Edmiston v. Kupsenel

135 S.E.2d 777, 205 Va. 198, 1964 Va. LEXIS 165
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 27, 1964
DocketRecord 5718
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 135 S.E.2d 777 (Edmiston v. Kupsenel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edmiston v. Kupsenel, 135 S.E.2d 777, 205 Va. 198, 1964 Va. LEXIS 165 (Va. 1964).

Opinion

Carrico, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Grey Edmiston, the plaintiff, secured at the hands of a jury a verdict against Samuel Kupsenel, the defendant, in the sum of *199 $28,500.00 for personal injuries received in an automobile accident caused by the negligence of the defendant. . ■. :■

Upon motion of the defendant, the trial court ruled that the jury’s verdict was excessive and put the plaintiff on terms to accept an award of $14,250.00 :'or-face a new trial on the issue of damages. The plaintiff, pursuant to the provisions of Code, § 8-3 50 1 , accepted, under protest, the reduced judgment' for- $14,250.00 and excepted to the action of the trial court in ordering the remittitur of $14,250.00. We granted the plaintiff a writ of error.

The evidence shows that the collision in which the plaintiff was injured occurred on September 29, 1959. The plaintiff was a passenger in an automobile being operated by Glenn R. Blevins. Thé Blevins vehicle was struck with great force by an automobile being operated by Hester S. Sheffield. The Sheffield vehicle had, in turn, ■ been struck in the rear by the automobile of the defendant and proL pelled across the highway into the' Blevins vehicle. The plaintiff was thrown forward with such force that his head struck and “broke a hole” in the windshield of the vehicle in which he was riding.

The plaintiff was rendered unconscious as a result of the accident but recovered sufficiently to be able to walk, with assistance, to the ambulance. He was admitted to Lee Memorial Hospital at Marion where he, “just blacked out continuously for about a couple or three days.” He was suffering, in the words of his physician, Dr. Joseph S. Staley, from, “a severe lacerated and incised wound of the forehead, and the scalp . . . considerable cerebral concussion, manifested by disorientation and some dilation of both pupils . . . moderately severe contusion over the region of the right knee and over the region of the right'hip . . . multiple abrasions [or] small lacerations of both legs and the face and thorax . . . a-large swelling on the dorsum of the right hand.”

Dr. Staley, in characterizing the plaintiff’s injuries said, “he was so *200 sore everywhere ... he had such extensive injuries ... he had had a severe head injury ... he was so frankly bunged up.”

The plaintiff was treated for his injuries and discharged from the hospital on October 4, 1959, to return to his home. He suffered increased pain in his chest and was re-admitted to the hospital on October 9. It was then found that he had two fractured ribs. These fractures were treated and he was again discharged from the hospital on October 22,1959.

The plaintiff returned to his employment as a machinist at the Brunswick Company after a lapse of one month from the date of the accident. He continued to suffer pain and upon subsequent examinations, Dr. Staley found that his patient had, “complete loss of the abdominal and cremasteric reflexes on his left side” involving muscles, “enervated from the lower back” with, “marked tenderness . . . over the spine of the eighth to the tenth dorsal vertebra with marked muscle spasm on either side of these structures.” From these symptoms, the doctor concluded that his patient had, “definite neurological damage on the left side of his lumbar spine” and that his pain and discomfort therefrom were attributable to the injuries suffered in the accident.

Dr. Staley testified that the plaintiff had a permanent scar on his forehead resulting from the, “tongue-shaped laceration extending from roughly up in the hair and down and this was turned back.” When asked whether the injury to plaintiff’s spine was permanent, he said, “the fact that it has persisted for . . . three and a half years, would seem—in other words, if he were going to recover, I would think he would have done it in this time.”

In an examination conducted by Dr. Staley immediately before trial, the plaintiff, “did not show full recovery.” The doctor said that the plaintiff still had, “marked muscle spasm of the lumbar . . . muscles . . . with pain and tenderness over the region of the seventh to tenth dorsal vertebra. Indeed, it was so marked that we thought he might have what is known as Kummell’s disease, which involves the vertebral bodies, and this is why we referred him for another X-ray of his spine, because that may occur anywhere from one to five years after the original injury.”

The plaintiff was also examined and treated by Dr. O. O. Smith, Jr., who testified that the plaintiff was suffering from pain in his lower back, radiating into both hip joints. Dr. Smith’s X-rays revealed, “a slight narrowing of the lumbosacral interspace, consistent *201 with but not diagnostic of a herniated intervertebral disc.” The doctor concluded that the plaintiff, “had some trouble in the lumbosacral area” attributable to a whiplash injury. Dr. Smith was not “able to say” whether the plaintiff’s back injury was temporary or permanent or whether it resulted from the accident or from an old war-time injury to the plaintiff’s knee.

The plaintiff, testifying in his own behalf, stated that he was fifty-one years of age; that he had been in good health, and had experienced no trouble with his back prior to the accident. He described his injuries and their effect upon him. He told the jury that he still suffered pain, “all the time, day and night”; that he could not, “do a day’s work without” wearing a back brace, and that he had not, “been able to walk” his natural gait since the accident.

As a result of his injuries, the plaintiff lost $397.12 in wages and incurred medical and hospital expenses of $518.90, or a total of $916.02.

Dr. Harry W. Bachman, Jr., a witness called by the defendant, testified that he examined the plaintiff approximately two weeks before the trial. He stated that the plaintiff was suffering from degenerative arthritis; that the plaintiff had an abnormal spine, which he had had since childhood, in which, “the first one of the sacral vertebrae didn’t fuse onto the sacrum, and is down here at the end of his spine trying to be one of the lumbar vertebrae, kind of gives him fits, so to speak. This has produced narrowing and arthritic changes right at this point, which is right at the end of his spine (indicating).” This doctor said that the plaintiff’s war injury to his knee was not in “anywise connected with” his back injury. Dr. Bachman, however, candidly conceded that the accident had aggravated the pre-existing arthritic condition in the plaintiff’s spine. He freely admitted that, “by virtue of this aggravation . . . this man is having low back pains and back trouble and is in pain, and, as a matter of fact, is wearing a brace.” At another point in his testimony, Dr. Bachman acknowledged that the plaintiff was “hurting” and was “not a malingerer.”

When this witness of the defendant was asked whether the aggravation of the plaintiff’s pre-existing condition was permanent, he said, “it is probably . . . more or less permanent, but I think that I mean it may or—he is going to have good days and he is going to have bad days.”

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.E.2d 777, 205 Va. 198, 1964 Va. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edmiston-v-kupsenel-va-1964.