Dykes v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.

248 So. 2d 603, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5820
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1971
DocketNo. 3420
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 248 So. 2d 603 (Dykes v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dykes v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 248 So. 2d 603, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5820 (La. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

HOOD, Judge.

Bobby G. Dykes and his wife, Evelyn W. Dykes, instituted this suit for damages for personal injuries sustained by them when the automobile in which they were riding was struck in the rear by a car being driven by Edward J. McCabe. The defendants are McCabe and his insurer, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company. Judgment was rendered by the trial court in favor of plaintiffs, awarding Mr. Dykes $1,989.80, and Mrs. Dykes $1,000.00. Plaintiffs have appealed.

The issues presented are whether the awards of general damages made to plaintiffs should be increased, and whether plaintiffs are entitled to recover additional sums for loss of wages.

The accident occurred at about 1:00 P. M. on December 27, 1968, on a heavily traveled highway near Pineville, Louisiana. Mrs. Dykes was riding in the right front seat of an automobile which was owned and being driven by her husband. The Dykes’ vehicle stopped for a traffic light, and while waiting for the light, it was struck in the rear by an automobile being driven by defendant McCabe. As a result of that collision, both vehicles received minor damages, and plaintiffs sustained personal injuries. Plaintiffs’ minor son, a rear seat passenger in their car when the accident occurred, was not injured.

Plaintiffs were then residents of Colorado. They did not seek or obtain medical attention immediately after the cars collided, but instead they continued on their trip by automobile to the home of Mrs. Dykes’ parents in Shreveport, Louisiana. After their arrival, they drove to a Shreveport hospital where, some eight hours after the accident occurred, they were examined by Dr. Baer I. Ramback, an orthopaedic surgeon.

Dr. Ramback felt that plaintiffs had sustained relatively minor injuries as a result of the accident, and he prescribed for each of them muscle relaxants, a mild analgesic to relieve pain and the application of moist heat to the neck. Neither of the plaintiffs was hospitalized. Three days later, on December 30, plaintiffs left Shreveport and drove back to Colorado in their automobile. They returned to their respective employments on January 2, 1969. Mr. Dykes was employed at that time as an automobile salesman and as a part-time minister of the United Pentacostal Church. Mrs. Dykes was employed as a secretary in a business establishment in Colorado, and she also played the piano and an accordian at church services conducted by her husband.

[605]*605Mr. Dykes quit his job as a car salesman late in January, 1969, and he obtained employment as an insurance salesman. He left that job about one month later, however, because he found that “it was completely different from selling automobiles,” and that he could not make any money at that occupation.

Mrs. Dykes quit her employment as a secretary in March, 1969. She and her husband returned to Shreveport, Louisiana, in April, 1969, and they lived with Mrs. Dykes’ parents for a month or two. In May or June of that year, they became full-time traveling evangelists, and as such, they traveled into various parts of the United States conducting revival services. Both testified that from that time until the date of the trial in September, 1970, Mr. Dykes preached revival sermons on an average of five nights per week, and that on each of those occasions Mrs. Dykes played the piano and an accordion. Their travels apparently took them all over the United States, including such places as North Carolina, Montana, Utah, California, Indiana and Oregon. They traveled by automobile.

Neither of the plaintiffs consulted a physician about the injuries which they allegedly received as a result of this accident from the time they were examined by Dr. Ramback on the day of the accident until two months later, on February 27, 1969, when they went to their family physician, Dr. Ashley N. Grosboll, a general practitioner, of Loveland, Colorado. They were treated by Dr. Grosboll for a period of time thereafter, and they also were examined by other physicians after that date. The record contains the depositions of the two treating physicians, Dr. Ramback and Dr. Grosboll, and of three other examining doctors.

Although Mr. and Mrs. Dykes did not seek medical treatment for their injuries between the date of the accident and February 27, 1969, we attach some significance to the fact that Mr. Dykes telephoned his family doctor, Dr. Grosboll, on February 10 requesting a prescription or treatment for an unrelated ailment, and yet he did not mention or seek treatment for the injuries which he asserts was then causing him much pain and disability.

Injuries Sustained by Bobby G. Dykes

Mr. Dykes was 30 years of age when the accident occurred. He testified that he experienced a headache and a pain in the middle of his back immediately after the cars collided, that since that date he has continued to suffer pain in his neck and back, and that he has had high blood pressure and has been extremely nervous and irritable since the accident. He stated that his pain and nervousness has been such that he was compelled to discontinue selling cars about one month after the accident, and that he has been unable to return to that occupation. He explained that the reason why he and his wife did not seek medical treatment until two months after the accident was that Dr. Ramback had told them that their injuries would just have to work themselves out over a period of time.

On the day of the accident, Dr. Ramback concluded that Mr. Dykes had sustained a “mild ligamentous strain” of the muscles of the neck and upper back, and a slight “myoligamentous strain” in the lumbar spine area. He examined Mr. Dykes again on April 8, 1969. That examination was essentially negative as to abnormalities, but he still classified the strains as being moderate in the cervical and dorsal spines, and slight to moderate in the lumbosacral spine. He did not feel that his condition was disabling.

Dr. Grosboll examined Mr. Dykes for the injuries sustained in the above mentioned accident on February 27, 1969, and he treated him throughout the month of March, and again on May 28 and on December 26, 1969. He concluded that Mr. Dykes had sustained a “severe myospasm, antrascapular, secondary to whiplash,” hypertension and elevated blood pressure, all [606]*606as a result of the accident, and that Dykes was disabled during the entire ten month period that he observed him.

Dr. Heinz K. Faludi, a neurosurgeon, examined Mr. Dykes on February 5, 1970, and concluded that he had suffered a cervical and thoracic muscular sprain as a result of the accident, and that he had not responded very well to treatment because of a neurotic attitude toward the injury. The doctor stated that he felt that Dykes’ attitude bordered “on the pathological,” and that he probably was in need of psychiatric care. He found Dykes’ blood pressure to be “slightly elevated,” but we interpret his conclusion to be that the increase in blood pressure was not related to the accident. He did not feel that Dykes was incapacitated from work.

Dr. R. Fred Marceau, a psychiatrist, interviewed Mr. Dykes on August 14, and again on August 17, 1970. He found Dykes’ blood pressure to be normal, but concluded that he had sustained a post traumatic type anxiety neurosis which came on after the accident. He felt that Dykes was disabled from returning to work as a car salesman, but that he probably would be able to return to that type work within two or three months after the examination, with proper psychiatric care.

The trial judge did not accept Mr.

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Related

Burke v. United States
605 F. Supp. 981 (D. Maryland, 1985)
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276 So. 2d 812 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
248 So. 2d 603, 1971 La. App. LEXIS 5820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dykes-v-state-farm-mutual-automobile-insurance-co-lactapp-1971.