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An El Paso woman thought her doctor tied her tubes. The next year, she was pregnant

A woman with an oxygen mask pulled to the top of her head lays in a hospital bed, partially covered in a blue sheet. She looks at a swaddled newborn baby in her arms.
Courtesy
/
Grissel Velasco
An El Paso mother's medical negligence lawsuit against her doctor for not tying her tubes and not telling her is now in the hands of the Texas Supreme Court. It comes as others throughout the Texas are challenging state laws related to reproductive rights and bodily autonomy.

Grissel Velasco didn鈥檛 want more kids.

In 2014, Velasco 鈥 31 years old at the time 鈥 was expecting her third child, and was receiving care at Sun City Women鈥檚 Health Care in El Paso, owned by OB-GYN and then-El Paso City Council member Dr. Michiel Noe.

With Sun City staff鈥檚 guidance, allegedly at Noe鈥檚 recommendation, she paid to receive tubal ligation 鈥 also known as tube tying 鈥 at the same time she delivered her baby boy. Having any more C-section births in the future would be risky, she said she was told.

鈥淭hey were the ones who read the papers to me, and for that reason I signed to not have children,鈥 Velasco said in Spanish during an interview with 四虎影院. 鈥淚 agreed to not having more children.鈥

But around October 2015, an at-home pregnancy test came out positive. An ultrasound at a New Mexico clinic confirmed Velasco was about four or five months pregnant with a healthy baby girl.

Velasco said she came out of the appointment in tears, terrified. She remembers later trying to explain to her son鈥檚 doctor how she was pregnant again when her son was only about a year old.

鈥淚 broke down in tears and said to her, 鈥業t's not my fault,鈥欌 Velasco said. 鈥淪he tells me, 鈥楬ow come this isn't your fault?鈥 I tell her, no, it's not my fault. I mean, I paid to have surgery, and I don't know what the doctor did, because I'm pregnant again.鈥

Nearly 10 years later, Velasco鈥檚 medical negligence lawsuit against Noe and his clinic is in front of the Texas Supreme Court. The court鈥檚 ruling could determine to what extent people can be rewarded damages for the burden of an unwanted pregnancy 鈥 or it could protect medical professionals from liability for causing those pregnancies due to negligence.

It鈥檚 also a ruling that could have major implications in a state like Texas, where strict abortion laws make getting an abortion nearly impossible after the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

What the law says

Texas鈥 abortion bans prioritize birth in almost all circumstances. The Texas Supreme Court examined the state鈥檚 narrow medical exemptions for abortion in court the very same day Velasco and Noe鈥檚 lawyers made their arguments to the state justices.

Velasco, now 40, said she didn鈥檛 want an abortion and grew to love her daughter before she was born. But the unwanted pregnancy stirred up complicated feelings and put her life plans on hold. The Ciudad Juarez native is a nail technician and hoped to study cosmetology and eventually open her own salon.

鈥淚 was late to accept my pregnancy,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t wasn't easy for me at all. I was very depressed, I cried a lot, sometimes I even had a really bad temper.鈥

In an affidavit, Velasco also stated she sometimes felt suicidal, angry, distraught and guilty for feeling that way.

Dallas attorney Linda Turley said Texas courts have ruled in a number of ways on whether and to what extent damages can be awarded for an unwanted pregnancy caused by negligence. Turley 鈥 who is not involved with the lawsuit but has experience with medical negligence cases 鈥 said the case鈥檚 novelty is probably why the state鈥檚 highest court accepted it.

鈥淲hat this case points out in conjunction with the elimination of rights under Roe is that when a woman does have an unwanted pregnancy in Texas, she has no options,鈥 Turley said. 鈥淲e have a very strict anti-abortion law, and a woman basically has no right to terminate her pregnancy, so that in situations like Ms. Velasco found herself in, we鈥檙e far more likely to see that pregnancy go to term 鈥 even though it is unwanted 鈥 when it results from medical negligence in providing care.鈥

An El Paso district judge first dismissed Velasco鈥檚 claims of medical negligence, fraud, intentional infliction of emotional distress and other allegations. But a state appeals court later decided the evidence supported her medical negligence claim. Noe鈥檚 lawyers disagreed and brought the case to the state Supreme Court.

