Caldwell v. Haynes

643 A.2d 564, 136 N.J. 422, 1994 N.J. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 6, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by126 cases

This text of 643 A.2d 564 (Caldwell v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. Haynes, 643 A.2d 564, 136 N.J. 422, 1994 N.J. LEXIS 628 (N.J. 1994).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

HANDLER, J.

Plaintiff was injured while seated in a disabled car on the Pulaski Skyway when the car was struck in the rear by defendants’ car. Plaintiff suffered back injuries, for which he sued the Kehlers and Deloris Haynes, the owner of the disabled car. He also brought a separate action, which was later consolidated, against the personal injury protection (“PIP”) insurance carrier.

The jury found Todd Kehler 100% liable and awarded damages based on lost past wages, lost future income, and pain and suffering. However, the trial court, finding the damages award to be excessive, granted Kehler’s motion for a new trial on damages only. The Appellate Division, in an unreported opinion, agreed with the trial court that the past-lost-income award was excessive *427 but upheld the jury verdicts for future lost income as well as pain and suffering.

We granted Todd Kehler’s petition for certification, 134 N.J. 559, 636 A.2d 518 (1993), which challenged the Appellate Division’s refusal to set aside the damages award in its entirety.

I

On May 21,1987, Todd Kehler (hereinafter defendant), who was operating a car owned by Alice Kehler, struck the rear end of a disabled vehicle at or near the shoulder of the Pulaski Skyway. The disabled car had stalled in the right lane of the roadway and its owner, co-defendant Deloris Haynes, had left the car to seek help. Plaintiff, Paul Caldwell, who remained in the disabled vehicle, was injured by the impact. He sued the Kehlers, Haynes, and, in a separate action that was later consolidated, State Farm Insurance Company, the PIP carrier.

Caldwell, who was thirty-five-years-old at the time of the accident, was examined and treated over the years by various doctors and hospitals. For almost a year after the May 1987 accident, Caldwell continued treatment with Dr. Sherman, a board-certified internist, who initially treated Caldwell for a spasm, tenderness, and a reduced range of motion in his back. Despite Caldwell’s treatment, he remained in pain. Eventually, Dr. Sherman suspected the “possibility of tuberculosis of the spine.” Dr. Sherman testified that in his opinion “the accident unmasked or reactivated latent tuberculosis” because he could find no other provoking factors, and medical literature indicated that “significant auto trauma can be a provoking factor.”

Later, Caldwell began treatment with Dr. Lee, an orthopedic surgeon. In late 1990, Dr. Lee admitted Caldwell to the hospital because Caldwell was still experiencing back pain and his “right leg was still getting numb every now and then.” Caldwell testified that Dr. Lee told him he had tuberculosis of the spine. Dr. Lee’s discharge summary indicated the final diagnosis as post-traumatic lumbosacral sprain with spasms, psoas abscess with multiple lum *428 bar abscesses, suspected tuberculosis, and osteomyelitis with destruction of certain vertebrae. Apparently, Dr. Lee’s antibiotic treatment of Caldwell ended the progress of the disease. No evidence suggested that further destruction of spinal bone or other increase in disability had occurred or would occur in the future.

However, according to defendant’s expert, Dr. William Burke, the automobile impact was not severe enough to cause the tuberculosis to spread; and because the appearance of tuberculosis in the spine had been diagnosed so much later, it was improbable that the tuberculosis was related to the accident, if that was indeed a correct diagnosis of plaintiff’s condition.

Caldwell testified that his back pain was “sharp,” he was “in constant pain every day,” and “everything became a problem,” including tying his shoes, walking, and driving. Caldwell denied ever having had any back pain before the accident.

Before the accident, plaintiff had been employed for two to three years as a general laborer by a construction company that repaired bridges and tunnels. At the time of the accident, Caldwell earned $25.65 per hour and worked forty or forty-five hours per week, although his hours varied, seemingly due to the seasonal nature of the work. After the accident Caldwell missed three months of work.

Caldwell testified that at the construction company he earned an average gross weekly income of about $1,000. His testimony suggested that his pre-accident annual salary before taxes had been about $44,000. Caldwell stated that in 1987, the year of the accident in which he missed three months of work, he had earned $33,000. However, Caldwell estimated that his gross wages for the previous year in his work for the same company were only “twenty something” thousand.

After the accident and the three-month absence, Caldwell continued working for the company, with lighter work assignments but at the same salary, until July 1990, more than three years *429 after the accident. In July 1990, the company discharged Caldwell. Caldwell testified that he had been fired because he could no longer “do the strenuous work that it would take to do ... the lifting, and other things like that.” Caldwell also stated that “[b]eing terminated with a construction company means you can be fired one day and back at work the next day just because, you know ... [tjhere’s quite a few they would fire one week, hire back the next week. So I was just one of them.” That was the first time the company fired Caldwell. He did not seek to be rehired.

Caldwell remained unemployed for a period of eighteen or nineteen months. In February or March 1992, he found work driving a senior citizens’ van twenty hours a week at $5.50 per hour. At the time of trial, Caldwell was earning a little over $6,000 per year. He said he was capable of driving a full week, but the job offered only twenty hours. Thus, in addition to the initial three-month absence from work, Caldwell missed eighteen or nineteen months between the construction and the driving job. Then, he worked part-time during a five- or six-month period during which he had the twenty-hour-per-week driving job.

As noted, the court consolidated the PIP and personal-injury claims for trial. On the personal-injury claim, the trial court instructed the jury to calculate Caldwell’s lost income based on his net income after taxes. With respect to future lost income, the trial court did not instruct the jury about present value or work-life expectancy.

Ultimately, the jury found defendant Todd Kehler 100% liable and awarded Caldwell a total of $1,950,000: $200,000 for past lost wages, $1.5 million for future lost wages, and $250,000 for pain and suffering. The owner of the car in which plaintiff had been sitting, co-defendant Haynes, and the owner of the car in which Todd Kehler had been driving, co-defendant Alice Kehler, were cleared of responsibility.

Defendant Todd Kehler moved for a new trial on both liability and damages. The trial court affirmed the liability finding, but ordered a new trial on damages. It stated: “I don’t know what *430

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Bluebook (online)
643 A.2d 564, 136 N.J. 422, 1994 N.J. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-haynes-nj-1994.