DiChiacchio v. Rockcraft Stone Products Co.

225 A.2d 913, 424 Pa. 77, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 751
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 1967
DocketAppeal, 364
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 225 A.2d 913 (DiChiacchio v. Rockcraft Stone Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DiChiacchio v. Rockcraft Stone Products Co., 225 A.2d 913, 424 Pa. 77, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 751 (Pa. 1967).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mb. Justice Musmanno,

On February 20, 1960, Joseph DiChiacchio, 42 years of age, was walking along Broad Street in Philadelphia when a plank, measuring 2x8 feet, crashed from a third-story height down on to his head and struck him to the ground. The force of the impact was such that the cap on one of his teeth and fillings from other teeth were forced out of his mouth which, with his nose, emitted blood. His left eye was swollen and he suffered other injuries, to be referred to later.

He brought suit in trespass against Rockcraft Stone Products Company which had constructed the scaffolding from which the plank had become detached and received a verdict in the sum of 125,00o.1 Rockcraft moved for a new trial on the grounds of excessiveness in the verdict. The court ordered that damages in excess of $12,000 be remitted within 30 days; otherwise a new trial would follow as to damages alone. The plaintiff refused to file a remittitur and the case is before Us on appeal as to whether the law requires a new trial.

The defendant admitted liability for the accident so that the only issue for our consideration is the reasonableness of the verdict of $25,000.

, On the day of the accident the plaintiff was taken to the St. Agnes Hospital for concussion of the brain, cuts on. his face and over the left eye, headaches, dizziness and nervousness. He remained in the hospital for [79]*79a week and then was taken home where he remained for another week. At the end of two weeks following the accident he returned to his work as a carpenter. When asked why he returned to his occupation he replied: “Well, I had a family to support and I was afraid of losing my job.”

Dr. Joseph Cava, who cared for him at the hospital, continued to treat him for six months further for headaches, dizziness, and nervousness, sequels to the original diagnosis of concussion and “consistent with post concussion syndrome.” In August, 1960, Dr. Cava referred the plaintiff to Henry Shenkin, a neurosurgeon, for additional care. Dr. Shenkin agreed with Dr. Cava that the plaintiff suffered from a post concussion syndrome with anxiety and nervousness. These ailments particularly affected the plaintiff in his carpentering work which required him to climb and descend ladders. During these activities he was often assailed by dizziness and, while working at the top of a ladder, he suffered from a constant fear of falling.

On October 9, 1962, he actually fell from the top of a ladder while hanging cabinets and was treated by Dr. Cava for the injury sustained in the fall, plus the continuing dizziness and headache. The trial judge, in describing the plaintiff’s disabilities, said: “Even at the time of trial, which was more than five years after the injury, he [the plaintiff] told of having headaches several times each week. His testimony was that he was told that there was no medical aid available for his problems. He stated that at times the left side of his face and left eye feel numb, and that he still becomes dizzy when he is on a ladder while working. Plaintiff’s wife testified that before his injury, he got along well with his children, but that since then he has not been patient with them, becomes easily upset, and is disturbed when driving an automobile. A specialist in internal medicine, who treated plaintiff, [80]*80testified that plaintiff’s headaches and dizziness were due to the concussion of the brain that he had suffered. This physician, having made a diagnosis of post concussion syndrome with an anxiety, nervousness, referred plaintiff to a neurosurgeon. In 1962, while working on a ladder, plaintiff got dizzy, lost his balance and fell, thus hurting his shoulder. In the opinion of the specialist in internal medicine, plaintiff’s headaches and dizziness resulting from the accident could go on indefinitely in the future.”

In view of this appraisement of the plaintiff’s disablement, it is incomprehensible why the trial judge ordered a remittitur of $13,000. Nowhere in his able opinion, which thoroughly discusses the case from every angle, does he suggest a reason for reducing the verdict. He does not say that the amount of the verdict shocked his judicial conscience. He does not suggest that the amount violated any rule for the computation of damages. On the contrary, the whole opinion, with the exception of the sentence ordering the remittitur, is a strong argument justifying the plaintiff’s right to retain the verdict awarded him by the jury. The trial judge emphasizes the fact that the “defendant produced no testimony whatsoever to contradict, challenge or dispute plaintiff’s evidence as to the damages.” Indeed, it is a mystery how the defendant seeks to minimize with argument the extent of the plaintiff’s injuries and disablement, and yet refrained from producing a single witness to contradict the testimony of the plaintiff and the testimony of his physician as to his injuries. It is also important to note that the absence of defendant witnesses at the trial was not due to the lack of anyone to call because the defendant had had the plaintiff examined by its own doctor. The failure to produce that doctor can only lead to the conclusion that that doctor could not contradict the medical evidence presented by the plaintiff and his [81]*81doctor. This absence of contradicting evidence obviously made quite an impression on the trial judge, and impelled him to the utterance, as already indicated: “It is important to note that defendant produced no testimony whatsoever to contradict, challenge or dispute plaintiff’s evidence as to the damages.”

The defendant asks for a new trial, but of what use would be a new trial? If the defendant did not call its doctor at the first trial, it probably would not call him at a second trial, moreover there is no justification for any intellectual conclusion that a succeeding jury would give the plaintiff a lesser verdict than the one returned at the first trial, which, under all criteria and standards of proper verdicts, is not an excessive one, considering the original injuries and the continuing nature of the plaintiff’s disablement.

Nervousness and dizziness to a carpenter who must climb ladders, walk over narrow planks high above the ground, and reach out into space to nail together scaffolds and supports is as grave an occupational hazard as a deep sea diver operating with a defective diving helmet or a window cleaner lacking a safety belt. Nor is there time for Joseph DiChiacchio to learn another trade. At the time of the trial he was already 47 years of age; his schooling was limited to a seventh grade education. Carpentering is all he knows. If dizziness, nervousness and headaches keep him off the ladder it will keep bread off the table for himself and his family.

The defendant argues that the plaintiff did not prove any impairment of earning power, although, as we will see later, it did not complain when the judge charged on impairment of earning power. The defendant’s brief points out that the plaintiff’s wages were no less after the accident than before and argues that this shows he has suffered no economic wage potentiality. But the fact that the plaintiff has not had a diminution in wages since the accident does not of [82]*82itself prove an absence of impairment of earning power.

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DiChiacchio v. Rockcraft Stone Products Co.
225 A.2d 913 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1967)

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Bluebook (online)
225 A.2d 913, 424 Pa. 77, 1967 Pa. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dichiacchio-v-rockcraft-stone-products-co-pa-1967.