Carney v. Scott

325 S.W.2d 343, 1959 Ky. LEXIS 61
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 12, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 325 S.W.2d 343 (Carney v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carney v. Scott, 325 S.W.2d 343, 1959 Ky. LEXIS 61 (Ky. 1959).

Opinion

SANDIDGE, Judge.

This action arose out of a head-on collision at night, on Highway No. 130 in Union County, between an automobile owned and operated by appellant, Richard Carney, and one driven by appellee, J. R. Scott. As a result appellant sustained severe personal injuries and his automobile was destroyed. He sued appellee .for negligence and sought to recover for his loss of earnings, pain and suffering, permanent impairment of power to work and earn money, medical and hospital expenses, and the destruction of his automobile in the aggregate sum of $119,789.44.

The action was tried before a special judge without a jury. The court found the collision was caused solely by the negligence of appellee and that he was responsible for the injuries and damages suffered by appellant. The court further found that appellant, by his actions and conduct after being injured, materially contributed to his disability by failing to mitigate his injuries and damages, and for this reason awarded him only $9,512.07.

This appeal is from that judgment, and appellant contends the damages awarded are wholly inadequate and the court erred in failing to award him any damages for his permanent disability.

We have always been reluctant to set aside an award for damages, unless the amount is so disproportionate as to strike the mind at first blush as necessarily resulting from passion, prejudice, corruption or mistake in the application of the law. Keller v. Morehead, Ky., 247 S.W.2d 218; Wilkins v. Hopkins, 278 Ky. 280, 128 S.W.2d 772. The first question in the present case is whether the trial court made a mistake in the application of the law pertaining to mitigation of damages in arriving at its award.

It is the duty of an injured person to exercise ordinary care not to aggravate his injuries and damages. It is unnecessary to determine whether the failure to exercise such care should have been pleaded as an affirmative defense in this action, since there was no objection to the introduction of evidence on the subject, and the mitigation issue was tried by consent of the parties. CR 15.02. However, it is *346 well settled that the wrongdoer always has the burden of proving that some of the consequences of the injuries inflicted by him might have been avoided through proper efforts and the exercise of ordinary care by the injured person. 25 C.J.S. Damages § 144, p. 791. To determine whether ap-pellee satisfied this burden necessitates a résumé of the facts.

At the time of the collision on June 17, 1955, appellant was 26 years old, married and the father of three children. He was an experienced coal miner earning approximately $6,000 per year.

As a result of the collision appellant sustained a compound fracture of his left leg above the knee, several cuts, and other less serious injuries. He was removed to the hospital in Morganfield and.became the patient of Dr. Humphrey, who was on the hospital staff. The night of the collision he was given narcotics to relieve his pain and was treated for shock. The next morning his left leg was placed in traction, which involved drilling a hole and inserting a pin through the tibial bone below the left knee and the use of weights to overcome muscle spasm. About a week thereafter infection developed at the site of the compound fracture, at the point where the pin had been inserted through the tibia, and in his heel. The infection was treated with antibiotics. During the early part of appellant’s stay in the hospital an insurance company paid his expenses, but the extent of its liability was soon reached, and by July 16th appellant’s unpaid hospital bill amounted to $319.20. The following testimony by appellant as to what then occurred is undisputed: “The head nurse, the woman that tends to the bills, came in two or three times wanting some money, so I didn’t have it or couldn’t raise it, and none of my people has it, they are not rich, so after they come in two or three times, I told them I would go home if it would be all right with the doctor * * * so he came down there with the bill, and after he put the cast on me I signed it, and they sent me home.” It is undisputed that representatives of the hospital, and not appellant, first contacted Dr. Humphrey about his being removed from the hospital. The writing which the doctor had appellant sign after he placed the cast on him and made arrangements for his removal was to the effect that he was leaving the hospital of his own accord.

The answer of Dr. Humphrey to an inquiry from the court as to whether appellant could have stayed in the hospital if he had chosen to do so was as follows: “Well, Judge, hospitals can’t operate without money, and I don’t believe he would have wanted to stay because the hospital authorities were asking him about the bill every day and the insurance company had notified him that it would not be held obligated, and that caused quite a bit of tension and apprehension and mental strain on Mr. Carney to be in the hospital and know that he didn’t have any money to stay there and they were asking for the money, and he would have been very unhappy had he remained there.” The printed billhead of the hospital specified in bold type that “All bills are due one week in advance.” Apparently appellant was confronted with a Here’s-your-hat, what’s-your-hurry situation.

The evidence as to what Dr. Humphrey may or may not have said to appellant about leaving the hospital is .rather uncertain, indefinite and to some extent conflicting. In answer to an inquiry-as to what the appellant was told, the doctor said, “I’m sure I explained to him that we were not through with him and that he needed to stay and receive further treatment.” The appellant admitted that he needed to be in the hospital where he could receive better treatment, which is obviously true with .respect to almost any ailment, but he could not afford to remain. Dr. Humphrey did not advise him that it would be unsafe for him to go home, or make any predictions as to what might happen if he went home. Instead, he co-operated with appellant leaving the hospital by putting him in a cast *347 so he could be removed, prescribed further treatment for him, and told him to come back the next month and to continue to come back for treatment. Dr. Humphrey did not release him as a patient. Appellant returned to his home, where he was under the care of a nurse, and continued to take the medicine and treatments prescribed by the doctor. It is undisputed that the “main nurse” ■ at the hospital told appellant it would be all right for him to go home.

Appellee’s theory that the appellant failed to mitigate his injuries and damages is predicated solely on the fact that he acquiesced in being removed from the hospital on July 16th. It is difficult to see how appellant failed to act as a reasonably prudent person under the circumstances.

The trial court specifically found as a fact that the appellant “by his failure to heed the instructions of his physician and his actions incident to leaving the hospital against the advice of his doctors” contributed to his disability and failed to use ordinary care in the mitigation of same. (Our emphasis.) It was expressly and solely on this finding that the court mitigated the damages to which appellant was entitled.

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Bluebook (online)
325 S.W.2d 343, 1959 Ky. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carney-v-scott-kyctapphigh-1959.