City of Paducah v. Brunnhoper

135 S.W.2d 413, 281 Ky. 177, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 13, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 S.W.2d 413 (City of Paducah v. Brunnhoper) 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
City of Paducah v. Brunnhoper, 135 S.W.2d 413, 281 Ky. 177, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 26 (Ky. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Perry

— Affirming.

Mrs. Brunnhoper sued the city of Paducah, Kentucky, to recover damages for personal injuries sustained as the result of a sidewalk accident, wherein she stumbled and fell, painfully injuring and fracturing her foot and ankle.

Prom a verdict and judgment recovered by her for *179 $5,000, the city has appealed, earnestly insisting, as grounds for reversal of the judgment, that the following errors, prejudicial to its substantial rights, were committed upon the trial:

(1) The court erred in refusing to sustain defendant’s motion for a peremptory instruction offered at the close of plaintiff’s testimony and renewed at the close of all the testimony.

(2) The damages awarded in the sum of $5,000 are excessive and not warranted, and evidently brought about through the passion and prejudice of the jury trying the case.

(3) The court erred in its instruction to the jury to find damages for the plaintiff on account of permanent injuries, there being no definite and positive proof that she received permanent injuries of any kind.

The accident occurred in the following way:

At about nine o’clock on the evening of June 16,. 1938, Mrs. Brunnhoper, with two friends, Mr. Proctor and Mrs. McCann, was walking along the west sidewalk of Second Street, between Kentucky Avenue and Broadway. It appears that Mr. Proctor walked between them, Mrs. McCann next the curb, while the plaintiff walked on the inside of the sidewalk, next the buildings. Mrs. Brunnhoper, when passing Cazner’s clothing store,, stumbled and fell upon a runway platform or ramp, which it appears he, with the city’s knowledge and permission, had placed at his store door step for convenience in trucking freight into and out of the store.

This platform or ramp, it is admitted, was installed by Cazner shortly after the 1937 flood and has since such time been maintained and left outside the doorway by Cazner both day and night.

It was constructed even with the top of the door step, from which it sloped down to the sidewalk, a distance of some two or two and a half feet, and extended towards the curbing, flush with the sidewalk, a further three feet.

The evidence shows that upon this occasion the part of Second Street where the accident occurred was very dark, there being neither a street nor a store light there to disclose or warn travellers along the sidewalk of the location of this alleged dangerous platform ob *180 struction; and that the obstruction was not seen nor discovered by Mrs. Brunnhoper, when she stumbled and fell over it onto the concrete walk, thereby receiving the painful and severe injuries to her foot and ankle complained. of.

The testimony of plaintiff and her witnesses, among whom are her two companions, shows that so severe was the injury and pain resulting from this fall, fracturing her ankle, that she had to be lifted from the sidewalk and assisted or practically carried to a nearby car, where she rested for awhile on its fender, after which- she was driven to Redmon’s place nearby, into which she was again practically carried by her companions. She states that after there drinking a coca cola and taking an aspirin, she was taken home in a taxicab by her companions, who carried her into the house and put her to bed.

She called Dr. Bradley to treat her injury, who testified, after qualifying as an expert, that he found, upon examining her injured foot and ankle, that “she had one of the bones broken in her leg and dislocated and a strained ankle, a strained foot” and that he had attended her “ever, since about the 18th or 20th of June.” He stated that plaintiff * ‘has a stiff foot” and that “she cannot get her heel down to the floor. The ankle and foot is in perfect position, but it is just stiff, like you would have a stiff knee or a stiff elbow. The inflammation was of such a nature this gluey substance cemented the bones together and she cannot work it;” that it had been nearly six months since she had received the injury and there has been little improvement; and that he didn’t believe she would ever have a good foot. "When asked upon cross-examination if there was any way to break up the adhesions that caused plaintiff’s foot and ankle to be stiff, he answered,

“The foot has many little bones and I don’t
believe those can ever be broken up.”

Further, he testified, when asked if he had said she would probably be permanently injured in her foot, that he had said he believed she would be crippled permanently; that no man could say that she would be a cripple; but that he believed, at her age, she would have a stiff (ankle) joint.

Dr. R. C. Gore, also testifying for plaintiff as an •expert, stated that he had examined Mrs. Brunnhoper’s *181 foot and that she now has an ankylosed condition and that evidently she had a fracture and a dislocation of • the bone. Further his testimony is that:

“The position seems to be perfect, but she cannot work the bone. In other words, her foot has dropped down slightly, she cannot put her heel to the floor, and I am satisfied there has developed an arthritis, and that is the complication she has now. That as a rule when you get this type of an injury, it results in a permanent injury. You can hardly move it enough to overcome this ankylosed condition. A callus is thrown out and you cannot get motion down there, and if you do, you get arthritis, especially if a person is past 25 or 30 years of age.”

When asked on cross-examination if he meant that there were adhesions, which would have to be broken up before plaintiff could use her foot, he answered “Yes” and that it is very painful to break them up; when further asked if he had said that in the majority of cases where people have a fractured bone they overcome that condition by proper exercise, he answered:

“In a majority of cases, but these types of cases have to be handled very carefully, and as a rule they are left crippled.”

He further testified that while he had not made an 5-ray of the foot,- Dr. Bradley had, the showing of which he was told when in consultation with him, and that he was satisfied there was a fracture of the bone; that in this case it was the small bone of the ankle, or fibula, which was broken, which does not amount to much, but that it was the dislocation that hurt and “this callus that is thrown out;” and that there was a fracture and a dislocation.

Defendant, on the other hand, contends that plaintiff and her friends were upon this occasion drinking and acting in a hilarious manner and that plaintiff was not at the time of her fall and resulting injury exercising ordinary care for her own safety.

There was some proof that the plaintiff and her companions appeared to be drinking at this time, though other of the defendant’s witnesses stated that Mrs. Brunnhoper and her companions were walking along the street, talking and behaving naturally, and that *182

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W.2d 413, 281 Ky. 177, 1939 Ky. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-paducah-v-brunnhoper-kyctapphigh-1939.