Brown v. Vanderveer

460 S.W.2d 502, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1970
Docket11779
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 460 S.W.2d 502 (Brown v. Vanderveer) 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
Brown v. Vanderveer, 460 S.W.2d 502, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2362 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

This is a rear end automobile collision case. Mrs. Edna L-. Brown, appellant, was the operator of a 1932 Chevrolet automobile which when stopped for a red signal light at the intersection of North Third Street and French Avenue in Temple, Texas, on November 22, 1967, was rear-ended by a 1959 Ford automobile driven by appel-lee, seventeen year old Miss Brenda Jane Vanderveer. Mrs. Brown and her husband brought suit for property damage and damages for personal injuries to Mrs. Brown. The case was tried to a jury which found appellee guilty of negligence proximately causing the collision. The jury found that damages to the Brown car were $100.-00 and that Mrs. Brown had sustained $1,000.00 damages for loss of earnings as a result of the collision and that she reasonably incurred $689.00 in medical, drug and hospital bills as a proximate result of the collision. The jury also found that Mrs. Brown had suffered no damages for personal injuries, if any, which she sustained as a result of the collision including past and future physical pain and mental anguish, if any, and for future loss of earning capacity. Judgment was rendered on the verdict and appeal by Mr. and Mrs. Brown has been perfected.

Appellants assert that the various negative answers of the jury as to damages are without any evidence to support them and that they are against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence and are manifestly unjust. We agree with the latter contention.

All of the testimony regarding the injuries sustained arid physical pain and mental anguish suffered by Mrs. Brown was offered by her. Appellee offered no rebutting testimony. We have carefully read *503 the entire statement of facts and will briefly recite the testimony relative to these matters.

At the time of the collision appellee was driving about twenty miles per hour. The impact according to Mrs. Brown was “pretty heavy.” It knocked her forward and across the steering wheel. It propelled her car into the car stopped in front of her. Both the front and back bumpers of her car were damaged. The rear tail pipe was crushed. The grill and radiator of ap-pellee’s car was damaged.

In 1967 Mrs. Brown was about 43 years of age. She had worked as a waitress for many years. She did rather heavy lifting in her work. Before this incident she had been in good health and had never suffered with pains in the neck and shoulders. Immediately after the accident she suffered a severe headache and took aspirin. She then went to the James Connally Air Force Base Hospital to see Dr. Milwe who prescribed pain pills and was told to return the next day. The next day she was so stiff and sore that it was necessary for her sister to drive her to the hospital. Mrs. Brown was not able to return to work for two weeks after the accident and she never has been able to do the heavy work she had done before. This was verified by her employer, Mr. Betros. Both Mr. Betros and Mrs. Brown’s sister, Mrs. Edwards and a fellow employe Wallace Oliver, testified to complaints of pain by Mrs. Brown after the accident when there were none before and to her loss of efficiency as a worker. Mrs. Brown testified to the pain and suffering which she endured after the collision.

Mrs. Brown discontinued going to the hospital in Waco because of the distance from her home. She went to see Dr. L. E. Robertson in McGregor where Mrs. Brown lived. Dr. Robertson made X-rays and gave her muscle relaxing and pain pills. He treated her for a while and recommended that she see Dr. R. L. Stockton, a neurosurgeon.

Dr. Stockton testified by deposition and in person. He was the only medical witness. He first examined Mrs. Brown in January 1968, and testified that, “Examination of the neck revealed decreased range of motion in all quadrants. There was marked muscle spasm in the neck muscles posteriorly and this was present bilaterally. There was a tender area along the medial side of the left scapula, and that is all — that’s the neck part. As far as the neurologic examination was concerned it showed the tendon reflexes equal and active. Motor functions were completely intact, sensory function revealed a decreased pin stick on the fingertips on the left hand primarily in a C7 nerve root distribution.” He further testified that he was under the impression that at that time she was under a “cervical myofascial strain with mild nerve root compression, * * * and that this was probably secondary to muscular spasm.” At that time he did not believe she had any kind of disc disease. The X-rays taken by Dr. Robertson shortly after the collision and interpreted by Dr. Stockton showed a “normal cervical spine with some possible increase in arthritis around the apophysial joints. * * *” Dr. Stockton prescribed a course of muscle relaxants, pain medication and cervical traction.

Dr. Stockton saw Mrs. Brown April 22, 1968 and at that time she had “enough increase in muscle spasm or something that she had an absent right biceps jerk. There was also some slight decrease in strength on the left. On May 6, Dr. Stockton saw Mrs. Brown and she had a moderate amount of relief of pain, “she was still having some decrease in strength in her left biceps. There were also decreased reflexes in both upper extremities.” He saw her again on June 3, and, “At that time she was still having the pain in her neck and with radiation of pain into her left arm, with a decreased biceps jerk on that side.”

Early in June Mrs. Brown was in the hospital four days when a myelogram was *504 performed by Dr. Stockton. This test showed some abnormalities which were not related to the accident. It also showed a “filling defect at C5-6 and C6-7, * * * on the left side. * * * usually these are the ones that are associated with a herniated nucleous pulposus in that area. * * *»

When Mrs. Brown left the hospital Dr. Stockton testified, “She was continuing to have pain and, of course, we found the disc and it was decided by the patient that she preferred to wait for an additional period of time.”

Dr. Stockton saw Mrs. Brown on July 12 and she was suffering less pain but she was still having her reflex deficits. Also when he saw her on August 21 she was feeling better.

Just before September 7 Mrs. Brown began having severe pain but she was improved when Dr. Stockton saw her on September 21; and this was true when he saw her on November 20, and on February 19, 1969. On May 27, 1969, Dr. Stockton released the patient from regular visits. At that time, he said, she was having very little pain.

In June 1969 Dr. Stockton saw Mrs. Brown twice and at that time he testified she was having severe pain in her neck, left shoulder and down into her arm. The problem in her shoulder joint he thought was arthritis. We quote the following testimony of Dr. Stockton:

“Q Now, Doctor, if you assume that Edna L. Brown did not have any trouble with her neck on November the 22nd, 1967 or her shoulder or the parts of the body that you have examined and treated since January 29th, 1968, immediately before she was in a collision on November the 22nd, 1967 in which her vehicle was struck from the rear and thereafter she did have the complaints that you heard and difficulty that you saw and have treated in her body, would you have an opinion within the realm of reasonable medical probability as to what caused the trouble in Edna L. Brown’s body ?

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Bluebook (online)
460 S.W.2d 502, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-vanderveer-texapp-1970.