Dwyer et al v. Southwest Airlines Co.
Filing
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MEMORANDUM OPINION OF THE COURT AND ORDER: Accordingly, plaintiff Vanessa Jackson's Motion to Amend Complaint (Doc. No. 99) to add a new category of damages is DENIED on the grounds of futility. Insofar as this plaintiff seeks to amend the Co mplaint to remove her claim for damages to compensate her for future loss of earning capacity, that portion of the motion is GRANTED as unopposed. Signed by District Judge Aleta A. Trauger on 5/8/2019. (DOCKET TEXT SUMMARY ONLY-ATTORNEYS MUST OPEN THE PDF AND READ THE ORDER.)(am)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE
NASHVILLE DIVISION
ANGELA DWYER et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
SOUTHWEST AIRLINES CO.,
Defendant.
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Case No. 3:16-cv-03262
Judge Aleta A. Trauger
LEAD CASE
CONSOLIDATED WITH:
MELISSA WARD,
Plaintiff,
v.
SOUTHWEST AIRLINES CO.,
Defendant.
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Case No. 3:17-cv-00286
Judge Aleta A. Trauger
MEMBER CASE
______________________________________________________________________________
MELISSA WARD,
Plaintiff,
v.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant.
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Case No. 3:17-cv-00842
Judge Aleta A. Trauger
MEMBER CASE
______________________________________________________________________________
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ANGELA DWYER et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendant.
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Case No. 3:17-cv-01219
Judge Aleta A. Trauger
LEAD CASE
______________________________________________________________________________
MELISSA WARD as Parent and Next Friend
of RONALD TILLMAN and GREYSON
OWENS, her minor children,
Plaintiff,
v.
SOUTHWEST AIRLINES CO. and
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendants.
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Case No. 3:18-cv-00352
Judge Aleta A. Trauger
MEMBER CASE
______________________________________________________________________________
VANESSA JACKSON,
Plaintiff,
v.
SOUTHWEST AIRLINES CO. and
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Defendants.
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Case No. 3:18-cv-01343
Judge Aleta A. Trauger
MEMBER CASE
MEMORANDUM and ORDER
Before the court is plaintiff Vanessa Jackson’s Motion to Amend Complaint (Doc. No. 99).
Jackson seeks to amend her Complaint under Rule 15(a)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Southwest Airlines Co. and the United States of America both oppose the proposed additional
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damages claim on the grounds that it is futile. (Doc. Nos. 103, 104.) For the reasons set forth
herein, the court will deny that portion of the Motion to Amend on the grounds of futility. The
court will grant as unopposed the plaintiff’s request to remove a claim for one category of damages.
I.
Background
Vanessa Jackson filed her original Complaint in this action on December 4, 2018. In
February 2019, this case was consolidated with the case Angelina Dwyer et al. v. Southwest
Airlines Co., Case No. 3:16-cv-03262, which had previously been consolidated with four other
member cases. The consolidated cases all arise from the same December 15, 2015 aviation incident
at Nashville International Airport that occurred when an aircraft operated by Southwest Airlines
Co. (“Southwest”) departed a taxiway. The plaintiffs in the consolidated cases were all passengers
on the aircraft at the time the incident occurred, and they allegedly suffered personal injuries as a
result of it.
Jackson amended her Complaint in March 2019, with the consent of the defendants, to
substitute the United States as a defendant in the place of the United States Federal Aviation
Administration. (See Doc. Nos. 87–89.) She filed her present motion within the deadline set forth
in the operative Case Management Order for amending the pleadings. In her motion, she seeks
permission to add a claim for damages in the form of the loss of household services and to remove
her claim for damages in the form of future loss of earning capacity. The United States does not
oppose the removal of the claim for damages associated with the loss of future earning capacity.
However, it opposes the addition of the new claim for damages on the grounds that it would be
futile, because “Tennessee law does not permit a plaintiff to seek personal injury damages for loss
of value of past and future household services outside of the context of a loss of consortium claim.”
