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Sheri M. Puffer, M.D. and Women's Health Services Arlington, PLLC v. Candace Williams

Docket 02-25-00244-CV

Court of record · Indexed in NoticeRegistry archive · AI-enriched for research

CivilReversed
Filed
Jurisdiction
Texas
Court
Texas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth)
Type
Lead Opinion
Case type
Civil
Disposition
Reversed
Docket
02-25-00244-CV

Appeal from a jury verdict in a medical malpractice action in the 17th District Court, Tarrant County, Texas

Summary

The court reversed a jury verdict awarding noneconomic and exemplary damages to Candace Williams after finding that her malpractice claim was based solely on the emotional harms of an unplanned pregnancy that arose from a doctor’s failure to perform a tubal ligation. Relying on the Texas Supreme Court’s decision in Noe v. Velasco (2024), the court held that pregnancy-related noneconomic harms (including mental anguish from deciding to terminate) are not legally compensable because pregnancy is inseparable from bringing about a child’s life. Because Williams offered no other compensable damages, the judgment was reversed and judgment rendered that she take nothing.

Issues Decided

  • Whether a mother may recover noneconomic damages (mental anguish) for an unplanned pregnancy caused by a doctor’s negligent failure to perform sterilization when the pregnancy was later terminated by abortion
  • Whether an award of exemplary damages is permissible when there are no compensable noneconomic damages awarded

Court's Reasoning

The court applied the Texas Supreme Court’s precedent in Noe v. Velasco, which holds that noneconomic damages for pregnancy-related harms are not recoverable because pregnancy is inseparable from bringing about a child’s life and a healthy child is not an injury. Williams’s emotional harms flowed from the pregnancy itself and the decision to terminate—burdens that Noe treats as noncompensable. Because Williams presented no other cognizable compensatory damages, her malpractice claim failed as a matter of law, and exemplary damages could not stand without compensatory damages.

Authorities Cited

  • Noe v. Velasco690 S.W.3d 1 (Tex. 2024)
  • Jacobs v. Theimer519 S.W.2d 846 (Tex. 1975)
  • Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 41.004(a)

Parties

Appellant
Sheri M. Puffer, M.D.
Appellant
Women's Health Services Arlington, PLLC
Appellee
Candace Williams
Judge
Chief Justice Bonnie Sudderth

Key Dates

Decision date
2026-04-23
Trial court number
2023-01-01

What You Should Do Next

  1. 1

    Consult appellate counsel

    If the plaintiff wishes to pursue further review, consult appellate counsel promptly about seeking discretionary review from the Texas Supreme Court and evaluate the likelihood of success given governing precedent.

  2. 2

    Assess post-judgment relief

    Consider whether any procedural post-judgment motions (e.g., motion for rehearing or motions under Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure) are timely and appropriate.

  3. 3

    Evaluate alternatives

    If further appeal is unlikely, evaluate settlement options or other nonlitigation remedies, and consult counsel about whether any limited claims for economic damages could be supported or pursued.

Frequently Asked Questions

What did the court decide?
The court reversed the malpractice verdict and rendered judgment that the plaintiff take nothing because Texas law bars recovery of noneconomic damages for pregnancy-related harms.
Who is affected by this decision?
Patients who seek to recover emotional damages for pregnancy-related harms caused by medical negligence in Texas are affected; their noneconomic claims tied to pregnancy will generally be barred under Noe.
What happens to the exemplary damages award?
The exemplary damages award was also overturned because exemplary damages generally require compensatory damages beyond nominal damages.
Can this decision be appealed further?
A party could seek review by the Texas Supreme Court, but this decision applied Texas Supreme Court precedent (Noe), making further appeal challenging.

The above suggestions and answers are AI-generated for informational purposes only. They may contain errors. NoticeRegistry assumes no responsibility for their accuracy. Consult a qualified attorney before relying on them.

