Algood v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (4-20-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 2000
DocketNos. 76121 AND 76122.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Algood v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (4-20-2000) (Algood v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (4-20-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Algood v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (4-20-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
Defendant-appellant Stanford Smith ("Smith"), through his insurance carrier (Allstate Insurance Company) which provided a legal defense to him under his policy of insurance, appeals from a jury trial verdict in favor of plaintiff-appellee John Allgood ("Allgood") (see appellate case number 76122, which includes the denial of a motion for new trial, or in the alternative, for remittitur) and a subsequent award of prejudgment interest (see appellate case number 76121). For the reasons adduced below, we affirm.

A review of the record on appeal indicates that on August 9, 1993, between the dusky hours of 8 to 8:40 p.m., Allgood was operating his motorcycle, a Kawasaki 750, northbound on East 93rd Street in Cleveland, Ohio.1 The weather was clear, and Allgood was not wearing a helmet and his motorcycle's lights were not turned on. A vehicle operated by Smith made a left turn directly in front of Allgood, causing Allgood to be thrown from his motorcycle, catapulting over the hood of Smith's vehicle, striking his head upon the ground. Allgood was transported to St. Luke's Hospital via Cleveland's Emergency Medical Service, which had responded to the dispatcher's call at 8:46 p.m. Allgood, in addition to abrasions on his legs and left hand, had suffered a fractured skull which damaged his cranial nerve, which resulted in a permanent loss of his sense of smell. Medical expenses incurred by Allgood were approximately $4,100.

The original Complaint alleging negligence was filed by Allgood on August 1, 1995. See Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Case No. 292927. On June 27, 1996, a non-binding arbitration panel found in favor of Allgood in the amount of $10,000 less 30 percent comparative negligence on Allgood's part. On February 18, 1997, on the day of trial, the case was voluntarily dismissed by Allgood. The matter was refiled on February 13, 1998. See Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court Case No. 348970. On November 16, 1998, Allgood filed a motion in limine seeking to preclude testimony that, at the time of the accident, he was operating his motorcycle without a driver's license. The jury trial commenced before a visiting judge on November 17, 1998, at which time the motion in limine was granted in part.

At the trial Robin Allgood, Allgood's spouse, testified for plaintiff to the following: (1) she has known Allgood for approximately seven years, and has been married to him for the past three years; (2) Allgood had purchased the motorcycle a couple of days before the accident and was out riding with friends on the date of the accident; (3) she heard of the accident from Allgood's mother, who was at the hospital, sometime after 9:00 p.m.; (4) the physical description of his injuries from the accident; (5) Allgood was treated at the hospital emergency room the night of the accident and released shortly after 11:00 p.m.; (6) she took him back to the hospital a few days after the accident with complaints of pain and headaches, but he was treated and was not admitted; (7) several days after the second visit to the hospital, she took him back to the hospital a third time with complaints of pain, popping sounds in his knee which kept him from working, vomiting, and headaches, and this time he was admitted overnight for observation; (8) after the accident, she began to notice that Allgood lacked a sense of smell; (9) Allgood had a back and neck workers' compensation injury in 1988 which he was being treated for at the time of the accident.

The second witness for plaintiff, via videotape deposition, was Dr. Bruce J. Feldman, M.D. Dr. Feldman, a board certified trauma surgeon, testified that he examined Allgood, upon the request of plaintiff's counsel, on July 9, 1998 (four years and eleven months after the date of the accident). Allgood's medical records indicated that the emergency room personnel took x-rays of his spine, neck, chest, pelvis and knees, and also tested him for drugs and alcohol usage. The result of the drug/alcohol test was negative. The medical records corroborated the second, and third, visit to the hospital days following the accident and the complaints of the patient. The headaches complained of were to the front portion of the head. Dr. Feldman reviewed the CAT-scans performed on the head of the patient following the accident and concluded that a left frontal skull fracture, with bleeding into the left frontal area indicating acute trauma, was present. The physical examination of the patient in 1998, specifically the cranial nerves, indicated that the patient was unable to smell. This lack of sense of smell, also known as "anosmia," is mainly caused by trauma to the olfactory lobes of the brain, which lobes are located in the undersurface of the frontal area of the brain. Allgood also exhibited, apart from scarring on the skin surface on the knees, a problem with the right knee in that its movement to the front and back was a little excessive. Dr. Feldman maintained an expert opinion in 1998 that the following problems were exhibited and caused by the 1993 accident: (1) the frontal fracture and frontal bleeding was unresolved as the patient continued to complain of headaches; (2) the patient suffers from anosmia, which is permanent in the patient's case owing to the length of time the condition has been evident and the scarring to the brain due to the frontal bleeding; and, (3) the patient had internal derangement of the right knee due to damage to a ligament. Dr. Feldman stated that his opinion would not change in light of Allgood having prior headaches in the occipital or bitemporal areas of the brain prior to the accident because these two brain areas are located in the rear of the brain and his current headaches are located in the front area of the brain. The records indicated that the patient received no substantive medical treatment for any complaints related to the accident until the patient was examined by Dr. Feldman, and Dr. Feldman did not offer any ongoing treatment. Dr. Feldman admitted that the patient, at the time of the 1998 examination, did not tell Dr. Feldman of a head and back injury in 1988 or having received treatment for that injury from March of 1988 to November of 1993, but Dr. Feldman reviewed those records on the date of the deposition. Dr. Feldman stated that he did not see in those records that Allgood had complained of headaches behind his eyes, these "behind the eyes" headaches being three to four times per week from March of 1988 to November of 1993. The doctor then opined that, even though the complaint of headaches was "behind the eyes," that he did not agree that would be the frontal area of the brain; a "behind the eyes"-type headache could be caused by a bitemporal headache. See Feldman deposition at 39, 44. The doctor also admitted that he did not review all of the emergency room x-rays or the commentary by the emergency room examining physicians (which indicated that there was no tenderness in the knee joint immediately after the accident). The doctor explained that this lack of tenderness did not surprise him, since the painful abrasions to the knees would mask the underlying tenderness. The doctor admitted that there is no medical record, which he reviewed, documenting Allgood's alleged loss of smell. The doctor described the skull fracture as not being depressed, which indicates a conservative treatment plan where nothing physically is done to the area of the fracture. The emergency room physician did not test cranial nerve number 1, so the anosmia was not detected; however, Allgood did not complain of a loss of smell when he presented himself for examination in 1998. Feldman deposition at 49.

Following the testimony of Dr. Feldman, the defense reargued the motion in limine

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Bluebook (online)
Algood v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (4-20-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/algood-v-smith-unpublished-decision-4-20-2000-ohioctapp-2000.