Clatterbuck v. Miller

209 S.E.2d 904, 215 Va. 359, 1974 Va. LEXIS 292
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 2, 1974
DocketRecord No. 740013
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 S.E.2d 904 (Clatterbuck v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clatterbuck v. Miller, 209 S.E.2d 904, 215 Va. 359, 1974 Va. LEXIS 292 (Va. 1974).

Opinion

Harrison, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The issue here is whether the trial court abused its discretion in setting aside as excessive a $40,000 verdict for the appellant.

On April 13, 1971, Charles Edward Clatterbuck allegedly sustained injuries when a vehicle operated by him was struck by another vehicle operated by George F. Miller. On December 15, 1971, Clatterbuck filed his motion for judgment seeking $45,000 damages from Miller for these injuries. Responsive’ pleadings were filed and on May 30, 1972, the case was tried in the court below. The court ruled that the appellee was liable as a matter of law and submitted the issue of damages to the jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellant in the amount of $40,000. Appellee moved that the verdict be set aside as'excessive and for other reasons.

[360]*360On August 17,1972, the trial judge advised counsel that:

“I have determined that the Court committed error in determining, as a matter of law, that the defendant was liable for the plaintiffs damages. This issue should have been submitted to the jury and, in any event, the Court should not have taken this action until the defendant concluded his evidence. To do so denies the defendant his ‘day in court’. I find also that the verdict was excessive. On these grounds I must sustain the motion of the defendant to set aside the verdict of the jury and order a new trial.”

The case was retried on May 8, 1973, before a jury, with the same trial judge presiding, and a verdict was again returned for Clatterbuck but in the reduced amount of $5,000. Appellant moved the court to set aside this verdict and to reinstate the verdict returned by the first jury. The motion was overruled, and final judgment was entered in favor of Clatterbuck for $5,000. We granted appellant a writ of error limited solely to the question of whether the first verdict should have been set aside on the ground that it was excessive.

Clatterbuck‘was twenty-seven years old at the time of the accident, was unmarried and had been working for three years as a chainman on a highway survey crew. He was an outstanding athlete in high school and continued his interest in athletics after graduation by playing on a local softball team in what is described as a “rough and tumble type” league.

The accident occurred near the Town of Orange on Highway 20. Clatterbuck had stopped behind a motor vehicle making a left turn when he was struck from the rear by Miller. The second jury found negligence on Miller’s part, and we do not review its action. Immediately after the impact Clatterbuck drove his vehicle a short distance forward and parked it on the shoulder of the road. Later Clatterbuck drove the vehicle to the home of his girl friend, whom he has since married, and she and her brother accompanied him to the office of Dr. J. D. Middlemas in Orange.

Dr. Middlemas testified that he saw appellant four times, the last occasion being April 26, 1971, and that Clatterbuck told him that he had pain and soreness in his neck and lower back. Dr. Middlemas had x-rays made and prescribed heat, rest and analgesics for the pain. On April 26, although the pain and soreness in appellant’s neck had cleared up, Dr. Middlemas thought he had muscle strains and tears and recommended that [361]*361Clatterbuck see Dr. Strider, an orthopedist in Charlottesville. Appellant did not go to see Dr. Strider.

Dr. Middlemas said that the x-rays revealed no evidence of fracture or evidence of injury to appellant’s back, but did show “a suggestion of spondylolisthesis”. He described this as an absence of one of the bony parts of the lower part of the back. He said this defect existed prior to the accident, was something that a small percentage of people are born with, and it apparently had not affected Clatterbuck at all. The doctor also testified that he did not think that trauma could aggravate the condition particularly. His diagnosis of appellant’s condition was “traumatic to the back”, meaning, he explained, a strain or sprain.

On January 17, 1972, approximately one month after Clatterbuck filed suit, his attorney sent him to see Dr. Donald L. McNay, an orthopedic surgeon with offices in Warrenton, Virginia. Dr. McNay took x-rays and conducted an examination of appellant. He testified that this examination showed no evidence of spinal cord involvement; that Clatterbuck demonstrated some back spasm, splinting and localized tenderness in the lumbar area, or low back, right above the buttocks; that there was no evidence of movement irritation and no muscle wasting in his leg; and that his tendon reflexes were normal. Dr. McNay said: “We are simply dealing with a chronic mechanical problem in the back that has not been relieved to date.” He further said that Clatterbuck had a defect in his lumbar spine and that this caused the pain. He described the defect as located at the very last disc of the spine and said that this condition exists in a little over l'/r of the population. He also referred to the condition as a “fatigue fracture simply caused by chronic stress. We don’t associate it with acute injury, we associate it with simply the mechanics of the back . . . ”. He said that the fractures about which he had testified were not caused in the accident.

Dr. McNay admitted that he had depended entirely upon what appellant told him for he found little objective evidence of back injury. The doctor testified that he was not really in a position to state with reasonable medical certainty that Clatterbuck’s problems were caused by the accident, but it was his opinion that appellant’s condition was so caused. His reasoning was that, while Clatterbuck did have a basic problem prior to the accident, [362]*362appellant said it had not given him trouble, and that the trauma of the accident could aggravate appellant’s pre-existing condition and bring about the pain and suffering of which Clatterbuck was then complaining. He testified that where a “weak link” exists, it produces instability and any stress upon it to an abnormal degree can cause trouble. He placed appellant’s disability at approximately 409r “as far as his spine is concerned”.

Appellant’s testimony was that prior to the accident he had experienced no trouble with his back or neck but that since then he has been in constant pain; that at times he is unable to drive a car or lift his legs; that while a back brace was helpful for awhile, it afforded him little permanent relief; and that he is required to sleep on a piece of plyboard underneath his mattress or to use an orthopedic mattress. Appellant was advised by Dr. McNay to seek some form of employment that does not involve stress on his back.

Appellee’s position is that Clatterbuck sustained a very minor back sprain which cleared up around May 1, 1971. He says that any difficulty experienced by appellant after that time is related to his chronic back defect or to his athletic activities, and not the accident.

Clatterbuck was never hospitalized as a result of the accident. His medical expenses, including x-rays, amounted to approximately $250. He continued his normal activities from the date of the accident to the time of trial. He played softball on a team in the Orange Softball League during the 1971 season and continued his highway employment at the same salary. In addition, he worked part time at a service station. He suffered no diminution of earning capacity and testified that for the year following the accident he “reckoned” he lost a total of five or six days from work.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.E.2d 904, 215 Va. 359, 1974 Va. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clatterbuck-v-miller-va-1974.