Full Filing Text
In the
                Court of Appeals
        Second Appellate District of Texas
                 at Fort Worth
             ___________________________
                  No. 02-25-00244-CV
             ___________________________

            SHERI M. PUFFER, M.D. AND
WOMEN’S HEALTH SERVICES ARLINGTON, PLLC, Appellants

                             V.

             CANDACE WILLIAMS, Appellee


           On Appeal from the 17th District Court
                  Tarrant County, Texas
              Trial Court No. 017-342966-23


         Before Sudderth, C.J.; Kerr and Womack, JJ.
             Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth
                                      OPINION

      When a doctor’s negligent failure to perform a sterilization procedure leads to a

mother’s unplanned pregnancy, can the mother recover damages for the

noneconomic hardships of that pregnancy?          The Texas Supreme Court recently

provided the answer: No. See Noe v. Velasco, 690 S.W.3d 1, 3–12 (Tex. 2024).

      In Noe v. Velasco, the Court held that a mother cannot recover “for the mental

anguish and physical pain” of a negligently caused pregnancy because pregnancy is

“inseparable from[] bringing about the child’s life,” and “Texas law does not regard a

healthy child as an injury.” Id. at 10–12. So although pregnancy “undoubtedly

impose[s noneconomic] costs on the mother”—from her physical “discomfort” to

her “worry” about “the weight of responsibility”—those costs are not compensable

injuries in Texas. Id. at 5–12 (noting that “not every consequence of another’s

tortious conduct is an injury or . . . a compensable element of damages in every case”).

      The question presented here is whether this rule still applies when the

unplanned pregnancy does not result in “a healthy child,” id.—when the mother has

an abortion rather than carrying the pregnancy to term. Appellants Dr. Sheri M.

Puffer and Women’s Health Services Arlington, PLLC (together, Dr. Puffer) argue

that the bar on noneconomic damages still applies; Appellee Candace Williams argues

that it does not. This appears to be an issue of first impression.

      But it is an issue of first impression in name only, as Noe’s logic is clear:

Pregnancy is “inseparable from[] bringing about [a] child’s life”—no matter the

                                            2
pregnancy’s outcome—so a mother cannot recover for the noneconomic hardships

inherent in a negligently caused pregnancy. Id. at 9–12. Because such hardships are

the sole basis for Williams’s award of compensatory damages, and because those

damages are barred under Texas law, we will reverse and render.

                                    I. Background

      In 2021, Williams was pregnant with twins, and her pregnancy was considered

high-risk. Although she contemplated having an abortion, she instead decided to

carry the twins to term but asked Dr. Puffer to perform a tubal ligation sterilization

procedure1 when the twins were delivered via cesarean section. Dr. Puffer agreed and

scheduled the procedure.

      For reasons unknown, the tubal ligation was not performed at the time of

Williams’s cesarean section.2 And more importantly, Williams was not told that the

tubal ligation had not been performed. Consequently, Williams became pregnant

again in 2022.3 And again, her pregnancy was considered high-risk.


      1
       A tubal ligation is often colloquially referred to as having one’s “tubes tied.”
      2
        Dr. Puffer admitted that she had failed to perform the tubal ligation but
denied that the failure was a breach of the standard of care. She testified that
“there[ were] many reasons a tubal ligation might not be performed” and that—
although she could not remember why she had not performed Williams’s—even if she
had simply “forget[ten],” that was “still an example of a reason it wasn’t done,” so she
met the standard of care.
      3
       The evidence showed that, after the birth of Williams’s twins, she returned to
Dr. Puffer’s office for a visit. Because Williams believed the tubal ligation had been
performed, she stated as much to Dr. Puffer, and Dr. Puffer took her word for it. Dr.

                                            3
      Due in part to her health concerns, Williams decided to have an abortion.

However, the decision took an emotional toll on her. She later testified that she “felt

guilty” and “convicted,”4 she “didn’t even come out of [her] room for months,” and

she “withdrew from [her] friends” due to their perceived “judgment.” The experience

also impacted Williams’s marriage. She explained that, although her husband had

participated in the decision to have an abortion, “just the fact that we had to make

that decision, and . . . we didn’t want to” caused them to “grow[] distant.”

