DeLong v. Wickes Co.

545 So. 2d 362, 1989 WL 55302
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 26, 1989
Docket88-00895
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 545 So. 2d 362 (DeLong v. Wickes Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeLong v. Wickes Co., 545 So. 2d 362, 1989 WL 55302 (Fla. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

545 So.2d 362 (1989)

Shirley A. DeLONG, Natalie Y. DeLong, and Richard DeLong, Appellants,
v.
The WICKES COMPANY D/B/a Wickes Lumber Centers, and Enrique L. Santiago, Appellees.

No. 88-00895.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.

May 26, 1989.
Rehearing Denied May 29, 1989.

*363 Paul Castagliola and Candace S. Whitaker of Riden & Goldstein, P.A., St. Petersburg, for appellants.

Troy J. Crotts of Fowler, White, Gillen, Boggs, Villareal & Banker, P.A., St. Petersburg, for appellees.

PARKER, Judge.

Shirley and Richard DeLong, wife and husband, and Natalie DeLong, their daughter, appeal the trial court's judgment awarding monetary damages in their favor after the court denied their motions for new trial. We affirm in part and reverse in part with directions.

Mrs. DeLong and her daughter were involved in a serious collision with Enrique L. Santiago, who was driving a truck owned by The Wickes Company d/b/a Wickes Lumber Centers. The DeLongs filed suit against Wickes Lumber, its employee, Santiago, and The Insurance Company of North America,[1] for personal injuries sustained by Mrs. DeLong and her daughter as a result of that accident. The complaint included a claim by Mr. DeLong for loss of consortium. The accident occurred when Santiago drove the Wickes Lumber truck through a yellow traffic light, striking the DeLongs' "brand new" 1982 Ford Escort. Mrs. DeLong was driving the vehicle and was attempting to complete a left turn when she collided with the oncoming truck. Mrs. DeLong's daughter and another person were passengers in the car.

The expert medical testimony at trial was contradictory on the issue of whether Mrs. DeLong and her daughter sustained permanent disabilities as a result of the accident. As to Mrs. DeLong, the medical evidence ranged from a finding by a Dr. Nach of no permanent injury to a twenty percent disability rating from her attending chiropractor, Dr. Snair. The independent medical examiner (IME) accorded Mrs. DeLong a five percent rating based solely upon her subjective complaints. The medical evidence with regard to the daughter was more consistent in that all the practitioners concluded that she suffered some degree of permanent injury, which included facial scarring; however, they disagreed as to the extent of that disability.

There was evidence in the record from Dr. Nach that Mrs. DeLong had reached "maximum medical improvement" and Natalie DeLong was "near maximum medical improvement," with an excellent prognosis as to both patients. The medical expenses incurred by both Mrs. DeLong and her daughter were admitted into evidence without objection. The reasonableness and necessity of those expenses was greatly contested at trial, in particular the chiropractic treatment received by the two women, which in some instances duplicated the physical therapy recommended by various physicians as the prescribed treatment. Further, Dr. Snair was the only person to recommend continued chiropractic care to both patients for an indefinite period. Considerable medical opinion was offered that neither patient would benefit from further medical or chiropractic care.

*364 Evidence was also introduced at the trial that Mrs. DeLong and her daughter suffered from physical conditions which predated the accident in question. Mrs. DeLong was diagnosed as having a misalignment of her spine, and her daughter suffers from congenital scoliosis. Dr. Bialis, a plastic surgeon who was treating Natalie DeLong for facial scars related to the accident, testified that some of those scars were not caused by the accident but resulted from acne. In fact, Dr. Bialis stated that he referred her to a dermatologist for her acne condition. The IME testified regarding Mrs. DeLong that her X-rays were consistent with that of a 46-year old woman, with or without an accident, and that the normal wear and tear she was experiencing in her knee was occasioned by arthritis due to aging.

The defense sought to impeach Natalie DeLong regarding a second accident in which she was involved after the instant accident. Although Natalie attempted to characterize this later accident as minor and insignificant, the defense established that following the second accident, Natalie's visits to Dr. Snair were more frequent than immediately prior to that accident. In addition, it was brought out that Natalie told Dr. Snair about this second accident but neglected to mention it in her responses to interrogatories submitted by the defense, which specifically inquired about her involvement in other accidents.

There was additional testimony presented regarding lost wages and pain and suffering by Mrs. DeLong and her daughter. According to the daughter, she lost two months of work, in which she would have earned $250 per week, as a result of the accident. After the two months, she obtained similar employment to that before the accident, where she remained until she got married and moved to New York.

At the time of the accident, Mrs. DeLong was not employed. However, she stated at the trial that she intended to seek employment as a surgical nurse, which was the type of work she had been doing for the past ten years in New York. Two months had elapsed between the time the family arrived from New York and the time of the accident. Several months after the accident Mrs. DeLong obtained a job as a sales clerk at Robinson's Department Store at minimum wage, where she worked for three years until she became employed as a nursing home supervisor. As a nursing home supervisor, she now earns $10 per hour, more than she did working as a surgical nurse in New York. She estimated the difference in the salary she would have received as a nurse as opposed to a sales clerk in those three years to be approximately $70,000. Her testimony does not establish, however, that during those three years as a sales clerk she was unable because of the accident to obtain the type of employment which she has presently.

Mr. DeLong's consortium claim was grounded, among other reasons, upon three weeks of total care of his wife immediately following the accident, with continued care for a lengthy period of time, during which he was obligated to perform all the household duties previously the province of his wife. In addition, during that time he had to forego his profession in real estate sales and had to perform additional jobs in order to support the family. The uncontradicted evidence showed that the DeLongs' lifestyle and sexual relations were adversely affected by the accident.

There was also testimony presented regarding the effect of the DeLongs' failure to wear seat belts. The IME testified to his belief that had Mrs. DeLong been wearing a seat belt she would have prevented approximately fifty percent of the damage she suffered, and her daughter's injuries, had she worn a seat belt, would have been reduced by seventy-five percent. The evidence concerning the seat belts consisted of the testimony of the investigating officer that seat belts were available in the DeLong vehicle and that Mrs. DeLong and her daughter were not wearing them at the time of the accident. In addition, photographs taken of the accident confirmed the vehicle contained seat belts. The record also reflected that the vehicle was purchased new, four to five months prior to the accident.

*365 The jury returned a verdict in favor of the daughter in the sum of $10,409.90, and for Mrs. DeLong in the amount of $3,546.49.[2] This second amount was then reduced by the jury's finding that Mrs. DeLong was twenty-five percent comparatively negligent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
545 So. 2d 362, 1989 WL 55302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delong-v-wickes-co-fladistctapp-1989.