Abel v. Carolina Stalite Co.

345 F. Supp. 2d 521
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedNovember 8, 2004
DocketNo. 1:02 CV 00892
StatusPublished

This text of 345 F. Supp. 2d 521 (Abel v. Carolina Stalite Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abel v. Carolina Stalite Co., 345 F. Supp. 2d 521 (M.D.N.C. 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BEATY, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

The present action came before the Court for a trial by jury during a session of court beginning April 5, 2004. After the evidence was presented, the following five issues were presented to the jury: (1) Was Plaintiff Michael Alien Abel injured by the negligence of Defendant Allen Lee Drew?; (2) Was Plaintiff Michael Allen Abel injured by the negligence of Defendant Carolina Stalite Company?; (3) What amount, if any, is Plaintiff Michael Allen Abel entitled to recover of Defendants for his injuries?; (4) Did the negligence of Defendants proximately cause Plaintiff Joanie Abel to lose the consortium of Plaintiff Michael Allen Abel?; (5) What amount, if any, is Plaintiff Joanie Abel entitled to recover of Defendants for loss of consortium? On April 15, 2004, a jury verdict was returned. As to the first three issues, the jury found that Plaintiff Michael Allen Abel was injured by the negligence of both Defendants and awarded him damages in the amount of $46,575.00. As to the final two issues, the jury found in favor of Defendants on Plaintiff Joanie Abel’s claim for loss of consortium. A form Judgment [Document # 62] was entered by the Court on May 11, 2004, and an Amended Judgment [Document # 67] was later filed on July 9, 2004. Plaintiffs filed a Motion for a New Trial [Document # 57] on April 26, 2004, and a hearing was held on that Motion on August 4, 2004. Plaintiffs’ motion requested a new trial on the issue of damages, and alternatively, a new trial on all issues. This motion is now before the Court.

II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The facts as presented at trial are briefly summarized as follows: As of February 28, 2000, Plaintiff Michael Allen Abel (“Michael Abel” or “Mr. Abel”) was employed as a truck driver by R & S Senter Trucking, Inc. (“R & S Senter”) in Georgia. On that date, Mr. Abel and another driver for R & S Senter, J.R. Day (“Mr.Day”), arrived at the premises of Defendant Carolina Stalite Company, Limited Partnership (“Carolina Stalite”) in Rowan County, North Carolina. Carolina Stalite operates a surface mining operation and produces aggregate material used in concrete manufacturing. Mr. Abel and Mr. Day had planned to pick up a load of aggregate material at Carolina Stalite and drive it to a destination in Georgia. When they arrived at Carolina Stalite, Mr. Abel drove his tractor-trailer to an open area near a stockpile of the aggregate that was to be loaded into his trailer. As he waited for the Carolina Stalite employees to load his trailer, he remained in the cab of the truck doing paperwork.

Defendant Allen Drew (“Mr. Drew” or “Defendant Drew”), an employee of Carolina Stalite, operated the front-end loader that was used to load the aggregate material into trucks. As Mr. Drew was driving the front-end loader to the stockpile where [530]*530Michael Abel was waiting, he collided with the rear of Mr. Abel’s trailer. Michael Abel was still in the cab at the time of the collision, and testified that he was thrown towards the front of the cab. At trial, Defendants admitted that Mr. Drew was negligent in causing the collision. Although Mr. Abel complained of neck pain to one employee of Carolina Stalite, he indicated that he was not seriously injured. Mr. Abel testified that he did not remember being hit in the eye. After the collision, he and Mr. Day proceeded to make the drive to Georgia in order to deliver the load of aggregate to a site in Georgia as planned. However, during the course of that return trip, Mr. Abel complained of increasing pain in his neck and back. Both he and Mr. Day also testified that a knot appeared above his right eye. Due to the pain in his neck and back, Mr. Abel did not complete the delivery to the site in Georgia as planned. Instead, Mr. Abel returned directly to R & S Senter in Georgia where his wife, Plaintiff Joanie Abel (“Joanie Abel” or “Ms. Abel”), picked him up and drove him to a physician.

As a result of the accident, Mr. Abel suffered a neck and back injury, and was forced to undergo back surgery approximately nine months after the collision. Mr. Abel’s treatment included upwards of 30 office visits, several painful procedures, hospitalization for the back surgery, and numerous pain medications during the months following the collision. Mr. Abel was also forced to miss time from work as a result of the neck and back injuries, but the injuries were not so severe as to prevent him from continuing his career as a truck driver. The injuries resulted in Mr. Abel receiving from his physician a permanent partial disability rating of eight percent to his neck and back. At trial, some evidence was presented that Mr. Abel suffered from a degenerative disc disease pri- or to the collision. However, the evidence presented at trial clearly supported the conclusion that Mr. Abel’s neck and back injuries were caused by the collision, and Defendants did not present any evidence to contest that Mr. Abel’s neck and back injuries were causally related to the collision.

Approximately five or six months after the collision, Mr. Abel began to notice blurred vision in his right eye. Approximately eight months after the collision, he sought medical treatment for the eye, and was eventually diagnosed with a choroidal rupture in his right eye. The choroidal rupture resulted in a permanent loss of central vision in his right eye. As a result, he was not able to maintain his commercial driver’s license, and thus was no longer able to continue his career as a truck driver.

A significant portion of the trial was dedicated to both Plaintiffs and Defendants attempting to prove that Mr. Abel’s eye injury was or was not causally related to the collision at Carolina Stalite. Both Plaintiffs and Defendants presented qualified and equally relevant testimony by specialists in the field of this particular type of eye injury. The experts agreed about the diagnosis of the injury suffered by Mr. Abel and agreed that his permanent vision loss was caused by the choroidal rupture. Both experts also agreed that a choroidal rupture is generally caused by a direct blow to the eyeball, and that the loss of vision caused by a choroidal rupture does not appear until several months after the trauma to the eye. However, the experts gave divergent opinions as to whether Mr. Abel’s injury was proximately caused by the collision at Carolina Stalite. Plaintiffs’ expert was of the opinion that the injury likely resulted from a blow to the eye during the course of the accident. Defendants’ expert stated that a blow of the force sufficient to cause Mr. Abel’s injury [531]*531would have been painful and immediately noticeable to Mr. Abel. Because Mr. Abel testified that he did not remember being hit in the eye during the collision, Defendants’ expert opined that the injury was idiopathic, meaning that it had simply developed without any particular trauma to the eye.

During the trial, Plaintiffs presented evidence of the past and future economic consequences of Mr. Abel’s injuries, including damages for the injury to his neck and back and damages for the injury to his eye.

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Bluebook (online)
345 F. Supp. 2d 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abel-v-carolina-stalite-co-ncmd-2004.