      Williams sued Dr. Puffer for medical malpractice,5 seeking noneconomic

damages for her pregnancy-related mental anguish—specifically, for the mental

anguish surrounding her “difficult decision . . . to terminate her pregnancy”—and

exemplary damages to punish Dr. Puffer’s gross negligence.6            A jury awarded

$250,000 and $100,000 respectively.7



Puffer later stated that she “wish[ed] that [she had] looked at [her] operative report”
during Williams’s office visit, but because she did not, she did not realize the tubal
ligation had not been performed.
      4
        Williams explained that “[a]bortion is not something that [her] family supports
in [their] ethics and values.”
      5
        Williams alleged that Women’s Health Services Arlington was vicariously liable
for the negligence.
      6
       Although Williams pleaded for economic damages as well, she did not present
any evidence of economic damages at trial, and the jury was not asked to determine or
award any.
      7
       The Texas Supreme Court handed down Noe approximately nine months
before trial. See Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 1 (reflecting date of May 10, 2024). Dr. Puffer

                                           4
                                    II. Discussion

         This appeal hinges on a single question:8 whether Texas law permits Williams

to recover damages for the mental anguish arising from her unplanned pregnancy.9 In

other words, this appeal hinges on whether Noe applies. See generally Noe, 690 S.W.3d

at 3–12.

         In Noe, as here, a doctor’s failure to perform a tubal ligation resulted in an

unplanned pregnancy. Id. at 3–4. But unlike Williams, the mother in Noe—Grissel

Velasco—did not have an abortion; she gave birth to the unplanned child. Id. at 4.

Nonetheless, the pregnancy brought Velasco significant mental anguish. Velasco v.

Noe, 645 S.W.3d 850, 866 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2022), rev’d in part, 690 S.W.3d 1 (Tex.

2024).


repeatedly sought relief based on Noe—in special exceptions, in a summary judgment
motion, in a motion for a directed verdict, in objections to the jury charge, and in a
motion for new trial.

        In Dr. Puffer’s other three appellate issues, she argues that (1) Williams’s
         8

decision to have an abortion broke the chain of causation such that there was
insufficient evidence of that element; (2) there was insufficient evidence to support
the jury’s award of mental anguish damages; and (3) there was insufficient evidence to
support the jury’s gross negligence finding and award of exemplary damages. We do
not reach these issues. See Tex. R. App. P. 47.1.

        This is a pure question of law subject to de novo review. See Noe, 690 S.W.3d
         9

at 3 (holding “as a matter of law” that pregnancy-related “[n]oneconomic
damages . . . are not recoverable” in Texas); Hardin v. Obstetrical & Gynecological Assocs.
P.A., 527 S.W.3d 424, 435 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2017, pet. denied)
(applying de novo standard of review to trial court’s conclusion that mental anguish
damages premised on child’s birth were not recoverable).


                                            5
      Velasco produced evidence that, when she discovered her unplanned

pregnancy, she was “distraught [and] worried”; she “felt guilty for feeling angry”; she

became “depressed” and “suicidal”; and she “had fits of crying, had difficulty

sleeping, . . . [and] felt weight on [her] chest.” Id. And, like Williams, Velasco sought

to recover for these pregnancy-related noneconomic hardships. Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 4;

Velasco, 645 S.W.3d at 864–66.

      The intermediate court of appeals held that such noneconomic damages were

recoverable.   See Velasco, 645 S.W.3d at 864–66.         It distinguished between the

noneconomic aspects of raising an unplanned child and the “physical pain and

psychological stressors sustained by [the mother]” due to the “financial, physical, and

emotional toll of pregnancy and childbirth.” Id. at 865; see Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 10

(describing intermediate court’s distinction).      The court noted that there are

“situations where a person . . . does not go home with a child (whether through

abortion, miscarriage, stillbirth or adoption),” so the person “do[es] not have the

redemptive experience of raising the child to ‘compensate’ them for having to carry

and deliver [the] child against their wishes.” Velasco, 645 S.W.3d at 865. Thus, the

court reasoned, the law should distinguish “between the feelings one experiences in

raising a child and the feelings one experiences in carrying and birthing a child.” Id.

