Capital Traction Co. v. Sneed

26 F.2d 296, 58 App. D.C. 141, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3655
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedApril 2, 1928
DocketNo. 4615
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 296 (Capital Traction Co. v. Sneed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capital Traction Co. v. Sneed, 26 F.2d 296, 58 App. D.C. 141, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3655 (D.D.C. 1928).

Opinion

BLAND, Acting Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $18,000, and interest and costs, in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, in a personal injury ease, in which the chief and important question submitted for our decision is: When is the alleged ratification of a written release, procured by fraud, a question of fact for the jury, and when is it a question of law for the decision of the court, upon motion for directed verdict?

The question of ratification, as well as the validity of the release, regardless of its ratification, being involved, necessitates a somewhat extended statement of the evidence. The material portions of the evidence, necessary for our decision in the ease, are as follows :

Plaintiff claims injury, at 8:10 p. m. on November 16, 1923, by a premature starting of one of defendant’s street ears at New Jersey avenue and C street, N. W., in the District of Columbia. Plaintiff was employed at the Interstate Commerce Commission, and lived at the Government Hotels on the Union Station Plaza, A and B Buildings, near the comer of New Jersey avenue and C street. Plaintiff approached a ear, which was standing at New Jersey avenue and C street. She walked around the rear of same, and was standing in front of the door when the conductor opened it. She started to get on the car, but before she had gotten both feet on the platform the car was started suddenly, and she grabbed the dividing rail on the rear platform. Her coat was fastened by the premature closing of the door. She continued to hold to the dividing rail for about a block, when the ear went around a sharp curve at First and C streets, when she was thrown to the platform. It was an unreported or blind accident, and no witnesses testified concerning the incidents of receiving the injury, except plaintiff.

Plaintiff continued to the Business High School and returned home on a street car. She was suffering with her back when she returned, and a friend came and bathed her back with witeh hazel, and also bathed her hand, which was swelling badly. There was a bruised spot in the small of her back. Prior to the injury plaintiff had been a healthy and active woman, with the exception of the fact that she had had two prior operations for tumor, one in 1915 for fibroid tumor in the uterus, and the other in Decern[297]*297her, 1920, for a lymphatic tumor in her side. She had never had a pain in her back in her life prior to the injury.

Plaintiff was educated in the rural schools of Kansas and had a second-grade certificate for teaching school, which was equivalent to High School. She later received a diploma for attending a night school. She taught school in the rural schools of Kansas for 5 years, and while teaching became a stenographer and typist, receiving her first position in Kansas City, when she was 27 or 28 years old, as a typist, with the R. G. Dun Mercantile Agency. She then took a position with a credit clearing company. When she was in her early 30’s she worked in a lawyer’s office, in Kansas City, acting as his secretary, stenographer, and typist. She worked for an importing and extracting company for about 3 years, and then for a fire insurance company running a business service bureau. She later took a position, with the Interstate Commerce Commission in Kansas City, in which position she remained for 8 years, and was then transferred to the Commission’s office in Washington, where she continued to be employed until some months after the date of her alleged injury. At the .time of the trial in the court below, in February, 1927, plaintiff was 53 years of age.

Plaintiff did not go to work on the following day (Saturday), but did return to work on the following Monday (the 19th). On Tuesday, November 20th, the plaintiff did not go to work, but took one day off of her annual leave. She took her annual leave in December and has not worked since January 14, 1924.

When the plaintiff came down to her breakfast on the morning after the alleged accident, she noticed certain lines, in a semi-horizontal position, across the back of her coat which she had worn at the time of the injury. On November 20th she telephoned to the Capital Traction Company and talked to Mr. Wilkinson, of the claim department, and told him she had an accident and thought she was hurt, but that it was probably only temporary; that she did not desire to put in a claim for personal injury, but would want to put in a claim for the damage to the coat. Wilkinson called the same day at the Government Hotels. In getting the coat she walked in a normal way and without apparent pain. She made no claim" for personal injury, and explained to him that her back pained her a little, but that she had gotten some liniment from the women in the hotel, with which she had rubbed her back, but that she thought she ought to be reimbursed for the damage to her coat.

On the same date, November 20th, she telephoned Dr. Jerome S. Crowley and made an appointment to see him that day. She saw Dr. Crowley then and on several occasions later, and during the course of his treatment of her he told her that she had a small tumor on the neek of the bladder. She did not know she had such a tumor until after the doctor’s examination. The doetor explained to her that it was not necessary to have it removed, as it would cease to trouble her. On her first visit to the doetor she explained about her fall on the street car, and told him about the pains up and down her spine, and he treated her back. He never told her that the pain in her back was caused by the tumor, but did tell her that the pain that he was treating her for came from the street car injury, and that his treatment was intended to relieve the same.

About a month after the interview with Mr. Wilkinson, defendant’s claim agent, she again telephoned the defendant company, talked with Mr. Wilkinson, and told him that her back was still hurting her, and that she wished to put in a claim for personal injury, in addition to her claim for damages for her coat. On this occasion Mr. Wilkinson asked her who her doctor was, and, upon being advised that it was Dr. Crowley, asked if she had any objection to his seeing Dr. Crowley, and she said she had not. On December 27, 1923, Mr. Wilkinson called on Dr. Crowley at his office in Stoneleigh Court Apartments, in Washington City. Dr. Crowley told Mr. Wilkinson that he had found a slight bruise at the lower dorsal vertebra, and that he strapped it, but that it was nothing serious; that he had seen her two or three times, and she was responding readily to treatment. Dr. Crowley also told Mr. Wilkinson that the plaintiff had a small tumor on the neck of her bladder, but that that had nothing to do with the accident. The latter fact we think is conceded in this ease, and the tumor was, in fact, removed on February 29, 1924, at the Howard Kelley Hospital in Baltimore, by being burned off or cauterized, and it was done in about 15 minutes and did not require or necessitate her remaining in the hospital after the tumor had been removed. Dr. Crowley’s treatment of plaintiff consisted of baking her back with a light for the purpose of removing the pain. Dr. Crowley told plaintiff that he had talked to Mr. Wilkinson about her condition.

According to Dr. Crowley, the plaintiff’s [298]*298last visit to him was on December 28, 1923. The treatment given by Dr. Crowley, according to plaintiff, was not giving her much relief, and she went to Dr. Sommerwerek, a chiropractor, on December 30,1923, and complained of the pain in the lumbar region of her back, which she explained was caused by the accident.

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 296, 58 App. D.C. 141, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3655, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-traction-co-v-sneed-dcd-1928.