Brady v. Terminal Railroad Assn.

127 S.W.2d 1, 344 Mo. 502, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 4, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 1 (Brady v. Terminal Railroad Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brady v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 127 S.W.2d 1, 344 Mo. 502, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 428 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

Owing to a defective handhold, or grab iron in railroad parlance, thé respondent fell from the top of a freight car to the ground in the yard of the Wabash Railway Company in Granite City, Illinois, and was injured on November 20, 1927. The car had been placed on an interchange track in the yard by the appellant Terminal Railroad Association for delivery to the Wabash and respondent first sued the latter for his injuries and recovered a judgment for $25,000- in the circuit court. But that judgment was reversed outright by Division One of this court in April, 1932. [Brady v. Wabash Ry. Co., 329 Mo. 1123, 49 S. W. (2d) 24, 83 A. L. R. 655.] During the pendency of that suit he also filed the present action against the appellant, which came to trial in November, 1933, and respondent again recovered judgment, this time for $15,000. On appeal this court en banc reversed that judgment in February, 1937. [Brady v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 340 Mo. 841, 102 S. W. (2d) 903.] Respondent obtained a writ of certiorari fróm the United States-Supreme Court, which reversed our decision on January 31, 1938, and *503 remanded the canse to this court for further proceedings. [Brady v. Terminal Railroad Assn., 303 U. S. 10, 82 L. Ed. 614, 58 Sup. Ct. 426.] The case was reargued at the present September Term, 1938, this time on the sole issue whether the $15,000 damages awarded were excessive. We limit our statement to the facts on that issue, taking most of them bodily from appellant’s brief without quotation marks.

Respondent was 31 years old when injured. lie testified that he landed on his back when he fell. About a half hour afterward he was taken to the Granite City Hospital. He said he remained there for two or three weeks, but the hospital records show he was discharged six days after the accident. They bandaged his back and treated his left hip where it was cut, bruised and had'been rubbed by the cinders. Beginning three or four days after he returned home, for possibly a month or two he was taken back and forth to the office, where he remained for several hours. He was still being treated by the Wabash doctor at Granite City. He suffered pain every day in the middle of his back. His hips were bruised and he had trouble getting up and down, and used a cane. While at the Wabash office he was not required to do any work. He made no improvement at all while under the care of the Wabash doctor, and got worse all the time.

He then went to see Dr. Meinhardt, who treated his back éleetrically and massaged it. At the time of the accident he weighed 155 pounds. At one time thereafter he weighed 115 pounds. In the summer of 1929 he went to western Texas and remained a year and a half. Up to that time he had not worked. Since the accident he had worked about fifteen days on a vegetable truck, but his back hurt and he became nervous. He has worn all the time a brace composed of canvas and leather strips. He had no difficulty or pain or inconvenience or discomfort of any kind in his back or any other part of his body before the accident, and worked seven days a week for the Wabash. He has made efforts to go without his cane for two or three days at a time but finds he cannot get along without it. He gets jerky, makes quick steps and cannot get around well. At the time of the trial, six years after the injury, he was suffering pain under his shoulder blades, in the middle of the back and down close to the hips. Recently, Dr. Meinhardt has given his back electrical treatments.

Dr. Meinhardt said the respondent first consulted him in the early part of January, 1928. At that time he had a large amount of tenderness over the entire back extending from the lower part of the shoulders down to the hips, and the muscles of those regions were tender on pressure or palpation; the muscles were rigid and somewhat tender and boardlike. He was very nervous. At that time he weighed 145 to 150 pounds and he complained of headaches, pain in both hips, inability to stoop or bend over, and his back became worse when he moved around. The treatment prescribed was rest to sort of immobilize the spine, and heat to the back. His muscles also were given *504 massage. He was given liniment for His hips and sedatives to promote rest and sleep. His back was taped with ádhesive from below the shoulders to the hip region. It was .kept on for one, two or three months. A supportive belt was suggested and respondent has worn two or three while under the doctor’s care. In 1929 X-ray pictures were taken, but they were not produced at the trial because they had been misplaced and lost during a former trial.

The doctor’s diagnosis was a hypertrophic arthritis of the spine. He explained that means an abnormal bony growth projecting from the edges of the bones. In this instance it was growing between the vertebrae. The doctor was waiting for this condition to become solid and there is not much that can be done for appellant medically. The doctor expects the bones to become fused or ankylosed. This condition exists between the 10th and 11th vertebrae, corresponding to the 10th and 11th ribs, and located about the middle of the back. The spine ankylates backward in this region. He has a curvature of the spine to the left which is congenital, that is, the curvature has come on because of the stiffness of the spine. An arthritic condition shown by X-ray photographs taken two weeks after the injury would be too soon to say that it was due to the injury. The doctor found increased arthritic deposits between the 10th and 11th vertebrae, since he began his treatment of respondent. Respondent had an arthritic condition which antedates the injury, but since the injury the X-rays show the projection bone has increased. In the doctor’s opinion respondent’s fall rekindled or lighted up the condition and caused this additional bony growth and the pain. The condition is very painful. Plaintff has a disability with respect to manual work because of the pain and after that he will have a disability because of the back being stiff.

On cross-examination, Dr. Meinhardt said respondent at present weighs 150 pounds and that he can work, depending upon the kind of work, and that there are some types that he should be able to do. He does not think respondent is as agile as he was previously. Even with pain a man can. do things. Respondent has no broken bones that the doctor found. The X-ray pictures taken by him on January 17, 1928, showed a condition of some bonj'' growth in the lumbar region. The ankylosis now is between the 10th and 11th thoracic vertebrae, two vertebrae above the part that the doctor X-rajmd in January, 1928. This is in the lower part of the back and the chest and the doctor never did take an X-ray of the thoracic vertebrae. .Of his own knowledge the doctor does not know there is an ankylosis condition, except from the other X-ray pictures taken by a Dr. Peden. He did not know whether the condition was there previously. The spurs lower down on the spine and disclosed by Dr. Meinhardt’s own X-ray pictures, may be a result of the condition existing. He X-rayed respondent three times, but he never X-rayed the place of this ankylosed condition. The original arthritis was due to a diseased condition and *505 it must have existed before the injury. The X-rays did not show any broken bones. The bone growth of the upper lumbar region that respondent had could not occur in a week or two. .

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.2d 1, 344 Mo. 502, 1939 Mo. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-terminal-railroad-assn-mo-1939.