Conley Ex Rel. Conley v. Lafayette Motor Car Co.

221 S.W. 165, 204 Mo. App. 37, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 12
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 165 (Conley Ex Rel. Conley v. Lafayette Motor Car Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conley Ex Rel. Conley v. Lafayette Motor Car Co., 221 S.W. 165, 204 Mo. App. 37, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 12 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

OPINION.

BECKER, J.

(after stating the facts as above). — The main point relied upon by plaintiff in error is that there was no evidence of the plaintiff having been injured in the collision and that therefore the court erred in overruling defendant’s demurrers offered at the close of plaintiff’s case and again at the close of the whole case. Counsels’ argument in support of this contention is that according to all the evidence plaintiff’s arthritis was due to a germ condition and that this condition could be the result of disease; further that since germs could not be introduced into the system by trauma excepting through a break in the skin, and no proof having been adduced that plaintiff’s skin was broken at the time of his fall due to the accident, that the most favorable view that could be taken of the testimony was that plaintiff’s condition could possibly have been caused by a fall or could possibly have been due to disease, and that therefore the case falls within the rule that where a condition under *44 the evidence may he due to either of two existing causes (e. g. accident or disease) for one only of which the defendant is liable, simple proof by the plaintiff that the cause for which the defendant is liable is a possible cansó is not sufficient, and in such a case, before the plaintiff is entitled to have his cause submitted to the jury, it is necessary that he go further and show with reasonable certainty that the cause for which the defendant is liable produced the condition complained of.

Our reading of the record, however, brings us to a conclusion contra to that argued by learned' counsel for plaintiff in error. There was testimony adduced on behalf of plaintiff tending strongly to prove that plaintiff had been strong and healthy his entire life up to the time that he met with the alleged accident; that he had never had any illness but had always been a strong, robust boy. That the condition of his teeth had been good; that on oiie occasion he had a tooth pulled,- some six or seven years before the date of the trial, but outside of that had never suffered with his teeth in any manner. While under all the testimony the mere visible signs of plaintiff’s injury at.the time were not great, yet “it would be dealing only with the surface of things to stop- only with that visible sign.”

According to plaintiff’s own testimony, after the collision, the impact of which threw one or both of the colliding automobiles against the automobile, on the seat of which plaintiff was riding, he was knocked off the seat into the street and that he fell, “right against the curb . . . right on. the base of my, spine with my hands out;” that the sensation he felt was like, “you hit your elbow bone, on my spine — up my spine.” And asked as to whether he had told the police officer who was there that he had been hurt in the accident, he replied that he did not remember it, that, “he had told some people about this pain coming up- my back,” that after the car was towed in he walked home, ‘ ‘ a couple of blocks, ’ ’ and that his back hurt him all the time and kept on hurting him. The day after he was injured he tried to'play ball but *45 was unable to do so-; that he told his friends, Roy and Jim Drowney, and Albert Causland of the accident at the time it occurred; that on the Mfonday after the accident he had returned to work and had worked from May up to the beginning of August, but because of his injuries he stayed away from work one or two days a week. He further testified-as to the pain in his back; “I noticed it all the time, I did; it kept -getting worse and worse, and I coudn’t use my back at all. .. ■. . I had to use a cane, and just-dragging my leg. ” He went to various doctors but he kept,-“getting worse and worse,” until finally for the two years prior to the trial he had been confined permanently to his bed and was unable to move from his hips down. .

Plaintiff’s mother tesified that plaintiff had been in excellent health up to the time he met with his, injuries and that he was always a strong, hearty boy, but that three or four days after the accident she noticed a change in the boy; that he was commencing to stoop and acted as though it hurt him to walk; that this condition kept growing worse all the time and that she then took him to Dr. Kollme; that- -the doctor prescribed for him but the boy became worse. She then took him for a .visit or two to Dr. Heine Marks, who prescribed for him, and then she put the boy under the care of Dr. Hoffmann. The boy during this period of time, up to September or October, 1917, was still able to walk around, though with great difficulty. Plaintiff’s mother further testified that about a month after the accident she examined the boy and found, at the base of his spine, a lump “about the size of ah egg, a good sized egg,” right at the lower part of the spine; that she used alcohol and different prescriptions, that the doctors gave her, upon’his spine and. finally the lump went away; that the boy’s condition kept gradually getting worse until it became necessary for bim to use a cane and crutch. It finally got so that he was unable to 'leave the house to visit the doctor and Dr. Hoffman being unable to visit the boy at his home, she called in Dr.: Kleinsfelder who had the boy removed to *46 a sanitarium for an examination and treatment. Later on the hoy’s condition failing to improve she called in Dr. Harman who continued to treat him up to the time of the trial. The boy kept getting worse and for many months prior to the trial had been confined to his bed. The mother further testified that the boy did not tell her that he had met with an accident until some four or five weeks after its occurrence and then only as a result of the visit of an attorney who came out to take the boy’s statement or deposition with reference to the facts concerning the collision between the several machines.

Thus far then, the record, for the purpose of considering defendant’s demurrer, shows plaintiff to have enjoyed excellent health continuously up to the time of the accident; that he was a strong, robust lad, but that immediately after the date of the accident the boy began to ail and was never a well boy again; that his condition became steadily worse until he was finally confined to his ,bed and that for two years next prior to the trial had been absolutely bedridden, unable to move any of his joints below his waist line. Then there is the testimony of the several physicians who treated the bioy, and also that of the' physician who examined him by order of the court.

Dr. M. F. Harman was a witness for plaintiff. He testified that he began treating plaintiff on February 28, 1918; that he made an examination of him at the time he took the case over from Dr.. Kleinsfelder; that he found plaintiff at the time with his entire pelvic region in a plaster cast, which he removed, and found plaintiff unable to move either hip or flex his limbs in any act or in any manner whatsoever, and stated that an injury to the spine, “could more than likely cause a condition of that kind; ’ ’ that he termed the condition of the plaintiff as a “complete ankylosis’’ a general arthritis of both the hip and knee joints, and on cross-examination stated that, “the came of the (plaintiff’s) condition I attributed to an injury which he had received prior to the time I had seen him.” “Q.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 165, 204 Mo. App. 37, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conley-ex-rel-conley-v-lafayette-motor-car-co-moctapp-1920.