(Doc. No. 103, at 3.) Southwest’s Response simply “adopts and incorporates by reference” the
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United States’ Response. (Doc. No. 104, at 1.) The plaintiff filed a Reply, arguing that there is no
available Tennessee precedent excluding damages for loss of the value of household services.
(Doc. No. 105.)
II.
Standard of Review
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a)(1) provides that a party can amend its pleading once
“as a matter of course” under limited circumstances. Rule 15(a)(2) applies “[i]n all other cases,”
and it provides that a party may amend “only with the opposing party’s written consent or the
court’s leave.” Such leave should be freely given “when justice so requires.” Id. Rule 15(a)(2)
“embodies a ‘liberal amendment policy.’” Brown v. Chapman, 814 F.3d 436, 442–43 (6th Cir.
2016) (citation omitted).
To determine whether to grant leave under this liberal policy, courts weigh several factors,
including “[u]ndue delay in filing, lack of notice to the opposing party, bad faith by the moving
party, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by previous amendments, undue prejudice to the
opposing party, and futility of amendment.” Wade v. Knoxville Utils. Bd., 259 F.3d 452, 458–59
(6th Cir. 2001) (citation omitted). Generally, futility provides an independent basis for dismissal
when any claims sought to be added “could not survive a motion to dismiss.” Midkiff v. Adams
Cty. Reg’l Water Dist., 409 F.3d 758, 767 (6th Cir. 2005).
III.
The Plaintiff’s Motion
The change sought in the proposed amendment is slight and, on its face, relatively
innocuous. In the original Complaint and First Amended Complaint, Jackson identified the
damages she seeks to recover in this action as follows:
43. Plaintiff has suffered, and will continue to suffer, the following types of
harm, for which she is entitled to damages from Defendants:
a. Past and future medical expenses;
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b. Future loss of earning capacity;
c. Past and future pain and suffering;
d. Permanent physical impairment;
e. Past and future emotional distress; and
f. Loss of enjoyment of life.
(Doc. No. 89 ¶ 43.) The enumerated list of categories of damages in her proposed Second Amended
Complaint is identical, except that it omits the category “Future loss of earning capacity” and adds
“Loss of the value of past and future household services.” (Doc. No. 99-1 ¶ 43.)
In the Memorandum in Support of her Motion, Jackson explains that, as a result of the
injuries suffered in the aviation incident, she “has been limited in her ability to perform various
household tasks, and has to rely on friends and family to complete those tasks for her.” (Doc. No.
100, at 3.) Her retained expert has valued her past and future loss of household services at
$196,000. (Id.) She anticipates that the defendants will argue that this category of damages is only
recoverable by a spouse or family member, not the person injured. She argues, to the contrary, that
“[t]here is no Tennessee law to support” the defendants’ position and that the two cases on which
she expects the defendants to rely do not support the proposition that a plaintiff cannot recover for
the loss of household services on her own behalf. (Doc. No. 100, at 3–4 (citing Cone v. Hankook
Tire Co., Ltd., No. 14-1122, 2017 WL 401795, at *3 (W.D. Tenn. Jan. 25, 2017); Spears v. Cooper,
No. 1:07-CV-58, 2008 WL 5552336 (E.D. Tenn. Nov. 17, 2008)).) The plaintiff argues generally
that (1) neither case ruled out the possibility of the type of damages she seeks; (2) neither of these
cases is binding on this court, as they both attempt to predict what Tennessee courts would say in
an area in which there is little, if any, caselaw; and (3) in the absence of clear authority to the
contrary, the court should permit the finder of fact to consider damages actually suffered by
Jackson.
