (3) the awards for past and future lost earnings; (4) the award for future noneconomic damages (pain and suffering); and (5) the award for costs and prejudgment interest. We reverse the awards for past and future medical expenses and vacate the award of costs and prejudgment interest. The judgment is otherwise affirmed.

FACTS AND HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS

The Accident and Preliminary Medical Treatment

On June 16, 2015, plaintiff was sitting in his stopped car when Skeen, driving a truck while employed by KLS, drove into the back of plaintiff’s car. Skeen and plaintiff exchanged information, plaintiff’s car was towed away and a friend took him home. At the time, plaintiff felt a burning sensation in his back and neck. That night, plaintiff’s burning sensation became worse. The next morning he also felt tingling in his right leg. He went to his job at the Franchise Tax Board (FTB), but throughout the day, plaintiff became increasingly sore, and he made a same-day appointment to see his primary care physician, Dr. Benjamin Leavy at the UC Davis Medical Center (UC Davis). Dr. Leavy gave plaintiff naproxen and a muscle relaxer. The parties do not dispute that the health maintenance organization (HMO) that insured plaintiff had a contract with UC Davis regarding payment for services. About a week later, plaintiff consulted Chip Studley, a chiropractor, in a first of approximately six or seven visits they would have before July 10, 2015. Studley advised

2 plaintiff to consult his primary care physician regarding magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). On June 26, 2015, a UC Davis physician ordered an MRI. Thereafter, the tingling sensations in plaintiff’s leg became worse and his back remained sore.

Emergency Room Visit

On July 7, 2015, plaintiff was leaving work when he felt intense pain in his back and leg. He could not walk and struggled to get to his car. When he got to his car, he could not feel his foot and called his wife, to pick him up. He then went to the emergency room. Dr. Ian Michael Julie treated plaintiff in the emergency room at UC Davis. Plaintiff complained of back pain and numbness of his right lower extremity below the knee. Plaintiff said his pain was a 9 out of 10. Dr. Julie believed the decreased sensation to plaintiff’s leg could indicate there was nerve involvement with the pain. Dr. Julie conducted an exam and ordered x-rays to rule out possible causes of plaintiff’s symptoms that would be “potentially very, very serious issues that would potentially cause death or disability and would require immediate workup.” Having ruled those conditions out, Dr. Julie treated plaintiff with a muscle relaxant and an anti-inflammatory medication and plaintiff was discharged. Emergency room staff told plaintiff to follow-up with his primary care physician, continue to use pain and muscle spasm medication, and to return if things became worse. Dr. Julie gave plaintiff a work note to take one day off to recover that said plaintiff should not perform heavy lifting.

3 Treatment Following the Emergency Room Visit

Dr. Leavy again met with plaintiff on July 8, 2015. Dr. Leavy prescribed an opioid pain medication, changed the existing MRI order from routine to urgent, and put in an urgent referral to the spine clinic. Plaintiff met with Colleen Weaver, an orthopedic nurse practitioner at the UC Davis spine center, on July 20, 2015. Plaintiff’s MRI showed an obvious disc herniation at the L5-S1 level of his spine. Plaintiff and Weaver discussed surgery and other options, and plaintiff opted to first try physical therapy with possible medication and steroid injections. Plaintiff tried steroids and two physical therapy sessions but then decided to proceed with surgery. Dr. Yashar Javidan is an orthopedic spine surgeon with UC Davis. Dr. Javidan performed a microdiscectomy in September 2015. Just before the procedure, Dr. Javidan concluded the MRI showed plaintiff had a disc herniation that was compressing a nerve root in his spinal canal. According to Dr. Javidan, the disc herniation looked acute, and “no one walks around with a disc herniation that size without being in agonizing pain and . . . presenting to a[n] ER or doctor.” The disc herniation Dr. Javidan saw was acute, recent, and consistent with being caused by the collision. Plaintiff took off work from early September 2015 to mid-January 2016 to recover. After the surgery, plaintiff’s back pain subsided, but the numbness and tingling in his leg persisted. When Plaintiff again met with Dr. Leavy in November 2016, plaintiff reported a frequent “charley horse” in his leg with sharp pain, which was constant and had a burning quality. It looked painful when plaintiff was walking. Dr. Leavy diagnosed plaintiff with chronic midline low back pain with right-sided sciatica, which was more likely than not related to the collision. When Dr. Leavy met with plaintiff in February 2017, plaintiff

4 still reported low back pain and numbness in his right foot. Dr. Leavy referred plaintiff to pain management. Plaintiff tried steroid injections without success. Dr. Samir Sheth in the department of pain medicine at UC Davis met with plaintiff in August 2017. He determined plaintiff was a good candidate for neurostimulation. They began with a spinal cord stimulator trial on November 8, 2017, and after plaintiff reported a 90 percent reduction in his pain they implanted a permanent spinal cord stimulator on November 20, 2017. Plaintiff’s nerve pain and numbness improved. The relief provided by the spinal cord stimulator lasted until August 2019, when plaintiff began to feel more pain. He started having a burning feeling down his leg. He and the stimulator manufacturer tried to adjust the stimulator, but his pain increased. At trial plaintiff described the nerve pains as burning, electric, and “the worst pain ever.” Plaintiff met with Dr. David Copenhaver, a pain management specialist with UC Davis, in September 2019. Dr. Copenhaver ordered an electromyography nerve conduction study (EMG) and wanted plaintiff to see Dr. Javidan. Dr. Melissa Lao, a family medicine specialist who is one of plaintiff’s treating physicians with UC Davis ordered an MRI. The EMG showed there was a nerve root injury at the L5 level of plaintiff’s spine with some acute S1 considerations. The MRI showed a reherniation at the L5-S1 level. Dr. Javidan performed a fusion surgery on the L5-S1 level of plaintiff’s spine in October 2019. Dr. Javidan initially took plaintiff off work from the date of the surgery to early March 2020.

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Yaffee v. Skeen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yaffee-v-skeen-calctapp-2024.