      But the Texas Supreme Court rejected this distinction as “unpersuasive and

unworkable.” Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 10. It explained that “[p]regnancy and childbirth

are necessary to (and inseparable from) bringing about the child’s life,” so “[t]o award

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money damages for experiences inherent to a healthy birth wrongly suggests the

mother’s rightful position is one where the child had never been born—i.e., that

carrying a healthy baby to term is an injury.” Id. at 10–11. The Court acknowledged

that “[p]regnancy, childbirth, and parenthood undoubtedly impose [noneconomic]

costs on the mother,” including “the physical pain and discomfort that accompany

pregnancy and childbirth and the weight of responsibility and worry a parent

experiences.” Id. at 10. Nonetheless, “because the birth and life of a healthy child do

not constitute an injury” under Texas law, the Court held that Velasco could not

recover any noneconomic damages for the burdens inherent in her pregnancy.10 Id. at

10–12.

      In so holding, the Court reviewed its half-century of precedent barring

noneconomic damages in related contexts. See id. at 5–9. In Jacobs v. Theimer, for

example, a doctor had negligently failed to diagnose a pregnant woman with rubella,

and as a result of the rubella, the child had been born with defective major organs.

519 S.W.2d 846, 847 (Tex. 1975); see Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 5–6 (discussing Jacobs). The

mother sued, seeking mental anguish and other damages and claiming that if she had

known of the defects, she would have had an abortion. Jacobs, 519 S.W.2d at 847–48.


      10
        Although Velasco could not recover noneconomic damages, the Court held
that she could recover “medical expenses incurred during the pregnancy and
postpartum period as a result of [the] medical negligence” as well as “the expenses
incurred for the [unperformed] sterilization procedure.” Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 11. But
Velasco had not produced any evidence of such medical expenses. Id. at 12.


                                          7
The Texas Supreme Court held that the mother could not recover for her mental

anguish because such noneconomic damages would be “based upon speculation as to

the quality of life and as to the pluses and minuses of parental mind and emotion.” Id.

at 849; see Crawford v. Kirk, 929 S.W.2d 633, 637 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 1996, writ

denied) (op. on reh’g) (recognizing that “Jacobs precludes damages for emotional

anguish experienced by the parents of a deformed child” and applying same rule to

bar recovery for mental anguish stemming from birth of unplanned healthy child); see

also Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 7 (citing Crawford with approval).

      Again, in Nelson v. Krusen, the Court held that noneconomic damages were not

available when a child sought to recover for his own “wrongful life.” 678 S.W.2d 918,

924–25 (Tex. 1984) (op. on reh’g); see Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 6 (discussing Nelson). The

child alleged that, absent the doctor’s negligence, his parents would have had an

abortion, and he would have been spared “the pain and suffering of having to live

with muscular dystrophy.” Nelson, 678 S.W.2d at 920, 924. But the Texas Supreme

Court held that the plaintiff could not recover noneconomic damages “for being

alive”—even if that life was painful—as “a weighing of life against non-life[ is] a

calculation that cannot rationally be made.” Id. at 924–25 (explaining further that “it

is impossible to rationally decide whether the plaintiff has been damaged at all”).




                                            8
      This precedent reveals that, although Noe clarified the legal landscape in Texas,

its holding was not revolutionary.11 And its logic was plain: Pregnancy is “inseparable

from” the “gift” of human life, so even when a pregnancy is unplanned, traceable to a

doctor’s negligence, and emotionally grueling, the mother cannot recover for the

noneconomic hardships inherent in her pregnancy. See Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 10–11.

      But Williams insists that pregnancy ending in abortion is materially different.

