Christoffersen v. Weir

193 N.W. 922, 110 Neb. 390, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 240
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1923
DocketNo. 22389
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 N.W. 922 (Christoffersen v. Weir) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christoffersen v. Weir, 193 N.W. 922, 110 Neb. 390, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 240 (Neb. 1923).

Opinion

Dean, J.

This suit was brought to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by reason of defendant’s alleged negligence in driving his car against plaintiff while she was crossing Farnam street at Fourteenth street in Omaha. She recovered a verdict for $1,200. A motion for a new trial was overruled on condition that plaintiff file a remittitur for $350. Upon compliance with the court’s requirement, judgment was rendered for $850, and defendant appealed.

Briefly plaintiff’s account of the accident is that at about 6:30 or'7 o’clock in the evening of December 19, 1920, she left the north front door of the Paxton hotel pharmacy at the southwest corner of Fourteenth and Farnam streets. Fourteenth street runs north and south; Farnam east and west. From her evidence it appears that she went directly -north on the crosswalk to take a south-bound Council Bluffs trolley [392]*392car at; Fourteenth and Farnam streets; that when she reached a point about six feet north of the car tracks on Farnam street defendant’s car, which was being driven close to the curb, turned west from Fourteenth street into Farnam street and knocked her down; that the left front wheel of defendant’s car pinned both of her feet to the pavement and had to be backed off before she could get up, the wheel passing diagonally over her right foot a little above the instep; that after the accident she walked on crutches for three weeks, and the injuries subsequently caused her to limp and at all times caused “great pain and mental anguish and loss of sloe]).” Bhe also testified that the accident permanently impaired her health and that thereafter she was compelled to have medical treatment almost continuously at an expensé approximating $100. It appears from plaintiff's, evidence and defendant’s admission that he sounded no signal and gave no warning of the approach of his car.

Defendant’s version in substance is that on the night of the accident, at about 7 o’clock, he turned his Reo touring car from Fourteenth street into Farnam street at a speed of less than five miles an hour; that he was accompanied by his wife and her sister, Miss Tobin, all three occupying the front seat; that the headlights were turned on and the oar was without curtains and there, was nothing to obstruct his view; that he did not see plaintiff until she was opposite his left front wheel and that he stopped within six inches ; that he immediately stepped out of the car and, at his suggestion, she was taken in his ear to a. physician, at the Paxton hotel, where, on arrival, he told the doctor that plaintiff lost her balance and that her foot slipped under the front wheel of his car, but that the car did not strike her. Upon examination the doctor bound up her foot with adhesive tape. He testified that hp-did not see plaintiff running as she. approached his car. Ten days after the accident plaintiff called defendant up, according to his evidence, and told him that was the first [393]*393day she had been able to put her injured foot to the floor, and that he again told her she should have a doctor.

Defendant’s wife testified: “The instant the car stopped he (defendant) jumped out, the instant that I screamed, she was going down at the scream. Just at that instant a couple people jumped up there and some helped to pick her, and Mr. Weir backed up a few inches.” She also testified that Mr. Weir told the doctor in the Paxton hotel that the front wheel of his car was on plaintiff’s foot. When the doctor bound plaintiff’s foot, she said he advised her “to stay off of it for a few days, it might be sore.”

Mrs. Weir’s sister testified that she did not see plaintiff until the car turned the corner, and then she made a leap and fell back, and when they arrived at the hotel Mr. Weir and another man took plaintiff by the arm and helped her up the steps.

Mr. Cosgrove, a bystander, testified that he heard a lady cry out, and that he and another man picked plaintiff up and helped to put her in defendant’s car: that when he came up to her she was lying on her back in the street on the intersection of the sidewalk.

The only physician who testified on the part of plaintiff was the one who was first called to attend her about thyeo weeks after the accident. He testified that he found she had been hurt with some kind of a crushing or pressing injury to the foot which resulted in crepitus: that her right ankle joint was much swollen and woiild bear -weight with great difficulty and was very tender and painful on motion. He took an X-ray and found a fracture of one of the long bones of the ankle and of the foot, and sprained ligaments, and that the injury was permanent in that plaintiff would always limp: that the arch of her foot went, down as soon as she commenced to bear weight on it: that she had formerly been treated for tuberculosis and that this tendency delays healing and tends to localize tuberculosis in an injured bone. He said that his treat-[394]*394meat consisted of rest, the use of crutches and adhesive plaster strips.

Three doctors were called on the part of defendant. The doctor who made the examination at the Paxton hotel testified that plaintiff could not put her foot down without pain, hut that he found no fracture or deformity in any of the hones, and that he bound her foot with adhesive tape at the time. He further testified that to sprain the ankle or to fracture the small bones of the foot a “terrific force” is required. That the fracture of a bone of a tubercular person would heal more slowly than that of a person in normal health was conceded.

Another, who made an X-ray examination of the injured foot the day before the trial, testified that no fracture was disclosed, and that while there might be a minute fracture that sometimes heals without callus his X-rays gave no evidence of it; that the arch of her foot was in fairly average position; that he could not say she had a bad arch, and that he found nothing in the bones to cause lameness and that she had a good average foot. TJlo doctor’s conclusion was that there was nothing wrong with the bones, but he said that did not prove that there was nothing' wrong with the foot.

«The third physician called by defendant corroborated the other two in the main, but added that if plaintiff's foot or ankle was run over by an automobile it would be possible for the ligaments to- become tom or lacerated in some degree, and that torn ligaments will sometimes occasion more pain and more swelling than a bono fracture, but that the X-ray does not disclose liganlent injuries as it does bone injuries. He testified that on examination the day before the trial plaintiff complained of pain upon severe rotation of the arch.

Defendant complains of instruction No. 6, which follows : “Certain witnesses (physicians and surgeons) have been called who testified as expert witnesses. You are not bound to take the opinions of experts as binding upon you, but only to aid you in coming tó a proper conclusion, their [395]*395testimony being received as that of persons who are learned by reason of extra investigation and study along lines not of general knowledge, and the conclusion of such persons may be of value. You may adopt, or not, their conclusions, according to your own best judgment, giving in each instance such weight as you think should be given under all the facts and circumstances of the case.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 N.W. 922, 110 Neb. 390, 1923 Neb. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christoffersen-v-weir-neb-1923.