Dabareiner v. Weisflog

33 N.W.2d 220, 253 Wis. 23, 12 A.L.R. 2d 605, 1948 Wisc. LEXIS 360
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 N.W.2d 220 (Dabareiner v. Weisflog) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dabareiner v. Weisflog, 33 N.W.2d 220, 253 Wis. 23, 12 A.L.R. 2d 605, 1948 Wisc. LEXIS 360 (Wis. 1948).

Opinion

Hughes, J.

The case was tried to the court and a jury. The jury returned a verdiQt favorable to the plaintiffs, and the court ordered judgment for the plaintiff Arthur Dabareiner in the amount of $294.39 with costs of $48.51, and for the plaintiff Mae Dabareiner in the amount of $4,358, with costs and disbursements of $134.49.

This appeal is primarily an attack upon the judgment in favor of Mae Dabareiner.

The jury found that the defendant Weisflog was causally negligent with respect to, (a) management and control of his car, (b) keeping a proper lookout, (c) keeping within a *26 proper speed under the circumstances then and there existing, and (d) Keeping to his own right half of the roadway. It found the plaintiff Arthur Dabareiner free from negligence and assessed the damages of the plaintiff Mae Dabareiner for pain and suffering at $4,250, hospital and medical expense at $108.

The trial court answered the question as to damages of the plaintiff Arthur Dabareiner upon stipulation of the attorneys.

The findings of the jury with respect to negligence are not attacked upon this appeal.

Six assignments of error are presented and will be dealt with in the order raised, except that the first and last, which are closely related, will be treated together.

1. Is the verdict of the jury supported by competent medical testimony ?

6. Were the defendants entitled to a new trial upon the ground of newly discovered evidence ?

Mae Dabareiner is a woman fifty-one years of age and the mother of three children. She was teaching a rural school to make it possible for her to aid one of the children who was attending college. On Sunday, January 5, 1947, when the collision occurred, she was thrown against the windshield of the automobile with sufficient force to shatter the glass and cut her head. As the car swung around from the impact she was thrown against the right door, striking her right hip and arm.

According to her testimony, she remained in the car a few minutes (her husband testified that it was fifteen minutes), and then got out to another car in which she was taken to Jefferson to see Dr. Robinson. He treated the cut on her forehead and prescribed hot compresses for her arm. The next morning she returned to the school and continued to teach to the time of the trial nine months later. '

On the day after the accident she noticed that her right hip was bruised and was conscious of a sore head and a pain in her back. After school that evening she again called on *27 Dr. Robinson to have the head wound dressed. She testified that she did not mention to the doctor the pain in her back because she thought that it might be due to menstruation.

The pain in her back continued to increase during that week, so that by Saturday she experienced difficulty in walking. The following week she went to see Dr. Grueson at Fort Atkinson, who suggested the possibility of a fracture and ordered X rays, which proved negative. He thereupon prescribed a surgical belt to be worn as a support of the lower back. This helped to some extent but the pains were severe for a month or more and persisted to the' date of trial in the form of a sharp pain in the sacro region upon stooping, bending, or sudden motion, and dull ache following overexertion or housework. She further testified that she experienced pain upon becoming overtired, which interfered with her sleep.

She visited Dr. Grueson again in March and May and he. urged her to continue wearing the belt. On September 5th, she visited Dr. Wendt at Johnson Creek. She gave him a history of low back pain dating back to the time of the accident., Dr. Wendt testified that his examination revealed spasm of the muscles on the right side of the spine in the lower back, and deep palpation revealed a small area of severe pain in the sacroiliac area less marked on the left side. The patient was unable to flex or extend the right leg as freely as the left. Dr. Wendt testified that his diagnosis was sacroiliac neuritis due in all probability to trauma.

He testified on cross-examination that there were seven lumbar vertebrae; also, that after stretching of the ligáments, which normally hold the joint rigid, from an injury or sudden twist, the pain might tend to increase over a long period of time.

Counsel for the appellants argue that any schoolboy knows that there are only five lumbar vertebrae; that this court should hold as a matter of law that Dr. Wendt’s testimony will not support the verdict. Counsel urge this particularly since the respondent Mae Dabareiner failed to produce either Dr. Robin *28 son or Dr. Grueson as witnesses. The court is aware of no rule compelling a party to produce as witnesses in court all physicians who may have been consulted for treatment. It may well be that after visiting a physician a patient many conclude that he does not wish to be treated by such physician, much less assume the responsibilities attendant upon calling him as a witness.

The appellants produced Dr. Emmet W. Bowen, a physician of Watertown, who examined Mae Dabareiner during the trial' at their request. Dr. Bowen testified that his examination disclosed a very sensitive area over the right sacroiliac joint — much more so than one would ordinarily expect nine or ten months after the injury; all motions relating to the pelvis were restricted and evidently caused distress; the reflexes of the right leg were quite absent compared to those of the left leg. Dr. Bowen further testified that he felt that Mrs. Dabareiner did not suffer a sacroiliac strain, and then (after stating his reason, namely, that a strain is of sudden sharp onset) : N

“I concluded first that there was a neuritis but not of traumatic but of infectious origin, and my reason for that was the elevation in temperature [99.6°], the recession of the gums in the patient’s mouth, the discoloration of the crowned lower molar in the left jaw, which showed darkness on transillumi-nation, . . . that this was the focus of the infection . . . fever, rapid pulse, and protracted case over a period of months.”

It is apparent from this testimony that there was a sharp conflict in the medical testimony, and if Dr. Wendt was a competent witness it became the jury’s duty to determine .whose testimony was more credible.

At the time that the respondent Mae Dabareiner produced Dr. Wendt as a witness the appellants’ counsel stipulated the doctor’s qualifications on the record. After the trial counsel discovered that Dr. Wendt’s license to practice medicine was *29 not on file in the office of the county clerk for Jefferson county, as required by statute. They thereupon moved the trial court for a new trail. This is somewhat akin to defending against a rightful claim of a motorist on the ground that he was delinquent in obtaining this year’s license plates and had no right to be operating with outdated plates.

In any event, it cannot be said to be new evidence, because, if material, it could have been discovered by the exercise of due diligence as well before the trial as after. Mickoleski v. Becker (1948), 252 Wis. 307, 31 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.W.2d 220, 253 Wis. 23, 12 A.L.R. 2d 605, 1948 Wisc. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dabareiner-v-weisflog-wis-1948.