Noe, 62, has owned and operated Sun City Women's Health Care since 2001. His lawyer Diana Faust declined 四虎影院鈥檚 requests for comment.

In court filings and during oral arguments, Noe and his lawyers say he didn鈥檛 perform tubal ligation on Velasco because her medical records indicated she didn鈥檛 request one. Noe testified Velasco also didn鈥檛 wait the full before getting her tubes tied, as required by law.

Faust isn鈥檛 completely challenging the validity of Velasco鈥檚 claims, but she said if Noe were to pay damages for medical negligence, the amount would have to be equal to Velasco鈥檚 medical expenses caused by the unwanted pregnancy and birth 鈥 nothing more.

During , she pointed out there are no other medical expenses on record for the pregnancy and birth aside from the $400 Velasco paid for tubal ligation, which was refunded around November 2015. The cap in Texas for noneconomic damages in a medical malpractice suit is $250,000, .

鈥淭he court would have to conclude that this benefit, this joy, this blessing that is to be presumed from the birth of a healthy child is not a legal harm for which damages are recoverable,鈥 she said.

鈥極verriding benefit rule鈥

Whether having a child is an absolute benefit, considering also their health and chance of survival, is a question Texas courts have weighed in an array of cases for decades.

The Texas Supreme Court a couple could be compensated for the medical and hospital expenses of their disabled child. The couple argued Dortha Jean Jacobs could have terminated her pregnancy if she hadn't been misadvised by her doctor about the effects of rubella on her child's health.

A Waco appeals court that although Sandra Flax gave birth to a healthy child after a failed contraceptive procedure, she could still recover damages because of health issues she faced during the unwanted pregnancy.

Outside of medical negligence lawsuits, the that while Kate Cox鈥檚 fetus received a 鈥渢ragic diagnosis鈥 of Trisomy 18, the Dallas native couldn鈥檛 legally get an in-state abortion because she and her physician hadn鈥檛 proved it was a life-threatening condition for Cox under the state鈥檚 medical exemption.

Joe Lopez, Velasco's lawyer, argued his client鈥檚 case isn鈥檛 about the health, benefit or monetary value of a child. It's also not about a failed procedure, he said. It鈥檚 about Noe and his staff allegedly failing to tell Velasco the procedure hadn鈥檛 been performed.

Under that reasoning, she would therefore deserve compensation for the mental anguish, pain and suffering the alleged negligence caused, something Lopez said a jury should decide.

鈥淭he court can't say, 鈥極h my gosh, she had a baby, this is great,鈥欌 he told the justices. 鈥淭hat's not how the world works anymore.鈥

Velasco has nothing but love for her family, which has grown to five kids 鈥 she had her tubes tied three years ago while delivering her youngest. Having miscarried before, Velasco said being a mother is the best thing that鈥檚 ever happened to her.

Still, Velasco said she would own up to the unexpected pregnancy if she believed it was her fault.

鈥淚n this case, I can tell you I love my daughter,鈥 Velasco said. 鈥淏ut the doctor made a mistake. So, it's not that I'm demanding money, far from it. It's just that the doctor 鈥 what is he doing as a doctor?鈥

Got a tip? Email Toluwani Osibamowo at tosibamowo@kera.org. You can follow Toluwani on Twitter .

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Toluwani Osibamowo covers law and justice for 四虎影院. She joined the newsroom in 2022 as a general assignments reporter. She previously worked as a news intern for Texas Tech Public Media and copy editor for Texas Tech University鈥檚 student newspaper, The Daily Toreador, before graduating with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in journalism. She was named one of Current's public media Rising Stars in 2024. She is originally from Plano.