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The defendants, indeed, rely upon Cone and Spears, arguing that all available law—sparse
as it is—indicates that damages for the loss of the value of household services are not compensable
under Tennessee law outside the loss-of-consortium context and, therefore, that amending the
complaint to add this category of damages would be futile. They also refer to the Tennessee Pattern
Jury Instructions, which make no reference to the loss of household services as a category of
damages recoverable by a plaintiff injured in tort, while expressly contemplating the recovery of
such damages by the spouse of an injured person. The defendants further contend that there is “no
reason why, under her current complaint, Jackson may not recover [as an element of compensatory
damages] the cost of past and future preplacement household services necessitated by her alleged
physical impairment if she adduces admissible evidence at trial . . . that she has actually incurred
and will incur such expenses as a result of the airplane accident.” (Doc. No. 103, at 6.) Thus, the
defendants argue, permitting the category of damages sought by the plaintiff would potentially
give rise to duplicative recovery.
In her Reply, Jackson contends that the damages she seeks would not be duplicative and
argues again that, in the absence of legal authority excluding the damages she seeks, their validity
should be left to the finder of fact. (Doc. No. 105.)
IV.
Discussion
The court finds the defendants’ arguments persuasive. Contrary to the plaintiff’s position,
the single best argument against her ability to recover damages for the loss of her own household
services is that she cannot point to any Tennessee law authorizing the recovery of such damages,
despite the existence of a substantial body of Tennessee caselaw addressing the types of damages
that are available to tort plaintiffs, as discussed below. That caselaw expressly authorizes damages
of the type the plaintiff seeks only in the context of loss of consortium claims brought by the spouse
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of an injured party. Authority from outside Tennessee, including the federal district courts the
parties cite, tends to support the conclusion that the damages the plaintiff seeks are not recoverable
by her.
A.
Tennessee Law on Tort Damages
The Tennessee Pattern Jury Instructions identify several categories of compensatory
damages available under Tennessee law in tort cases. These include, among others, “pain and
suffering,” “permanent injury,” and “loss of enjoyment of life.” Tenn. Pattern J. Instr. – Civil §
14.01. Damages for pain and suffering provide “reasonable compensation for any physical pain
and discomfort and for mental pain and discomfort suffered by the plaintiff,” past and future. Id.
“Mental discomfort includes anguish, grief, shame, or worry.” Id. Permanent injury is defined as
“an injury that the plaintiff must live with for the rest of the plaintiff’s life that may result in
inconvenience or the loss of physical vigor.” Damages for permanent injury may be awarded, even
if the permanent injury does not cause such pain or inconvenience. Id. Likewise, loss of enjoyment
of life permits damages that “take[] into account the loss of the normal enjoyments and pleasures
in life in the future as well as limitations on the person’s lifestyle resulting from the injury.” Id.
The pattern jury instructions do not have the force of law but are “merely patterns or
suggestions.” State v. Hodges, 944 S.W.2d 346, 354 (Tenn. 1997). These instructions, however,
clearly reflect the current state of Tennessee law. See, e.g., Palanki ex rel. Palanki v. Vanderbilt
Univ., 215 S.W.3d 380, 388 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006); Overstreet v. Shoney’s, Inc., 4 S.W.3d 694,
703 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999) (from which the pattern instruction seems derived).
The Tennessee courts recognize that
[t]he purpose of tort damages in Anglo-American law is to compensate the wronged
party for damage or injury caused by the defendant’s conduct. The goal of awarding
damages is to repair the wronged party’s injury or, at least, to make the wronged
party whole as nearly as may be done by an award of money.
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Overstreet, 4 S.W.3d at 703 (citations omitted). To achieve that goal, a plaintiff may be awarded
compensatory damages “for any economic or pecuniary losses that naturally result from the
defendant’s wrongful conduct,” as well as “compensatory damages for non-economic loss or
injury.” Meals ex rel. Meals v. Ford Motor Co., 417 S.W.3d 414, 419, 420 (Tenn. 2013) (citations
omitted); Dedmon v. Steelman, 535 S.W.3d 431, 438 (Tenn. 2017). The Tennessee Supreme Court
has expressly recognized, consistent with the categories of damages listed in the pattern
instruction, that recoverable “[n]on-economic damages include pain and suffering, permanent
impairment and/or disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life.” Dedmon, 535 S.W.3d at 438
(quoting Meals, 417 F.3d at 420).
