Clarke v. Medley Moving and Storage

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 7, 2008
Docket1-06-3072 Rel
StatusPublished

This text of Clarke v. Medley Moving and Storage (Clarke v. Medley Moving and Storage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clarke v. Medley Moving and Storage, (Ill. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

FIFTH DIVISION March 7, 2008

No. 1-06-3072

GARCIA CLARKE, as Executor of the Estate of George ) Appeal from the Clarke, Jr., Deceased, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) No. 03 L 6457 v. ) ) MEDLEY MOVING AND STORAGE, INC., and ) Honorable GREGORY GRIFFIN, ) John B. Grogan, ) Judge Presiding. Defendants-Appellants. )

JUSTICE O'MARA FROSSARD delivered the opinion of the court:

After a jury trial, defendants Medley Moving and Storage, Inc. (Medley), and Gregory

Griffin were found liable in the survival claim for the pain and suffering George Clarke, Jr.

(Clarke), endured prior to his death and the wrongful death claim for his four surviving children.

On appeal, defendants contend: (1) the trial court erred in denying their motion for judgment

notwithstanding the verdict on damages for loss of past and future gifts, benefits, goods and

services; (2) the trial court erred in denying their motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict

on damages for pain and suffering; (3) the trial court erred by not including the modifier

conscious in the jury instruction for compensation for pain and suffering; (4) the trial court erred

in denying a new trial due to plaintiff's comments during closing argument concerning the special

interrogatory; (5) the cumulative effect of allegedly prejudicial comments by plaintiff's counsel

during closing argument deprived defendants of a fair trial; and (6) that remittitur should be 1-06-3072

entered because the record does not support the significant amounts awarded by the jury. For the

reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

BACKGROUND

In May 2002, 83-year-old Clarke was crossing the street when he was struck by a truck

driven by defendant Griffin and owned by defendant Medley. Clarke died of his injuries shortly

after he was transported to a hospital. In 2003, plaintiff Garcia Clarke, individually and as

independent executor of the estate of Clarke, sued defendants, alleging damages sustained by

Clarke's estate under the Illinois Wrongful Death Act (740 ILCS 180/0.01 (West 2002)) and

Survival Act (755 ILCS 5/27-6 (West 2002)).

At trial, the witnesses' testimony established that the pedestrian-vehicle collision occurred

at the intersection of Michigan Avenue and 95th Street in Chicago, Illinois. Griffin had driven the

Medley 26-foot moving van west on 95th Street and was waiting in the left-turning lane to

continue south on Michigan Avenue. Griffin turned left when his traffic signal was yellow and

was driving south on Michigan Avenue when his van struck Clarke, who was crossing Michigan

Avenue.

Defendant Griffin testified that he was driving the van and accompanied by Medley

employee George Thornton at the time of the collision. Griffin had an unobstructed view of the

southwest corner of the intersection in question, and he did not see Clarke on the corner or in the

street when Griffin was making his left turn. Griffin did not see Clarke until a second before the

collision. According to Griffin, at the time of the impact with Clarke, the nose of Griffin's truck

was south of the crosswalk, and the truck was heading straight southbound. Griffin applied his

2 1-06-3072

brakes, but did not have time to slow his truck or maneuver around Clarke. Griffin testified that

Clarke was outside the crosswalk when he was struck.

Denise Watkins testified that she witnessed the collision while she was in her vehicle on

Michigan Avenue and facing north. She was stopped at the traffic light and in the first vehicle in

the left-hand turning lane, waiting to turn left onto 95th Street and proceed west. She saw Clarke

walking east inside the crosswalk, from Watkins' left to her right. He was crossing with the green

light or the "walk man." Clarke was walking very slowly but started to run across the road when

he saw the light change. At the time of the collision, Watkins was involved in a conversation with

her passengers. When Griffin's van struck Clarke, Watkins exited her vehicle to tend to Clarke.

His eyes were open and moving to the right and left. He looked directly at Watkins and moved

his lips to ask for help but made no sound. Clarke's body was shaking and his chest was moving

very fast, as though he was having difficulty breathing. Watkins estimated that she was at the

scene for 10 or 15 minutes. An ambulance arrived at the scene, and the police followed. Watkins

did not identify herself to the paramedics or the police. No police officer spoke to Watkins except

to ask her to move her vehicle.

Fredella Robertson testified that she saw the collision from the front seat of Watkins'

vehicle. Robertson corroborated Watkins' testimony, adding that she (Robertson) exited the

vehicle and stood over Clarke while Watkins knelt beside him. Robertson also thought that

Clarke was attempting to speak but she could not determine what he was trying to say. He was

bleeding, gasping for air, and blood was running out of his mouth. Both Robertson and Watkins

thought Clarke would expire at the scene.

3 1-06-3072

Chicago police officer Derrick Jerry testified that Clarke was transported to the hospital

before he (Officer Jerry) arrived at the scene. It was his normal procedure to speak with anyone

at the scene who may have tended to the injured person, but he did not recall any people

identifying themselves as witnesses.

John Merlotti, M.D., a trauma surgeon, testified that he treated Clarke at the hospital.

Clarke was a level one trauma patient, coming to the emergency room as a significantly injured

victim. He could not communicate upon arrival. He had suffered a scalp laceration with blood

oozing from his ears and nose, which was clinical evidence of a basilar skull fracture. A chest X-

ray revealed a large hemothorax. Paramedics gave a history of "diminished level of

consciousness" at the scene of the accident.

Dr. Merlotti testified that, upon arrival at the emergency room, Clarke's Glasgow coma

score was three. That scoring system was used to characterize the level of consciousness of a

patient with a head injury, and the scores ranged from 3 to 15. Clarke was not alert or awake.

He exhibited no eye opening or verbal response, had no motor function, made no sounds, and did

not withdraw from pain. Dr. Merlotti stated that although a Glasgow coma score of three did not

mean there was no pain or suffering, a score that low so soon after the injury indicated that pain

and suffering were unlikely. He explained that open eyes, without more, were an insufficient basis

to reach an opinion about consciousness. Dr. Merlotti opined that, assuming the accuracy of

Watkins' observations that Clarke was actually moving and verbalizing words, there potentially

was a time period of pain and suffering. Dr. Merlotti, however, confirmed that there was no

evidence Clarke was conscious from the time the paramedics arrived at the scene until the time of

4 1-06-3072

Clarke's death. Dr. Merlotti testified that the injuries Clarke sustained, including rib fractures, an

open front right ankle fracture, scalp laceration, basilar skull fractures, and hemothorax, would

cause pain to a conscious person. Although Clarke had outlived the average life expectancy

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