Abraham Sons, Inc. v. Fallis, Jr.

275 S.W. 380, 210 Ky. 129, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 637
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 12, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 380 (Abraham Sons, Inc. v. Fallis, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abraham Sons, Inc. v. Fallis, Jr., 275 S.W. 380, 210 Ky. 129, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 637 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming.

The judgment for $1,200.00 in favor of John Fallís, Jr., against Abraham & Sons, incorporated, for personal injuries inflicted upon him by the truck of the -company striking him when it attempted to avoid a collision with an automobile on the Owenton pike near the intersection of the road that leads to Thornhill Heights, in the suburbs of Frankfort, Franklin county, is assailed on this appeal as excessive as well as otherwise erroneous. Appellee prosecutes this action by his next friend, he being only seventeen years of age.

The accident happened at night as the boy was returning from Thornhill. About the time he reached the Owenton pike a car turned into Thornhill road in an effort to turn around and return to Frankfort. While this car was attempting to make the turn the truck of *131 appellant, Abraham & Sons, traveling at a high rate of speed in the direction of Frankfort, suddenly came upon the scene. When the driver of the truck saw the automobile in his pathway and being unable to stop or turn to the left and avoid the car, drew the truck to the right over the tracks of the street ear company on to the sidewalk where young Fallís was traveling, striking him and knocking him down and rendering him unconscious, and inflicting the injuries of which he now complains. The injuries were principally about his head. The evidence of Dr. Patterson and other persons showed that he sustained a scalp wound about eleven inches long, cut to the bone and the flesh laid back. He was carried to the hospital, where he remained about eight days. Thereafter he was nursed at home until he in part recovered. Since the accident he has suffered with headaches- and pains in his head, with which he was not bothered before the accident. Dr. Patterson was asked several hypothetical questions with respect to the permanency and effect of the injury received by young Fallís, and in substance answered that if the boy was suffering from headaches at the time of the trial, as he testified, in all probability the duramata, a covering of the brain, had thickened from the blow or jar to the boy’s head by the collision with the truck, and that this condition was in all likelihood permanent. Upon this subject the questions propounded to and answers given by Dr. Patterson are as follows:

“15. Assuming that since that time he has suffered with headaches every few days and was free from this condition before the injury, what would you say as to whether or not that was caused by the injury? A. Yes, I would think that would be the cause of it, if he did not have headaches before the injury.
“16. "Would you give the jury your opinion of what condition would cause the headache? A. "What often causes headache is that the brain has a covering known as duramata, that will thicken from a jar or blow on the head.
“18. Doctor, you have testified about the condition in which you found this young man. Now, assuming that prior to his injury he had not been suffering from headaches or anything the matter with his head, and that following his injury and this *132 wound you have described to the jury he suffered from a headache every few days, would you or not say, in your opinion, that that was attributable to the thickening of the brain covering that you have referred to? A. It looks like that would be the cause of it.
“19. If he has suffered as I have stated since the injury would you give it as your opinion that that was the cause of it? A. It looks like it would be.
“20. Would that condition in your opinion be permanent? A. If it has been running on for six months, and there is a thickening' of the duramata, it would be permanent, I think.”

Appellant’s argument to the effect that the judgment is excessive is based largely upon the theory that there was no permanent injury. We think the evidence which we have copied shows with reasonable certainty that the boy sustained a permanent injury, and was sufficient to warrant the jury in awarding him $1,250.00 in damages, if he were entitled to recover at all. To be ex-, cessive the award of damages must be such as to strike the mind at first blush as having been superinduced by passion or prejudice. Welch v. Jenkins, 190 Ky. 479. It would be hard, indeed, to say that $1,250.00 for such a wound as that inflicted upon appellee, Fallis, in the instant case is excessive. The wound was about eleven inches long and cut through the tissue, nerves and blood vessels to the bone, the flesh being laid back so as to expose the skull. The boy was knocked unconscious. Months after the wound had healed he had pains in his head, which resulted from a thickening of the duramata, a brain covering, and, if true, the doctor thinks was permanent. All these facts considered, it does not strike one at first blush, or at all, that the verdict is excessive.

Appellant’s second complaint is that the court erred in instructing the jury to consider the question of the permanent reduction of plaintiff’s power to earn money after he became twenty-one years of age, as an element of damage. If, as stated by the attending physician, the duramata had become thickened and was causing pains and aches in the head of the boy six months after the injury, and that this condition was likely to continue, it was properly an element of damage to be considered by the jury as such pain was calculated to interfere with his *133 earning capacity, and as he was not entitled to have a recovery for this until after he arrived at his majority, we think the court properly embraced it in its instructions to the jury in the form given.

The next ground assigned for a reversal of the judgment is rested upon the misconduct of the attorney for plaintiff in his argument to the jury in stating that tbe proof showed that the skull of plaintiff, John Fallis, Jr., had thickened and was the cause of his headaches, and in further stating that the witness for the plaintiff, Dr. Patterson, stated in his testimony that “the boy’s skull had thickened, when as a matter of fact the physician in his testimony had not said anything of the kind, and the only testimony of said physician relative to that proposition was that he could not say that his skull had thickened, and that the only way that could be determined was through the X-ray and that no X-ray had been taken.”

In support of this motion counsel for appellant filed his affidavit, stating in substance that he was present at the trial in April, 1923, and that counsel for appellee, in argument to the jury, stated substantially that the skull of the plaintiff, John Fallis, Jr., had thickened and that that was the cause of his headaches, and that the witness, Dr. Patterson, had stated in his-testimony that the boy’s skull was probably thickened.

In response to the foregoing affidavit the attorney for appellee filed an affidavit saying in substance that he “did not state in argument to the jury the things set forth in the affidavit of opposing counsel; but in substance did say that Dr. Patterson had stated he could not say the membrane around the brain had thickened as a fact, but that Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 380, 210 Ky. 129, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abraham-sons-inc-v-fallis-jr-kyctapphigh-1925.