Collins Ex Rel. Collins v. Bisson Moving & Storage, Inc.

504 S.E.2d 347, 332 S.C. 290, 1998 S.C. App. LEXIS 98
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 20, 1998
Docket2870
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 504 S.E.2d 347 (Collins Ex Rel. Collins v. Bisson Moving & Storage, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins Ex Rel. Collins v. Bisson Moving & Storage, Inc., 504 S.E.2d 347, 332 S.C. 290, 1998 S.C. App. LEXIS 98 (S.C. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Judge:

Becky Collins brought this action against Bisson Moving & Storage, Inc. for personal injuries that she alleged resulted from a collision between a Bisson tractor-trailer and an ambulance in which she was riding. Collins was being transported to the hospital after her parked car was struck by a vehicle driven by Jean Wiles. The Bisson truck struck the ambulance as it pulled onto the interstate. Bisson admitted negligence, but contested whether the accident with Bisson’s truck proximately caused Collins’s injuries. The trial court granted a directed verdict in Collins’s favor on the issues of liability and damages, while leaving the amount of damages for the jury to determine. Bisson appeals that ruling and the trial court’s refusal to grant Bisson a damages offset for the amount paid to Collins by Jean Wiles in settlement of the first accident. We affirm.

FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In November of 1992, Collins and her son Miles were traveling through South Carolina on 1-95 on the way to their home in Florida when they encountered heavy rain near Ridgeland. Collins pulled onto the emergency lane of the interstate to wait out the storm. Traveling behind Collins in the southbound lane, Jean Wiles lost control of her car when the vehicles in front of her slowed due to the heavy rain. Wiles ran off onto the shoulder of the road and struck Collins’s parked car, causing damage to both cars and knocking Collins’s car into a ditch.

*293 Collins and Miles emerged fairly unscathed from the accident. Miles did not appear to be injured, and Collins complained only of a bump on the head and of being temporarily dazed. Although Collins did not want to go to the hospital, arriving ambulance personnel assured her that she could contact her husband if transported. Collins agreed, and she and Miles were placed in an ambulance for transport to Low Country General Hospital. Collins was immobilized on a backboard and fitted with a neck brace for the trip. Miles sat in front with the driver. As the ambulance pulled onto the interstate, an eighteen-wheeler owned by Bisson jackknifed and struck the back of the ambulance, tossing it across the emergency lane and into a ditch. The force of the impact jammed an ambulance attendant’s foot into a crevice in the base of Collins’s stretcher and left a dent in the vehicle’s interior where the attendant was thrown by the collision.

This second accident left Collins screaming in pain. She complained of an injured head, back, shoulder, and leg. Collins eventually underwent knee and back surgery. Collins accepted a settlement from Jean Wiles for $25,000 for the injuries she sustained in the first accident. Collins filed the current action against Bisson for injuries she and her minor son Miles sustained in the second accident, and Collins’s husband, Shawn, brought an action for loss of consortium. At trial, Collins claimed, in addition to these physical injuries, that she suffered from depression and permanent, short-term memory loss due to the collision with the Bisson truck. Miles suffered from bedwetting and problems in school brought on by the trauma of the accident.

At the close of her case, Collins moved for a directed verdict on the issue of her entitlement to damages in “some amount,” stating Bisson had admitted liability. The judge decided to delay ruling on the motion until the close of Bisson’s case; however, the judge remarked that he believed “the evidence has established that some injury has occurred.” Bisson then moved for a directed verdict as to “causation,” which the judge denied, explaining, “There is clearly testimony in the record concerning injury. The degree thereof, that’s for the jury.” At the close of all the evidence, Collins renewed her motion for *294 a directed verdict 1 and the judge granted Collins’s motion, stating:

The court would find in that regard that it could not allow a verdict for the defendant in this case. There has been proven damages of some type. The amount of which is fine. I’ll leave that for their [the jury’s] determination. But the court would direct a verdict as to proximate cause and will submit only one verdict in each of the three cases and that is actual damages in the amount of blank.... I will give the charge on proximate cause, that that has to be proven by the preponderance of the evidence together with those typical damage issues which we’ll charge but — but I believe that the jury must conclude there was some damage based on the — all the testimony that we have.

The judge essentially granted a directed verdict as to liability and damages, while leaving the determination of the amount of damages to the jury. During the trial court’s instructions to the jury, the judge explained:

Now, as I have stated to you, the issues that you are to consider have been somewhat narrowed in that you are to consider only the issue of damages. Now, that doesn’t mean, ladies and gentlemen, that I, by my instruction on damages, are [sic] telling you that you have to bring any certain amount because that’s up to you to determine what’s been established by the greater weight or preponderance of the evidence.

The trial court also instructed the jury on the use of the verdict form, telling them the amount of damages was to be determined solely by the jury:

To assist you in reporting your verdict and only to assist you I have prepared a two-page verdict form which I will send back with all the other exhibits.... It says, “We the jury in the above entitled action find as follows” and that will mean that you are unanimous.
*295 One, for the plaintiff Becky Collins in the amount of blank dollars. Now, that amount is just like that. It is for you. You determine what should go in that amount, what the plaintiffs have proved by the greater weight or preponderance of the evidence ... is her damage and what you believe is fair, just, and reasonable for that damage. You would write that just like you do a check, first lines in words [sic] in the parenthesis in numbers.

After deliberations, the jury returned with a verdict of $600,000 in favor of Collins. 2 The trial court denied Bisson’s motion to offset the damages award by $25,000 — the amount paid by Wiles to Collins in settlement of the injuries she sustained in the first accident. Bisson appeals, arguing the trial court erred in granting Collins’s directed verdict motion and in denying its request for a damages offset.

ISSUES

(1) Did the trial court err in granting a directed verdict on the issues of liability and damages?

(2) Did the trial court err in refusing to grant Bisson a damages offset for the amount paid to Collins by Jean Wiles?

STANDARD OF REVIEW

When considering a motion for a directed verdict, the trial court must view the evidence and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. If the evidence as a whole is susceptible of more than one reasonable inference, the case should be submitted to the jury. Gamble v. Int’l Paper Realty Corp., 323 S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
504 S.E.2d 347, 332 S.C. 290, 1998 S.C. App. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-ex-rel-collins-v-bisson-moving-storage-inc-scctapp-1998.