In other words, the Tennessee courts have not recognized a plaintiff’s loss of the value of
her own household services as a category of recoverable non-economic damages. As a result, the
plaintiff simply cannot establish that she is entitled to recover this type of damages. However, if
the plaintiff proves that, as a result of her injuries, she has been, or will be (for instance, when her
friends and family members tire of helping her), required to pay for services she previously
provided for herself, including such services as lawn and yard work, cooking, housecleaning, and
so forth, Tennessee law contemplates that she will be able to recover for these expenditures as a
part of her economic damages.
In addition, depending upon her injuries and the available proof, the plaintiff may be able
to establish, as part of her non-economic damages for loss of enjoyment of life, that she should be
compensated for her inability to engage in activities she previously enjoyed, including such things
as cooking or gardening. See Overstreet, 4 S.W.3d at 716 (citing approvingly cases awarding
damages related to the loss of “normal enjoyments of life,” including “recreational or family
activities,” “going on a first date, becoming a parent, reading, debating politics”); see id. at 717
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(noting that the evidence supported the jury award for loss of enjoyment of life, where the plaintiff
could not, among other things “do much of her housework without assistance” and that she
“sometimes burns herself when she cooks”). Further, if the plaintiff proves that she suffers from a
permanent injury, that category of damages is defined by the courts to include “inconvenience.”
See, e.g., Overstreet, 4 S.W.3d at 715. It appears to be broad enough to encompass, for example,
the inconvenience of having to devote two hours to perform a task that previously took only one,
as a result of the permanent injury. Thus, although the plaintiff cannot recover for the loss of the
value of her own household services, some components of that type of damages are recoverable
under damages categories already recognized by Tennessee law.
The conclusion that Tennessee law does not authorize the injured plaintiff to recover
damages for the loss of her own household services is bolstered by the fact that Tennessee law
expressly authorizes the recovery of the loss of the value of household services by the spouse of
an injured plaintiff within the context of a loss of consortium claim. The Tennessee Pattern Jury
Instructions provide that the spouse of an individual who suffered an injury may sue to recover, in
addition to other damages, “[t]he reasonable value of the injured spouse’s services this plaintiff
has lost [and the present cash value of such services plaintiff is reasonably certain to lose in the
future].” Tenn. Pattern J. Instr. – Civil § 14.20 (“Personal Injury – Spouse”); see also Jackson v.
Miller, 776 S.W.2d 115, 117 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1989) (“[L]oss of consortium is a right of action
separate from that of the husband for his damage[;] loss of services is a part of the loss of
consortium. . . .” (quoting Manning v. Altec, Inc., 488 F.2d 127, 132 (6th Cir. 1973)).
A spouse’s action for loss of consortium is a “distinct cause of action” created by statute.
Clark v. Shoaf, 209 S.W.3d 59, 61 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006) (citing Tenn. Code Ann. § 25-1-106).
Largely for that reason, the Tennessee Supreme Court declined to create a common-law cause of
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action for loss of parental consortium in personal injury cases, one that would have allowed the
minor children of an injured parent to be compensated for the loss of consortium and services
previously provided by the injured parent. Taylor v. Beard, 104 S.W.3d 507 (Tenn. 2003). The
court held that, due to its “limited role in declaring public policy” and the fact that the Tennessee
legislature had already involved itself extensively in this arena, “the issue of whether to create such
a cause of action is a matter of legislative discretion.” Id. at 511–12; see id. at 511 (“[T]he
legislature has . . . thoroughly occupied itself in the area of the family by determining the
availability of actions for loss of consortium for both spouses. Where the legislature has
thoroughly involved itself in an area of the law and where its decisions in that area appear to set
discreet boundaries, we think that it should be left to the legislature to change those boundaries,
if they are to be changed, and to define the new ones.” (emphasis in original; quoting Norwest v.
