Cortez v. Brown

408 So. 2d 464
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 4, 1981
Docket52243
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 408 So. 2d 464 (Cortez v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cortez v. Brown, 408 So. 2d 464 (Mich. 1981).

Opinion

408 So.2d 464 (1981)

Herbert A. CORTEZ
v.
Donna M. BROWN.

No. 52243.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

November 4, 1981.

*465 Bryan, Nelson, Allen, Schroeder & Cobb, James N. Compton, Harry R. Allen, Biloxi, for appellant.

Eldon L. Bolton, Jr., Gulfport, for appellee.

En Banc.

ON PETITION FOR REHEARING

WALKER, Justice, for the Court.

The petition for rehearing in this cause is sustained, the opinion entered on a former day of this Court is withdrawn, and this opinion substituted in the place thereof.

Appellee, Donna M. Brown, on March 10, 1977, filed suit in the Circuit Court of the Second Judicial District of Harrison County, against appellant, Herbert A. Cortez, for damages allegedly suffered by her when, on April 30, 1976, the Toyota, in which she was a passenger, was hit in the rear by a Ford station wagon, owned and driven by Cortez.

This cause was first tried on November 27 and 28, 1978, and resulted in a jury verdict for the plaintiff on liability, but the jury assessed her damages at $0. The motion for additur was overruled, but the motion for a new trial was sustained.

The second trial began on May 24, 1979, and was concluded on May 25, 1979, when the jury returned their verdict: "We, the jury, find for the plaintiff and assess her damages at $0."

On plaintiff's motion for additur or new trial, the court granted an additur of $16,000, or a new trial for damages only. Cortez declined to accept the additur and elected to appeal from the order granting a new trial, as authorized by Mississippi Code Annotated section 11-7-213 (1972).

Approximately three months before the rear-end collision (the basis of this suit), on February 6, 1976, the appellee, while employed by the City of Biloxi, slipped on the wet floor of the municipal building and landed on her tailbone. She suffered pain in her lower back and in her left leg. Four or five days later she consulted Dr. M.F. Longnecker, Jr., orthopedic surgeon, who admitted her to the emergency room of Howard Memorial Hospital "because I had a severe backache and I could hardly stand up." Donna testified: "I stayed in the hospital approximately a week to ten days in traction, on heavy medication for muscle spasms in my back." Her back pains persisted, so about the third week in April Dr. Longnecker put her back in the hospital for a myelogram, which was performed on April 21, 1976, by Dr. Richard E. Buckley, a neurosurgeon. At both trials, Dr. Buckley, by deposition, testified:

[T]he myelogram which I performed showed asymmetry at the L5-S1 area, which is the last disc space down in the low back, in that the nerve root on the right side at that level did not fill out like the nerve root on the left side filled out. I felt that this was not of clinical significance, since she had no symptoms referable to the right side. My diagnosis at that time continued to be that of acute chronic lumbosacral strain, and I so advised Dr. Longnecker.

*466 Continuing to complain of lower back pains, Donna was readmitted to the hospital by Dr. Longnecker where, on April 30, 1976, a tomogram was performed. After the completion of this intensive and complicated test, Donna's friend, Debbie Miller, picked her up at the hospital in her Toyota, and Debbie and Donna proceeded about 8:30 that night to a musical concert at Gulfport Harbor. Traffic was heavy, and after Debbie had turned west off of 20th Avenue and had stopped behind a car which was backing out, appellant Cortez, who was going to pick up his son at the Little League ballpark and, while observing the traffic policeman directing traffic, turned right at about 8 to 10 miles per hour and ran into the rear of Debbie's Toyota. Cortez was driving a Ford LTD station wagon. The headlights on Cortez' car were not broken, neither were the taillights on Debbie's Toyota. The damage to the Toyota was stipulated to be $233.18.

There were no complaints of injury by anybody at that time. Debbie took Donna to her mother's home and later that night Donna went with her mother and younger sister to a restaurant to celebrate her sister's birthday. She developed a severe headache and nausea, and had to be carried to her mother's home. Not being able to reach Dr. Longnecker that night, she called his office the next day and talked to his assistant, who suggested increasing the dosage of pain pills that she was already taking for her previous back injury at the City Hall. Donna did not go to see Dr. Longnecker again until the latter part of June, 1976, when her prescription for pain pills was exhausted.

She continued to work for the city, but gave up her night work as hostess at Mary Mahoney's restaurant. Later, she quit her job with the city and went to work at Howard Johnson's at an increased salary.

In her declaration filed against Cortez on May 10, 1977, she alleged that because of the rear-end collision:

[She] was thrown in and about the vehicle and suffered injuries to her head, neck, and back. That as a result of such collision, the Plaintiff herein suffered excruciating pain and mental anguish. Plaintiff further was unable to work for a period of time and suffered a loss of wages and has incurred medical expenses.
That all injuries and damages suffered by the Plaintiff were the direct and proximate result of negligence on the part of the Defendant herein, Herbert A. Cortez.

In May of 1977, another myelogram was performed. Dr. Buckley, by deposition, testified:

I didn't see her at all until sometime in May of 1977, the latter part of May. Again, Dr. Longnecker had seen her off and on with complaints. He asked me to see her in order to assist him in surgery. He had done testing on her which to him indicated that she had mechanical instability of her low back, and she continued to complain of low back pain, and complained of pain in her right leg. He had repeated the myelogram and noted some abnormality and had asked me to see her and assist him in the surgery for the fusion, and my opinion as to whether or not we should explore the right L5-S1 at the same time as the fusion was done. We reviewed the myelogram and talked to Donna, and she did complain of low back pain and stiffness, and complained of pain in her right leg. The myelogram, which I reviewed at that time and have reviewed very recently, was indentical to the myelogram which had been performed by me in 1976; that is, there was minor asymmetry at L5-S1, with the nerve root on the right side, not filling out as compared to the left side, and I agreed with Dr. Longnecker that the L5-S1 disc should be explored in conjunction with the fusion operation, since she was complaining of radicular pain in the right leg.

Drs. Longnecker and Buckley operated on Donna on June 1, 1977, removed a ruptured disc and fused the spine. Donna was in the hospital for about a month recovering from this operation. Dr. Buckley testified:

Based on the history of the accident occurring, with increased back pain, progressing *467 and radiating pain in the right leg, my opinion would be that in all medical probability the automobile accident did contribute to the necessity of her having surgery in 1977.
Q. You think that surgery, in your opinion and in all medical probability, would that surgery have been necessary had the automobile accident not occurred?
A. I don't know how to answer that question. Obviously

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Bluebook (online)
408 So. 2d 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cortez-v-brown-miss-1981.