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El Paso mom won鈥檛 get damages for unexpected pregnancy after believing her tubes were tied

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
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Grissel Velasco
El Paso resident Grissel Velasco with her newborn daughter in April 2016. Velasco sued Dr. Michiel Noe of Sun City Women's Health Care for the unexpected pregnancy after believing he had performed tubal ligation on her in 2014. The Texas Supreme Court ruled May 10, 2024 Velasco cannot recover damages for the pregnancy that resulted in the birth of a healthy child under Texas law.

An El Paso woman who got pregnant a year after believing her doctor tied her tubes cannot recover medical negligence damages for the unexpected pregnancy, the Texas Supreme Court ruled Friday.

In the court鈥檚 opinion, Justice Rebeca Huddle wrote Texas law doesn鈥檛 allow for 41-year-old Grissel Velasco to be compensated for the financial cost or pain and mental anguish of giving birth to and raising a healthy daughter. And because there were no valid expenses associated with the pregnancy or postpartum period on record, Velasco can鈥檛 recover those economic damages either.

鈥淭o award money damages for experiences inherent to a healthy birth wrongly suggests the mother鈥檚 rightful position is one where the child had never been born鈥攊.e., that carrying a healthy baby to term is an injury,鈥 Huddle wrote.

Velasco was receiving prenatal care at Sun City Women鈥檚 Health Care owned by Dr. Michiel Noe in 2014. She said she paid ahead of time to get her tubes tied at the same time she delivered her son, believing that having more C-section births would be risky.

Around October 2015, Velasco was surprised to learn she was four or five months pregnant. She didn鈥檛 want an abortion, she said, but she sued Noe and his clinic for not tying her tubes and not telling her the procedure hadn鈥檛 been done.

Noe鈥檚 lawyers alleged Velasco鈥檚 medical records didn鈥檛 indicate she wanted her tubes tied, therefore he didn鈥檛 perform the procedure. Plus, the doctor testified she didn鈥檛 wait the full 30-day consent period required by law before the surgery could take place. Attorney Diana Faust told the court Velasco had no other medical expenses on record aside from the $400 Velasco said she was told by Sun City employees to pay for the tubal ligation. The money was refunded around November 2015.

Faust did not immediately respond to 四虎影院' request for comment, but told justices during oral arguments last year raising the child was not an injury for which damages are eligible.

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 Faust said in November.

Velasco said she signed everything she was instructed to in order to get her tubes tied and feels she was lied to. She speaks little English, and Noe doesn't speak Spanish, she said.

"It's 10 years," she told 四虎影院 during an interview in Spanish. "Ten years of fighting this. I don't want to say that I want the lawsuit to be won in my favor, because that's not the case anymore. But I do think that the doctor needed to have some kind of sanctions."

Velasco's lawyer Joe Lopez said the court improperly treated Velasco's case as that of a failed procedure when in reality the procedure she paid for hadn't been done. Lopez said a jury should have been allowed to come to a conclusion about the mental anguish and pain the unexpected pregnancy caused his client and the compensation she deserved.

"I understand that most children are a benefit, I understand that," he said. "But not all children are a benefit. And I say that meaning that if that were the case, there wouldn't be tens of millions of people practicing birth control."

Huddle wrote the court had not up to this point 鈥渟quarely addressed鈥 a medical negligence claim like Velasco鈥檚. Dallas attorney Linda Turley, who is not involved with Velasco鈥檚 lawsuit, told 四虎影院 last year the case鈥檚 novelty was likely why the court took it up.

Oral arguments for Velasco's case happened the same day the court examined Texas' narrow medical exception for abortion in State of Texas v. Zurawski. In that case, reproductive rights lawyers argued patients and medical professionals want clarity in the state's abortion laws to avoid facing harsh penalties for facilitating necessary abortions.

That case is pending in the high court.

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 Turley said.

As for Velasco's daughter, now 8, Velasco said she's aware of the lawsuit and the circumstances surrounding her birth. But she's not all that interested at her age.

"All my children are treated equally," Velasco said. "They are all mine. Everyone is treated the same. So, she doesn't feel some kind of lack of love on my part."

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

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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.