Large Pain and Suffering Verdict Affirmed for Teenager with Fractured Leg and Degloving Injury
Posted in Ankle Injuries, Leg Injuries- open reduction and internal fixation surgery (with screw and rod through the length of the fibula)
- external fixation applied to right leg for three months
- placement of syndesmotic screw between tibia and fibula
- five irrigation and debridement and plastic surgical procedures for highest grade of severity of tissue loss (including an eight hour surgery to transplant abdominal muscle to his calf and a 400 square centimeter skin graft from his thigh)
- surgery to transplant blood vessels
- total of eight surgical procedures in the three months post-accident
- left ankle casted for six weeks for suspected calcaneus fracture
- hospital in-patient for three and a half weeks, 10 weeks of in-patient physical therapy and 14 months of home care
Plaintiff’s prognosis is poor:
- substantially limited range of motion in all aspects of his right ankle
- arthritis presence indicates the need for ankle replacement or fusion surgery in five years
- permanent scarring on abdomen and leg with dessication (dryer skin caused by lack of any oil producing glands leading to permanent chronic skin cracking and injury susceptibiliy
- inability to walk without limping by the end of many days
- embarrassment and depression
- Plaintiff’s main treating physicians – an orthopedic surgeon and a plastic surgeon – testified on his behalf; however, while the defense had plaintiff examined before trial by three different physicians, no doctor testified for the defense.
- The jury’s award of future pain and suffering damages covered a period of only 10 years even though the judge charged the jury that plaintiff’s life expectancy was 57 years and the testimony of plaintiff’s physicians as to permanency was unchallenged. Plaintiff’s counsel surmised that the jurors must have had some knowledge of the workings of New York’s structured settlement law (CPLR 5041) that limits (i.e., structures in the form of an annuity) future pain and suffering payments to a period of 10 years.
POSTED BY ATTORNEY RENE G. GARCIA:
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