Presbyterian Intercommunity Hosp., 631 P.2d 1377, 1380 (Or. Ct. App. 1981)).
The Tennessee Supreme Court’s refusal to extend loss of consortium causes of action to
other close family members—leaving the matter to the discretion of the legislature—strongly
weighs against this court’s permitting the type of damages the plaintiff seeks here. If these damages
were permissible under Tennessee law, the courts or the legislature would have so recognized.
B.
Other Courts’ Treatment of Tennessee Law
The cases cited by the parties, as the plaintiff argues, are not binding on this court, nor are
they particularly persuasive. The first is largely irrelevant, as it concerned a motion in limine in a
wrongful death action, in which the defendant sought to exclude expert testimony from the
plaintiff’s accountant on the value of the loss of the decedent’s household services. The defendant
argued that, because the decedent was single, he “would be the primary recipient of his own
household services—and thus household services would not be a component of economic loss
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associated with his death.” Spears v. Cooper, No. 1:07-CV-58, 2008 WL 5552336, at *7 (E.D.
Tenn. Nov. 17, 2008). The court noted that it was “unclear from the parties’ filings whether this
dispute in calculation is a purely doctrinal one, or involves an underlying factual dispute as to [the
decedent’s] living situation—either as his living situation was at the time of his death or how that
situation would have been had he survived.” Id. Regardless, because the defendant’s arguments
did not address the reliability of the accountant’s calculations, the court denied the motion without
any discussion of the “doctrinal” aspects of the dispute. Id.
In Cone v. Hankook, No. 14-1122, 2017 WL 401795 (W.D. Tenn. Jan. 25, 2017), the
defendant sought partial summary judgment in its favor as to some of the damages sought by the
plaintiff. The plaintiff had been severely injured in a vehicular incident that he alleged was caused
by a defect in a tire manufactured by the defendant. He suffered permanent traumatic brain and
spinal cord injuries. He sought to recover, among other categories of damages, the “loss of
household services to himself.” Id. at *3. The plaintiff’s economist described these losses as
“represent[ing] the value of replacing the previously uncompensated activities necessary for daily
life” and defined the services as including “household chores, shopping, fixing things, etc.” Id.
The plaintiff, however, had also submitted a “life care plan” that included “the cost of having
another person provide twenty-four hour in-home care.” Id. The defendant objected only that
allowing the plaintiff to recover both types of damages would be duplicative. The plaintiff argued
that the two categories did not overlap:
Dr. Carter testified that a life care plan measures the costs that will be incurred to
maintain Frazier in a “subsistent state.” In contrast, he said that household services
related to things that he could previously do for himself but was no longer capable
of completing due to his injuries, such as preparing food and cleaning up.
According to Dr. Carter, the ability to complete those tasks had a value, which was
represented in the loss of household services. He opined that having a caregiver
prepare food for Frazier was not a substitute for the loss of his ability to perform
that activity himself.
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Id. (citations to the record omitted).
In other words, the plaintiff in Cone was seeking precisely the same type of damages the
plaintiff here apparently seeks. The court, with little analysis, granted the defendant’s motion for
summary judgment as to those damages, finding both that Tennessee caselaw did not appear to
support this type of damages and that they would be duplicative:
The Court has not found, and Plaintiffs have not cited, any cases where damages
for loss of household services were awarded to an injured person. Rather, case law
shows that they are typically awarded to a spouse where the injured person or
decedent will no longer be able to provide household services[;] thus, the spouse is
compensated for that loss. In the present case, Plaintiffs are seeking compensation
for the loss of household services to Frazier himself. But, as Hankook points out,
damages in his life care plan provide for the cost of someone to cook, clean, and
perform other household chores. In other words, the tasks that he can no longer
complete for himself will now be performed by another person, the cost of which
is included in the life care plan. The Court agrees that allowing him to recover for
both the loss of household services to himself as well as expenses in his life care
plan for another person to provide twenty-four hour care would be duplicative and
improper.
