Berg v. Ullevig

70 N.W.2d 133, 244 Minn. 390, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 22, 1955
Docket36,531, 36,532, 36,533, 36,534
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 70 N.W.2d 133 (Berg v. Ullevig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berg v. Ullevig, 70 N.W.2d 133, 244 Minn. 390, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 595 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

Four personal injury actions were commenced arising out of an intersection collision which occurred February 17, 1953, at the intersection of West Eighth street and Tyler street in the village of Hastings, Dakota county, Minnesota. The actions were consolidated for trial. Verdicts were returned for the plaintiffs in the following amounts: Ivan Berg, $5,600; Bose Berg, $400; Loretta Maher, $800; Bichard Berg, a minor, $250. The verdict in favor of the minor, Eichard Berg, was increased by an additur to $475. After denial by the court below of motions for a new trial, plaintiffs appealed from the four judgments entered. They contend that the verdicts are inadequate due to insufficient damages appearing to have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice; that the jury did not take into consideration all the evidence produced at the trial, or if the jury considered all the evidence, it so misconstrued the same as to produce an inadequate verdict; that there were errors of law occurring at the trial and objected to at the time; and that the verdicts of the jury were not justified by the evidence and were contrary to law.

The legal issues are:

(1) Did the court below abuse its discretion when it refused to grant plaintiffs’ motions for a new trial on the grounds that the verdicts of the jury were inadequate and appeared to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice or on the ground that the verdicts returned were entirely inadequate?

(2) Did the court below commit reversible error in excluding certain portions of the opinions offered or expressed on the part of plaintiffs’ medical experts ?

*392 Facts of importance here are as follows: Ivan Berg owned and operated an automobile in which his wife, Bose, his minor son, Bichard, and Loretta Maher were riding as guest passengers at the time of the collision with defendant’s automobile. Ivan Berg was an employee at the Cudahy packing plant. He had been a regular employee of Cudahy’s at least as far back as 1948. Prior to November 1952 he had been employed in the company’s hide cellar. He complained of severe and permanent injury to his back as a result of the accident. However, he went back to work on the evening shift at Cudahy’s after the accident, and, with the exception of having lost four and one-half days of work allegedly due to his back condition and having taken off two weeks for vacation, he sustained no other loss of time up to the time of trial. He consulted Dr. Norbert J. Kulzer of Hastings on the day of the accident, and his condition was diagnosed as contusions and a lumbar sacrum sprain. He also consulted Dr. Weiss of Hastings twice and Dr. Juers at Bed Wing once. Later he was sent by Dr. Kulzer to Dr. Donovan McCain, an orthopedic surgeon in St. Paul, who saw him for examination and treatment on April 28, 1953, and again on 'September 28, 1953. A spinogram was performed upon the advice of Dr. McCain which proved to be negative. This was done by a Dr. Nash at St. Luke’s Hospital, St. Paul. He submitted to the spinogram for the reason that Dr. McCain thought there were signs of a protruded disc. Dr. McCain stated that in his opinion there was a disc injury, but he admitted that there were certain definite signs and results of clinical tests negating the presence of such injury and that Achilles, Patellar, and Plantar reflexes were the same on both legs and these were negative as to the presence of a protruded disc. He further admitted in his opinion testimony that, even though he should go so far as to perform a laminectomy, he might not find a protruded disc although he thought there appeared to be evidence of a disc injury, and he testified in answer to a hypothetical question that in his opinion it was related to the accident.

It appears from the.testimony of Ivan Berg and his local doctor, Norbert J. Kulzer, that he had sustained two back injuries prior *393 to this accident, one either in 1948 or 1949 and another in 1952. These, according to the testimony of Dr. Kulzer, involved what was termed a lumbar sprain. He lost approximately three months’ time from work after the accident in 1948 or 1949 on account of the back injury due, he said, to lifting of heavy hides in the Cudahy hide cellar. On November 4,1952, he was transferred to an easier job at Cudahy’s as a cook. There was testimony on the part of Dr. McCain, his own medical expert, that his difficulty in the lumbar region could be a reoccurrence of a former back injury, providing the reoccurrence came about within a six-months period, that is, it could then be related to the first injury. He also testified that discs usually protrude because of an inherent weakness; that they may protrude without any accident, by a simple bending movement or by stepping into a low spot; and that the most common cause of disc injuries is a lifting strain.

Ivan Berg expended $269 for medical care. He testified that he suffered property damage to his automobile in the amount of $600. There was some testimony that, if he should undergo an operation for a disc injury, future medical care would amount to $582. The jury found that he had suffered damages to his automobile in the amount claimed, namely, $600, and to this they added $5,000 as general and special damages for his personal injuries. Upon the testimony as a whole relative to Ivan Berg’s complaints, the jury could well have attributed more or less of his difficulty to his former injuries. They may have concluded that they were in the conjectural and speculative field when confronted with the claims of future and permanent injury and loss of future earnings; that the results of the accident necessitating future medical care were largely based upon medical testimony which tests negate in many respects; that the evidence did not in fact establish the existence of a protruded disc; and that his complaints were only in part the result of and due to the accident of February 17, 1953. Based upon the opinions of the medical experts and the testimony generally, the jury was free to draw inferences from the evidence as a whole. The jury having returned exactly what was asked for in the matter of property damage and having added thereto $5,000 as applicable to the other *394 items of Ms claim, we cannot say that the verdict was entirely inadequate and that the trial court abused its discretion in denying plaintiff a new trial.

Loretta Maher, who was thrown clear of the car at the time of the accident, went to the same doctor, Norbert J. Kulzer, in the afternoon on the day of the accident. Dr. Kulzer testified that he diagnosed her condition then as being contusions of the inner chest (no marks being visible); difficulty in breathing; pain in her lower chest and right shoulder; and sprains of the right elbow and right ankle. He found no abnormal heart condition. Chest X rays appeared negative. Later he found that her heart-beat rate was higher than normal and that her temperature became elevated; she displayed signs of fever and when this occurred he advised that she was not fit for work. She testified that about a week after the accident she had full movement of her arms and legs. Loretta Maher, a married woman who acted as the housekeeper for herself and her husband, had worked continually for four years as a punch press operator at Hudson Manufacturing Company in Hastings.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W.2d 133, 244 Minn. 390, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berg-v-ullevig-minn-1955.