She emphasizes that Noe barred noneconomic damages arising from a child-producing

pregnancy—a net-positive pregnancy—and she claims that her mental anguish

stemmed from “the loss of a pregnancy.” Cf. id. at 10 (explaining that, “society views

a healthy child’s arrival as a net boon and a gift”); Edinburg Hosp. Auth. v. Trevino, 941

S.W.2d 76, 78–79 (Tex. 1997) (holding that mother could recover mental anguish

damages arising from loss of fetus when doctor’s negligence during delivery resulted

in stillborn baby); Krishnan v. Sepulveda, 916 S.W.2d 478, 479–82 (Tex. 1995) (similar,

holding that mother could recover mental anguish damages arising from loss of fetus

when doctor’s negligent care led to stillborn baby). But this argument falls flat.

      Williams did not seek compensation for “the loss of a pregnancy.” After all,

compensatory “damages awards are meant ‘to place the plaintiff in the position in

which [s]he would have been absent the defendant’s tortious act,’” Noe, 690 S.W.3d at


      11
        But cf. id. at 6–9 & n.8 (discussing intermediate courts’ disagreement on
recoverability of noneconomic damages and noting that courts in other jurisdictions
have “reached varying conclusions”).


                                            9
10–11, and Dr. Puffer’s negligence is what brought about the very pregnancy that was

“los[t].” Williams had not planned for or wanted the pregnancy—that was the point

of her lawsuit. Had Dr. Puffer performed the tubal ligation or informed Williams of

its nonperformance, Williams would not have become pregnant at all.

      Instead, Williams attributed her mental anguish to the unpleasant decision

forced upon her by the pregnancy—“just the fact that [she and her husband] had to

make th[e abortion] decision.” We do not doubt the difficulty of this decision;

indeed, Williams’s testimony detailed the decision’s emotional toll. But such difficult

decisions are inherent in pregnancy itself; they are among the many “costs” that

“[p]regnancy . . . undoubtedly impose[s] . . . on the mother.” Id. at 7–10 (addressing

pregnancy’s noneconomic costs and referencing Hardin); cf. Hardin, 527 S.W.3d at

440–41 (rejecting plaintiff’s attempt to distinguish “tortious insemination” from

“wrongful pregnancy” and holding plaintiff could not recover mental anguish

damages premised on child’s birth). And, under Noe, a mother cannot recover for the

noneconomic hardships inherent in pregnancy—even when those hardships include

the agonizing decision to have an abortion rather than carrying the pregnancy to term.

See Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 10–12.

      Because the noneconomic burdens of Williams’s pregnancy are the sole basis

for her award of compensatory damages, and because a claim for medical malpractice

requires some form of legally cognizable compensatory damages, Williams’s medical

malpractice claim fails as a matter of law. See id. at 3, 12 (reinstating summary

                                          10
judgment dismissal of mother’s medical negligence claim based on her failure to

produce evidence of cognizable damages). We sustain Dr. Puffer’s first issue.

       And this issue is dispositive, as Williams’s lack of compensatory damages

undermines her recovery of exemplary damages as well. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.

Code Ann. § 41.004(a) (providing that, generally, “exemplary damages may be

awarded only if damages other than nominal damages are awarded”); see also Tex. R.

App. P. 47.1.

                                  III. Conclusion

       The question decided today is not one of public policy; it is one of binding

precedent. We are not asked to comment on abortion or to second-guess Williams’s

decision to have one. See Jacobs, 519 S.W.2d at 848 (acknowledging that abortion is “a

matter of very different but very deep feeling”). We are asked only to determine if

Noe—a binding case from a higher court—applies. See Noe, 690 S.W.3d at 3–12. And

it does.

       Therefore, applying Noe, we reverse the trial court’s judgment, and we render

judgment that Williams take nothing. See Tex. R. App. P. 43.2(c).

                                                    /s/ Bonnie Sudderth

                                                    Bonnie Sudderth
                                                    Chief Justice

Delivered: April 23, 2026




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