Bluebonnet Express, Inc. v. Foreman

431 S.W.2d 45, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2983
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1968
Docket116
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 431 S.W.2d 45 (Bluebonnet Express, Inc. v. Foreman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bluebonnet Express, Inc. v. Foreman, 431 S.W.2d 45, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2983 (Tex. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

BARRON, Justice.

This is a suit for damages brought by plaintiff, Percy Foreman, against Bluebonnet Express, Inc., and Junior Horace Marsh, driver of the truck involved, both defendants, for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by Foreman on May 23, 1962 in a rear-end collision between his vehicle and a truck owned by Bluebonnet Express, Inc. The defendant, Marsh, did not answer and an interlocutory default judgment was entered against him. At the trial with the aid of a jury, Bluebonnet Express, Inc. admitted liability, and the case was submitted to the jury on damages for medical expenses, pain and suffering and mental anguish only. Upon the jury’s answers to special issues, judgment was entered by the trial court for Foreman in the sum of $74,850.00. Following a hearing on motion for new trial, the trial court ordered a remittitur of $14.00 and otherwise overruled the motion. From the trial court’s overruling of the motion for new trial, this appeal has been duly perfected by Bluebonnet Express, Inc., as appellant against Foreman as ap-pellee.

The case is appealed on two points of error, the first point being that the trial court erred in refusing to grant a remitti-tur where damages awarded for future medical expense in the amount of $7,-850.00 were excessive by at least $5,000.-00, and the second point being that the trial court erred in refusing to grant a remittitur where damages awarded for pain and suffering and mental anguish in the amount of $65,000.00 were excessive by at least $50,000.00.

The accident happened around 12:00 o’clock at night two-tenths of a mile east of Post Oak Road on Memorial Drive in the City of Houston. Appellee’s 1960 Thunderbird was struck in the rear by appellant’s truck, and the impact was hard. The automobile, as the result of the collision had a bent axle, bent frame, and the doors buckled on both sides. Appellee testified that everything suddenly went black and then bright, like stars shooting, and he testified that he had a temporary blackout. Soreness in his neck and back resulted within two or three hours. The next day he went to Dr. Joseph Robertson, a Houston physician who examined him at his office and then examined him at Methodist Hospital. His back, shoulders and neck were carefully examined by Dr. Robertson, and at that time appellee had a great amount of pain. Since that time, May 24, 1962, appellee has been in the hospital in Houston about six times and has talked with Dr. Robertson regarding his condition a number of times. Also, he has been in the hospital and has had treatment for his neck and back in Miami, Oklahoma City, Sioux City and Chicago. He has received heat therapy, traction, medication, heat baths and various other forms of treatment at all of the places. Foreman testified that he has been in pain almost constantly since the accident except when he is moving, and if he sits *47 as long as two or three minutes the pain starts again. If he keeps sitting and does not move the pain gets greater as time passes. He has not slept longer than an hour at a time since the accident except when he was in a hospital where he received medication to keep him asleep the full night. Partial relief is obtained by using traction and heating pads. He has taken “pain killers” about every two hours during the night. He builds up a tolerance for the drugs and is required at intervals to change to another type of medication. He testified that the lack of rest and the pain make him highly nervous and irritable to the extent that he is required to schedule important conferences for early in the mornings or not later than 10:00 o’clock in the morning. As the day goes on, he testified, he gets more short-tempered and more intolerant due to the pain, and he testified that he never had that trouble before the accident. In important cases he invariably engages some other lawyer to deal with his clients because of his nervous condition. Appellee carries traction with him, but his use thereof never gives relief from pain for longer than 45 minutes to an hour. He is required to take sleeping aids such as seconal, norflex or noctec. The pain is greater and more intense at night. His injuries are located “at the base of my neck where it joins the shoulders and into the spine, and also the right shoulder is worse than the left, but both shoulders and in the small of the back also.” Appel-lee also has a condition known as diabetes mellitus, which he states is mild and does not bother him. He is overweight and attempts to control his weight at regular intervals. He is concerned with his injuries and he invariably rests and has a special chair in his office for the purpose of rest with no telephones, where he relaxes before he goes home in the evening, so he will not be irritable with his wife and young child. He testified that the pain, instead of getting better, has gotten worse from month to month and from year to year.

On cross-examination, appellee stated that he had practiced law about six hours a day more since the accident, because he has practiced law at night. He works during the time he is not sleeping at night and “I work on my client’s cases, and I do that because I can’t rest and if I am not resting I — I work.” Since the accident he has tried the Sizemore, Vaughn, Hudson, Mossier and other important cases, many of them taking several weeks to try, and he has been active also in making speeches to various groups over the nation. He testified that he had had no difficulty physically from 1948 until the accident and that he had never had pain in the upper part of the spine until the accident. He had, however, pain in the lower back many years ago when a horse fell on him, but he stated that he recovered in a short time.

Dr. Joseph Robertson, specializing in neurosurgery and who is shown to be a thoroughly qualified physician, saw Mr. Foreman on the afternoon of May 24, 1962, in the emergency room at Methodist Hospital in Houston. Foreman was complaining of his neck where he had quite a lot of pain. The pain had become progressively worse in less than a 24-hour period of time, and the pain was limited to the neck and back and between the shoulder blades in the back. His neurological study was noted and there were no abnormalities. There was no impairment of his central nervous system and its function. On examination his neck was limited in all cardinal ranges of motion and this was due to pain in his neck. Pain over the cervical spine in the mid-portion and over the muscles of the neck in the back, and the X-ray examination at that time revealed that appellee had osteoarthritis that was of a relatively marked degree. This condition was usual in a man of appellee’s age, and in most instances it causes no discomfort. Loss of the lordotic curve in the neck was attributed to the shortening of the muscles due to over-stretching, and such was attributed to the accident. There is no way to predict how long such *48 a condition will last. The doctor stated that pain will produce fatigue and nervousness, making the muscles tighter because it is normal to tighten the muscles when one is tired or tense, and one condition aggravates the other. He verified that appellee had been in the hospital with this difficulty six times in Houston. His hospital bills amounted to a total of $1,986.40 for the six hospital admissions, and such sum was reasonable and necessary. Dr. Greene or Dr. Dobson treated Foreman for his diabetes mellitus, a disease where the individual is unable to handle the metabolism of carbohydrates — sugar diabetes as it is commonly referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
431 S.W.2d 45, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bluebonnet-express-inc-v-foreman-texapp-1968.