Bennett v. Bartlett

158 S.E. 712, 110 W. Va. 478, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 111
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1931
Docket6881
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 158 S.E. 712 (Bennett v. Bartlett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Bartlett, 158 S.E. 712, 110 W. Va. 478, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 111 (W. Va. 1931).

Opinion

*479 Hatcher, Judge:

This is an action for damages for personal injury in which "the plaintiff recovered a verdict and judgment for $17,500.

The alleged injury occurred in the afternoon of January 19, 1928, on the brick highway near Pruntytown, while the ■plaintiff was a passenger (for hire) in a public bus operated ■by the defendant. It was raining at the time of the accident. In rounding a curve 233 feet from a concrete bridge, the bus ■got partly on the right hand berm of the road and before it entirely regained the hard surface, it ran into the side wall of the bridge, which tore out its right side and caused some of the seats to “pile up” on the plaintiff. Witnesses for the defendants said that an oncoming truck was taking the middle of the road and the driver of the bus pulled over on the berm to avoid a collision, and that when about 100 feet from the bridge the left front tire blew out, obstructing the efforts of the driver to prevent the wreck. Witnesses for plaintiff testified that they did not hear the blowout; that they were in position to have noticed the truck; that they did not see it; and that excessive speed prevented the bus from rounding the curve successfully and made it run out on the berm and into the bridge. The cause of the wreck is, therefore, a jury question.

As defendants contend that plaintiff suffered no material injury whatever in the ■wreck, and also challenge the amount of the verdict, a somewhat detailed statement of the evidence vdll be made. Immediately following the accident, plaintiff went to the home of Mrs. Charlotte Evans who resides close to' the bridge. The plaintiff told Mrs. Evans that she did not think she was hurt; but Mrs. Evans said that the plaintiff was so excited and frightened that she didn’t seem to realize what she was saying. Shortly afterwards, W. F. Six took plaintiff to her home which was in Pruntytown. He testified that she was very nervous and excited and seemed under the impression that he was taking her away from her home instead of towards it. Dr. Shaffer, a practicing physician, saw the plaintiff shortly after her arrival home. He found her to be very nervous and unable to give the details *480 of what had happened, and said that he “suspected a concussion because of the injury on her head.” He did not treat her, but advised her family physician, Dr. F. S. Suddarth, of her condition. Dr. Suddarth, who had been plaintiff’s physician for a number of years, attended her within a few hours after the wreck. He testified that he found “a considerable knot” on the back of her head; that she was suffering from shock and nervousness which in his opinion was caused by a concussion of the brain; that she remained in bed several weeks Under the care of a trained nurse (at his orders), during which time she had such intense headaches that the administration of morphine was necessary; that she complained of dizziness and of the sensation of going backwards; that about a year or year and a half after the bus accident, she commenced having convulsions, which affliction liad continued at intervals to the time of. trial; and that the front of both her legs, from the knees down, had become very much discolored, and she dragged her right foot when walking. Dr. Suddarth stated that plaintiff was of a nervous temperament and had always been rather frail, but with the exception of her eyes she had been in good physical condition for some time before the accident; that he had never known of her having convulsions prior thereto; and that in his opinion her present condition is the result of concussion of the brain, is permanent, and' will shorten her life.

Dr. H. H. Haines, a physician of Clarksburg, examined the plaintiff in April, 1928. He testified that she was then very nervous and unable “to handle her muscles” and that she had symptoms of cerebral concussion, which in his opinion had been caused by “a blow or injury.”

The plaintiff testified that she received a blow on the back of her head when the bus wrecked. In addition to what her physician had said of her, she stated that since the wreck she had not been able to sleep normally and had been troubled with double vision, the scientific name for which is “diplopia”. The evidence of plaintiff’s suffering and other afflictions is supported by the testimony of her father, her husband, and the trained nurse. This evidence is not controverted except as to the diplopia.

*481 Plaintiff was examined by Dr. Robert Sattler, an eye specialist of Cincinnati, in 1922, and be found that she had congenital weakness of the eyes. He testified: “She then had ametropia, that is, feeblesightedness. She also had asthenopia, to which we gave the name of muscular asthenopia which occasionally causes double vision. That is persistent and follows the long use of the eyes.” He examined her in the summer following the accident, and while he found some aggravation of her original trouble did not find diplopia “due to a paralysized muscle.” She was also examined by Dr. I. D. Cole, an eye specialist of Clarksburg, West Yirginia, in April, 1928. Dr. Cole procured, for purposes of comparison, the results of the examination made by Dr. Sattler in 1922. Dr. Cole states that he found the right eye of the plaintiff worse in 1928 than reported by Dr. Sattler in 1922; that the left eye was about the same; that she made no complaint to him of double vision; and that while she may have suffered at times from that trouble, yet from, his examination of the muscles of her eyes, he was certain that she did not have constant diplopia.

The defendant, relying on the evidence of Drs. Sattler and Cole, say that the plaintiff’s claim of diplopia is discredited, that “false in one thing false in all,” and that her testimony is not of sufficient weight to support the verdict.

The maxim, falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus, is “a rule of permission and is not mandatory.” Jones, Comm. on Ev. (2nd Ed.), sec. 2473. It is within the discretion of the jury, and in fact is its duty, to accept some of the statements of a witness if found to be true, while disregarding others. Levine v. Mantell, 90 W. Va. 166, 172-3. Consequently, rejection of plaintiff’s claim as to one affliction does not, of itself, entail the rejection of her other claims. For that matter, plaintiff’s case would not be materially weakened if all of her testimony be disregarded except her statement that she received the blow on her head when the bus wrecked. The testimony of Drs. Shaffer and Suddarth establishes prima facie that the blow caused concussion of the brain; that of Drs. Suddarth and Haines traces the symptoms which followed to the concussion; and that of Dr. Suddarth and the trained nurse (as *482 well as others) proves the sequelae of the conclusion. When we take into consideration-the pain, the dragging of the right foot, and the convulsions of plaintiff, all charged by Dr. Suddarth to the concussion, and not questioned by any witness, professional or laical, we cannot say the amount of the verdict indicates that the jury was prompted by prejudice or any other improper motive.

• The defendants impute error to the giving of plaintiff’s instruction No. 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.E. 712, 110 W. Va. 478, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-bartlett-wva-1931.