Conlon v. Roeder

418 S.W.2d 152, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 816
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedSeptember 11, 1967
Docket52330
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 418 S.W.2d 152 (Conlon v. Roeder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conlon v. Roeder, 418 S.W.2d 152, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 816 (Mo. 1967).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Commissioner.

Maureen Conlon, age 6, was injured August 16, 1962, in a collision between a 1959 Chevrolet operated by her great aunt, Mae Roeder, and a tractor-trailer unit owned and operated by Atlas Electric Company. Trial March 14 — 16, 1966, resulted in a directed verdict for Atlas Electric Company and verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $16,000 damages against Mae Roeder.

At the timé of collision Mrs. Roeder was taking her grandnieces, Maureen and Jean Conlon, to their home after visiting her over the weekend. Jean was in the front seat; Maureen was in the rear. ' Mrs. Roeder was northbound on Halls Ferry Road in St. Louis County, Missouri, intending to turn left into Highway 140. The Atlas tractor-trailer unit was eastbound on 140 approaching the intersection from Mrs. Roeder’s left. There was a stop sign controlling traffic on Halls Ferry Road crossing or entering Highway 140. Mrs. Roeder, driving about 40 miles per hour, did not remember stopping for the stop sign or looking to her left as she approached before entering 140, and she never saw the truck prior to the collision. The tractor-trailer struck the Chevrolet at the rear door on the driver’s side, causing the Chevrolet to spin around and come to rest at the northwest corner of the intersection with its rear upon the curb.

The Atlas driver died prior to trial. Plaintiff was 10 years old at trial and she could not remember anything about the accident except sitting in a chair in a filling station at the scene.

Mrs. Roeder testified that Maureen was thrown from the car to the pavement when the car spun around. When the car came to a stop she went to Maureen and picked her up. She was “covered by blood.” Plaintiff’s mother first saw her sitting in the filling station.

*155 Plaintiff, accompanied by her mother and defendant, was taken by ambulance to St. Louis County Hospital. Its record, among other things, stated:

At Barnes emergency room Dr. Minot P. Fryer, a specialist in plastic surgery, closed plaintiff’s wounds. The mother counted approximately 50 stitches in the cheek laceration and the same number in the eyelid laceration. Dr. Fryer later removed the stitches and saw plaintiff some five times following the accident at six-month intervals. He described the cheek injury at trial as a transverse laceration of the left cheek extending into the ala or corner of the nose. It measured 21/⅞" in length by ⅛" in width. The scar was deep and extended down into the fat of plaintiff’s face. The eyelid scar measured 10 millimeters by one millimeter and was visible when the eyelid was closed. Dr. Fryer felt that the cheek scar could be improved by a revision ,which would require cutting and removing the deepest scar and approximating the edges together for a finer scar. This surgery would require four or five days’ hospitalization. Both scars are permanent. The larger scar is redder than surrounding skin and is more noticeable with summer tanning. The discoloration probably will persist and revision will not change the length of the scar.

On July 23, 1963, while at home standing next to her mother, plaintiff had an experience in which “she started sliding down the wall to the floor * * *. She was not just perfectly, calmly lying there. She was trembling or twitching. She was making motions, but not for any length of time. * * * her hands were not relaxed, and her legs didn’t seem relaxed. * * * And she was very white and stayed white for some time, and then complained of a headache * * *. She acted tired and drowsy.” A neighbor, Jean Backowski, witnessed this incident. According to her, Maureen stood by her mother and “said something about I don’t feel too good, or something, and all the color drained out of her, her eyes drained back in her head, and she started twitching or something and went out. * * * More or less her whole body” was twitching and her eyes “went back in her head. * * * when we got to her on the floor, you know, she was still sort of unconscious.”

In February, 1964, Peter T. Conlon, Jr., plaintiff’s father, heard Jean Conlon scream that Maureen had fainted, “and I ran into the bathroom. My daughter, Maureen was lying between — her head was between the commode and the bottom of the washstand, and her head was hitting on the floor. * * * Bouncing up and down on the floor. * * * I reached right up in the medicine chest for smelling salts, and tried to revive her. After she started coming around, I picked her up and carried her into our bedroom. * * * She said she was hot, she had a headache, and she was sweating. * * * she said she would like to go to sleep.”

Maureen had never fainted prior to the accident, and had been an “easy-going” happy child. Following the accident she went to first grade and did well, but in the second grade she changed, complained of dizziness, stayed home from school, and became difficult. Prior to the accident she enjoyed swimming; after the accident she became afraid of water.

Dr. David Mendelson, a neurologist, saw plaintiff February 25, 1964, upon referral *156 by plaintiff’s pediatrician, Dr. Ebel. Dr. Mendelson obtained history and complaints from plaintiff’s mother, examined plaintiff, and ordered X rays and an electroencephalogram. The tracing “demonstrated a mild, abnormal, slow EEG which I thought, in view of her clinical history, may relate to the convulsive basis for the child’s complaints.” A second EEG tracing made September 17, 1965, was normal.

Dr. Mendelson testified that convulsive disorders can be caused by trauma and that it is not unusual to have a period of eleven months (from August 16, 1962, to July 23, 1963) between the trauma and initial faint. In response to hypothetical questions, he gave an opinion based upon a reasonable degree of medical certainty that plaintiff “had some type of convulsive disorder directly related to the injury experienced” in the collision of August 1962. On cross-examination he stated this conclusion to be based on “reasonable probability.” “The prognosis is guarded. She is complaint free as of her last visit, but she still has this tendency to have seizures.” On cross-examination Dr. Mendelson also stated that in addition to the hypothesis given, he was aware that plaintiff had been in an accident in which she was thrown from a car and received injuries to her head. He also considered a history of being unconscious following the accident and concluded from that also that plaintiff had received a blow to her head. He stated that one is not rendered unconscious from a blow other than to the head. He wrote in his report that in his opinion, plaintiff had experienced a cerebral concussion, which term described the effects on the brain of a blow to the head.

Dr. Fryer “didn’t make a note of it at the time, but I do know she was examined for head injury” while in emergency at Barnes Hospital. He testified that plaintiff “could have a severe brain injury, and it might not be anything visible,” and Dr. Mendelson stated that “one can receive a fatal blow to the head without any external evidence.”

At the conclusion of Dr. Mendelson’s testimony, defendant moved to strike the testimony and, at the conclusion of all the evidence, requested Instruction A, refused by the court, which would have withdrawn any issue of brain damage from the jury. Appellant contends (Point II) that the court erred in refusing her motion to strike because Dr.

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418 S.W.2d 152, 1967 Mo. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conlon-v-roeder-mo-1967.