Crumback v. Murdock

168 P.2d 25, 74 Cal. App. 2d 127, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1135
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 22, 1946
DocketCiv. No. 3512
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 168 P.2d 25 (Crumback v. Murdock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crumback v. Murdock, 168 P.2d 25, 74 Cal. App. 2d 127, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1135 (Cal. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries resulting from a collision between an automobile operated by the plaintiff and a pickup truck owned by the [128]*128defendant Foss and operated by the defendant Murdock. The accident happened on December 2, 1944, and the trial of the action was begun on May 21, 1945. A jury brought in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $25,000, and the defendants have appealed from the judgment which followed.

The only point raised is that the amount of damages awarded is grossly excessive and could have been arrived at only through the influence of passion and prejudice. Incidentally, it is argued in this connection that, although conflicting, the evidence on the issue of liability was very close; that the jury was out only forty minutes; and that it follows that the jury must have given no real consideration to the evidence with respect to the extent of respondent’s injuries. We do not regard the evidence on this issue as close. Liability clearly appears from the testimony of the defendant driver himself, and it may not be assumed that the jury spent much time on that issue.

Briefly stated, the appellants argue that the evidence clearly shows that the respondent was still improving at the time of the trial, a little less than six months after the accident, and that there is no satisfactory evidence of any permanent disability. It is argued that even the respondent testified that his back was improving and his headaches becoming less frequent ; that the doctor called by the respondent testified that a good restoration had been had of the shape of the vertebra which had been broken; and that the doctor called by the appellants testified that he found everything healed and normal, that the prognosis was good, that he could find nothing which would prevent the respondent from resuming his normal occupation but this would depend considerably on the individual, and that the respondent’s headache and dizziness condition was subsiding. What the respondent testified in this regard was that he did not then have headaches as often as he did “the first month or two” and that the pain in his back was 1 ‘less than it was at first. ’ ’ This could well be true without indicating a continuing improvement at that time. While the respondent’s doctor testified that he considered that there had been a good restoration as far as the shape of the broken vertebra is concerned his testimony, as a whole, indicates that other conditions were not so satisfactory. Even the testimony of the appellants’ doctor lends itself to a different interpretation from that which they suggest.

The respondent was 26 years old, with a life expectancy of [129]*12938 years. He had a wife and one child and was expecting another. Before entering the military service he had heen employed as a truck driver in work which required him to lift and handle heavy timbers. At the time of the accident he was in military service, having passed all physical examinations, and was assigned to duty as a cook, working 17 hours a day every other day. On his off-days he was working in a raisin packing plant where his duties required him to lift heavy boxes of raisins above his head.

In this accident the respondent was pinned under his own automobile with his back in a jack-knifed position, he was taken to a military hospital where he was found to be suffering from a broken back consisting of a compressed fracture of the third lumbar vertebra, from a severe concussion of the brain with possible brain contusion, from gasoline burns, and from contusions and abrasions of the head and body. The respondent testified at the trial that he still had headaches and dizziness, had lost most of his strength, and had been unable to do any work since the accident; that he had continuous pain in his back, which gets worse at times; that he had a headache almost every day and when he walked or overexercised this got worse and he became dizzy; that he had had dizzy spells about five times in the last two or three weeks, and that about six times in the last month he had had spells of nausea, causing vomiting; that a week previously he had been discharged from the military service on account of disability; and that he did not have the headaches as often as he did the first month or two.

An army doctor, who had treated the respondent at a military hospital near Fresno from December 2,1944, to February 19, 1945, testified that when the respondent was brought to this hospital he was suffering from pain in his back and his head, that he had some gasoline bums, that he had received a blow on the head and that he was in moderate shock. He then testified that there was a spinal fracture, the third lumbar vertebra being crushed, that because of the patient’s abdominal condition and low blood pressure, and because of his acute general injuries, they were delayed for four or five days in treating the fracture of his spine; and that in the meantime he was given blood plasma and other treatment. With respect to the treatment for the spine fracture he testified that the patient was strung up by his heels and by his thorax and his head thrown back in a marked hyperextension when the spine [130]*130was forcibly manipulated and the fracture sprung back into position; that a plaster east, extending from his knee to his armpit, was then applied to hold his back in that over-corrected position; that such a cast is usually kept on for six weeks, when a shorter cast is applied; and that this plaster cast is uncomfortable and many patients are not able to tolerate it. There is evidence that after these easts were removed steel braces were applied from his hips to his shoulders. He still wore these braces at the time of the trial and will have to wear them for at least another year and probably two. After about twelve weeks, the respondent was removed from the hospital near Fresno and taken to a hospital at Santa Ana where he remained about thirteen weeks and until shortly before the trial.

While this doctor testified that there had been a good restoration of the fracture insofar as the bone itself was concerned he testified that this referred merely to the shape of the bone and that this “is not the final answer”; that in such fractures cartilage discs and joints are also injured and that these injuries to the soft tissues in some cases not only produce a painful condition but cause a disability in addition to the fracture itself; that in spine fractures of this type “between one third and one half of them are not rehabilitated in spite of the best treatment we know, are not rehabilitated”; that in fractures of this type “the end result is usually accomplished in six to eight months, and in a good percentage of these patients we get a good recovery. However, if there is considerable pain at the end of six months, as there is in this patient, the strong probability is he will have a permanent disability and pain in that back of a fairly high degree. ’ ’ He further testified, with respect to the headaches, that he could not tell whether they would continue to grow worse or better. On cross-examination, he stated that he was unable to see that this case was one “in the upper brackets” insofar as good results after a fracture are concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
168 P.2d 25, 74 Cal. App. 2d 127, 1946 Cal. App. LEXIS 1135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crumback-v-murdock-calctapp-1946.