Id. at *4 (internal citations omitted). While not binding on this court, this case is generally
supportive of the conclusion that Tennessee law does not allow a plaintiff to recover for the loss
of his own household services but that he can recover the cost of paying someone else to perform
those tasks.
Another even more recent case provides further support for this proposition. In multidistrict
class-action litigation arising from the February 2014 recall by General Motors of vehicles that
had been manufactured with a defective ignition switch, the district court for the Southern District
of New York was called upon to survey the types of damages permissible in each of the fortyseven different jurisdictions involved in the multidistrict litigation. In re General Motors LLC
Ignition Switch Litigation, 339 F. Supp. 3d 262 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 12, 2018). Specifically at issue,
among many other types of damages, was the question of whether the plaintiffs could recover “for
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their ‘lost time’ (for example, time lost in repairing their vehicles).” Id. at 275. The court
interpreted this to mean lost “free or personal time,” id. at 307, which it found is not recoverable
in most states, as distinct from lost earnings or income, which nearly every state permits.
In considering the availability of damages for the loss of “free time,” the court also found
it necessary to address the related question of whether a plaintiff could recover, in each particular
jurisdiction, for the value of the loss of his or her own household services, that is, “lost-time
damages for household work.” Id. at 321. The court explained:
Strictly limiting compensation to lost income or earnings obviously places those
who work in the home without pay—historically, a group disproportionately
comprised of women—at a disadvantage. That said, perhaps mindful that
household services can be given a pecuniary value, some states—including some
that generally limit compensation to lost income or earnings—nevertheless
recognize a person’s right to recover for loss of time performing household labor.
Id. at 321. The court conducted a comprehensive survey of the laws of the forty-seven jurisdictions
that were represented in the multidistrict litigation and found that seventeen states allowed the
recovery of such damages. Id. at 322–23. The court then found that the other thirty jurisdictions,
Tennessee among them, 1 “prohibit a person from recovering lost-time damages for his or her own
unpaid household work,” but allow a spouse or next of kin to bring an action to recover lost-time
damages for the work of the injured party. Id. at 323. While recognizing the “archaic gender
norms” in which it was rooted, the court observed that the practice “can be justified on the ground
that unpaid household work can be assigned a concrete value to others who live in that household
(namely, the cost of replacing that work with paid labor).” Id. at 323–24.
The court in In re General Motors did not pretend to do an in-depth analysis of the law in
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The court cited Taylor v. Beard, supra, in support of its conclusion that Tennessee
permitted a spouse, but not the injured plaintiff herself, to recover for the loss of household
services. In re Gen. Motors, 339 F. Supp. 3d at 326.
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each jurisdiction, but its conclusion regarding the state of the law in Tennessee corresponds with
this court’s: Tennessee does not allow an injured plaintiff to recover for the loss of the value of his
or her own household services.
V.
Conclusion and Order
Because Tennessee law does not permit the recovery of the type of damages the plaintiff
seeks, allowing her to amend her complaint to add such a claim in this case would be futile. The
categories of damages already listed in the first Amended Complaint are those that are permitted
under Tennessee law. However, as also indicated above, some components of the damages the
plaintiff characterizes as “household services” may be recoverable as part of her damages for pain
and suffering, permanent injury, or loss of enjoyment of life. In addition, if her injuries require her
to pay a third party for services she previously performed for herself, she may seek compensation
for such payments as part of her economic damages. These kinds of damages fall within the
categories of damages already enumerated in the Complaint.
Accordingly, plaintiff Vanessa Jackson’s Motion to Amend Complaint (Doc. No. 99) to
add a new category of damages is DENIED on the grounds of futility. Insofar as this plaintiff
seeks to amend the Complaint to remove her claim for damages to compensate her for future loss
of earning capacity, that portion of the motion is GRANTED as unopposed.
It is so ORDERED.
This the 8th day of May, 2019.
ALETA A. TRAUGER
United States District Judge
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