ARNOLD v. Ellis

97 So. 2d 744, 231 Miss. 757, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 563
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1957
Docket40561
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 97 So. 2d 744 (ARNOLD v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ARNOLD v. Ellis, 97 So. 2d 744, 231 Miss. 757, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 563 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

*761 Lee, J.

Mrs. Mary Purvis Ellis sued Hunter Arnold and Mrs. Ruth Arnold for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by her as a result of their negligent operation of an automobile. The jury returned a verdict in her favor for the sum of $15,000, and, from the judgment rendered thereon, the Arnolds appealed.

The defendants lived at Sessums in Oktibbeha County. Hunter Arnold, the owner of a Buick automobile, told his wife, who was planning to attend a district demonstration meeting at State College, to carry a tractor tire to a certain service station in Starkville for repair. On April 27, 1956, Mrs. Arnold drove by the college, where her meeting was to be held, into town, delivered the tire, and was returning to the college to attend her meeting. She was proceeding east on Main Street when, at the intersection of that street with Montgomery Street, she collided with a Chrysler automobile, being driven by Mrs. Ellis south on Montgomery Street. There was an automatic traffic light at this intersection. The colors green, amber and red, respectively indicated “go”, “change” and “stop.”

*762 Mrs. Ellis testified that her speed at the time was eighteen to twenty miles an hour. As she approached the intersection, she saw the car coming from the right, bnt it was some distance away, at least two houses from the corner. The signal light was green, entitling her to proceed through the intersection, and she did not expect that the approaching car would run a red light and hit her. When she had passed over half of the distance, suddenly her car was struck by the Buick with such a terrific impact that it was turned around to the north part of the intersection and headed in the direction from which it had come. Mrs. Carolyn Franklin, who was in the Ellis car, gave corroboration. She testified that Mrs. Ellis was driving slowly and carefully; and that they had the green light; that they were in the intersection before she saw the Buick approaching from the right; and that it was an awful blow. The evidence of Ben O’Neal, a student, in an automobile on Main Street, was to the effect that the light was red against Mrs. Arnold at the time of the collision. Alton Peeks, a policeman, gave corroboration as to the position of the cars after the collision. Mrs. Ellis also testified that Mrs. Arnold, just after the wreck, said she did not know why she ran the red light.

Mrs. Arnold testified that the light was green before she got to the intersection, but as she went under it, she looked and realized that it was red. However, she saw no one approaching and did not see the Chrysler until it was immediately in front of her. While she did not remember telling Mrs. Ellis that she did not know why she ran the red light, she did not deny that she made the statement. She did admit however that, in a later statement, she said “I looked at the traffic light again and it was red and I was too close to the intersection to stop.”

Mrs. Ellis testified that she was thirty-five years of age and the mother of two children, six and two years of *763 age. Before the wreck she was in good health, took care of her children, did general housework, and worked in the yard. She slept soundly and had no headaches. She is a registered medical technologist, with an earning capacity of at least $300 per month, although she was not practicing her profession at the time. Since her injury, she cannot pick up her children to bathe or minister to them properly, or do her customary work. She has severe pain in her neck and back, the latter being similar to low back pains in labor. She sleeps on a hard surface bed and wears a body brace, which is very uncomfortable. She does not sleep well, suffers from headaches, has to go to the bathroom more often at night, and has had to curtail her social activities.

Dr. R. S. Ellis, her husband, examined her following the wreck. At first, except for tendérness and severe pain in her back, his findings were not positive. Consequently he sent her first to Dr. Elton S. Thomas at Columbus, and then later to Dr. G-eorge D. Purvis at Jackson. However, after a lapse of time, her back became stiff and the muscles were rigid. It was his opinion that she suffered an injury that permeated the vertebras in the lower back and the neck and that her pain and suffering will be permanent. If an operation is finally necessary, it seldom leaves the back in a satisfactory condition.

Dr. C. L. Ezell made X-ray pictures and examined Mrs. Ellis on October 10 and 13, 1956. He found pain and tenderness over the fifth and sixth cervical vertebras with spasm of the muscles of the neck. It was his opinion that some neural herniation was pressing on the spinal nerve, which he attributed to a ruptured disc. It is im.possible to tell how long she will have this pressure, but there will be pain from this permanently. If it continues, sooner or later she will have to undergo surgery. Her spine is not in a normal position. In his opinion she is not affected by spina bifida.

*764 Dr. Joe Brewer also made X-ray pictures and an examination of Mrs. Ellis on October 16, 1956. The symptoms which he observed were similar to those mentioned by Dr. Ezell. It was his opinion that a vertebra had slipped enough to decrease the cartilage between them. Raising the leg at thirty degrees caused pain when she should have been able to raise it at a ninety degree angle without pain. In his opinion, pain resulting from such an injury grows progressively worse, and she is permanently disabled.

The reports of Dr. Thomas and Dr. Purvis, who made examinations of Mrs. Ellis, were, without objection from the plaintiff, introduced in evidence. In the former, the doctor had found a moderate tenderness over the lumbar vertebras, and in the latter the doctor had diagnosed the condition as “static low back strain”, possibly following the wreck. Dr. Thomas was offered as a witness by defendants. It was his opinion that Mrs. Ellis had a spina bifida, a beginning separation of the spine. He found no abnormality in the cervical area or the disc. She had a congenital defect in her back. He admitted, however, that the accident aggravated this condition with an acute strain superimposed on the abnormality, and that, without the injury, she could have gone through life with the defect. There is no way to tell when the strain will end. She should improve, but it does not take much for the pain to recur.

During the trial, the plaintiff gave her consent for Dr. Dempsey Strange to examine her. He did so, and was offered as a witness by the defendants. He was of the opinion that Mrs. Ellis had a congenital defect and not a ruptured disc. He could find nothing specific outside of back strain with congenital deformity. He thought she had some pain, but that she exaggerated it, and he does not expect it to last forever. He admitted that chronic back strain produces the most severe suffering; and that, following the history, if she had come to him, *765 he would have had to assume that the wreck started the pain.

Defense counsel made a motion for a mistrial because, it was said, plaintiff’s counsel, in the statement of his case to the jury, used a blackboard to show that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
97 So. 2d 744, 231 Miss. 757, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-ellis-miss-1957.