Fatehi v. Johnson

143 P.3d 561, 207 Or. App. 719, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 1407
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 20, 2006
Docket0210-10156; A125099
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 143 P.3d 561 (Fatehi v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fatehi v. Johnson, 143 P.3d 561, 207 Or. App. 719, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 1407 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*721 ARMSTRONG, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment on a jury verdict in his favor in a negligence action that awarded him $10,000 in economic damages but did not award him any noneconomic damages. Plaintiff maintains that, on the basis of defendant’s response to his request for admissions, he was entitled to an award of noneconomic damages as a matter of law. Alternatively, plaintiff argues that a verdict for economic damages only is improper on the facts of this case. We affirm.

On March 22, 2002, defendant ran a stop sign and drove his vehicle into the taxicab that plaintiff was driving. Plaintiff did not seek medical treatment until 10 days after the accident, when he went to see the chiropractor to whom his attorney had referred him. The chiropractor treated plaintiff for soft tissue injuries in the neck and back. Plaintiff brought this action to recover economic damages of $11,002 for his medical bills and noneconomic damages for his pain and suffering from his injuries.

In the course of this litigation, plaintiff served on defendant a request for admissions under ORCP 45. Among other things, plaintiff asked defendant to admit that his negligence caused the accident and that, as a result of the accident, plaintiff was injured. Defendant admitted that his negligence caused the accident, but in response to plaintiffs request that he admit that plaintiff was injured as a result of the accident, defendant qualified his response by admitting that “plaintiff sustained some minor physical injury in the accident.” (Emphasis added.) However, in response to plaintiffs request that he admit that plaintiff sustained noneconomic damages as a result of the accident, defendant denied that plaintiff sustained any such damages.

At trial, plaintiffs chiropractor testified that plaintiff suffered moderate to slightly severe injuries to his neck and back in the accident. The chiropractor’s diagnosis was based on plaintiff’s complaints of pain and on x-rays and other tests. On cross-examination, the chiropractor testified that plaintiff had told him that he had been involved in only one prior accident in 1997, when in fact plaintiff had been involved in auto accidents in 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, *722 and 2001. Through the introduction of plaintiffs medical records, defendant established that plaintiff had suffered injuries similar to those at issue in this case in at least the 1993,1995, and 1997 accidents. The chiropractor further testified that plaintiffs attorney had referred plaintiff to him and that he and plaintiff’s attorney referred approximately 50 clients a year to each other.

Plaintiff testified that he experienced pain for a few days after the accident that rated a four or five on a scale of one to ten, where ten is the worst pain. He further testified that he continued to experience pain throughout his treatment with his chiropractor, a period of approximately five months, and that he was still experiencing pain about once a month at the time of trial, two years after the accident.

On cross-examination, defendant impeached plaintiffs credibility by introducing excerpts of plaintiffs deposition into the record. In that deposition, plaintiff had stated, under oath, that he had been involved in only one prior automobile accident, that he had never previously injured his neck or back, and that he had never previously complained to a doctor about his neck. Through plaintiffs medical records, defendant established that none of those statements was accurate. Plaintiff testified that, at his deposition, he should have testified that he did not remember any other accidents or injuries other than the 1997 accident.

At the close of evidence, plaintiff moved for a directed verdict on the question whether he was entitled to noneconomic damages as a matter of law as a result of defendant’s admissions. The trial court denied that motion. Plaintiff also requested the following instruction:

“Defendant has admitted that he is liable to Plaintiff for causing the accident. The defendant has also admitted that he caused injury to plaintiff. Accordingly, your verdict must include an award for economic and non-economic damages to the Plaintiff* * *.”

The trial court refused that request and instead instructed the jury that

“[D]efendant * * * has admitted that he was negligent and that his negligence caused the accident. [Defendant] has *723 also admitted that [plaintiff] sustained some minor physical injury in the accident. The issue for you to decide is the extent of the injuries [plaintiff] sustained as a result of the accident, and the amount if any [of] damages to be awarded to him.”

(Emphasis added.)

After the jury returned a verdict awarding plaintiff $10,000 in economic damages but no noneconomic damages, plaintiff objected to the verdict and moved the court to reinstruct the jury that it must award some noneconomic damages. The trial court denied that motion and accepted the jury’s verdict. On appeal, plaintiff assigns error to those three rulings.

All of plaintiffs assignments of error present the same basic question: Whether plaintiff was entitled to non-economic damages as a matter of law. We review for legal error, “looking] at the evidence in the light most favorable to defendant.” Wheeler v. Huston, 288 Or 467, 483, 605 P2d 1339 (1980).

Plaintiff makes alternative arguments. First, he argues that defendant’s admission that plaintiff incurred “some minor physical injury” in the accident entitles him to recover noneconomic damages. Alternatively, he argues that, even if the admission does not have that effect, an award for only economic damages is not appropriate in this case under the test from Wheeler.

In Wheeler, the Supreme Court summarized and synthesized its “protracted labors for a satisfactory solution” to the problem of jury verdicts that award a plaintiff economic damages but do not award any noneconomic damages. 1 The “thorny problems” presented by those verdicts *724 stem from the historical rule that a plaintiff could not recover economic damages unless the jury also awarded him non-economic damages. See, e.g., Hall v. Cornett et al., 193 Or 634, 645, 240 P2d 231 (1952). However, in the 1970s, the Supreme Court began carving out exceptions to that rule. We will not recount the whole history in this opinion; the Supreme Court undertook that endeavor in Wheeler. See 288 Or at 471-78. However, we will discuss relevant facts and reasoning of certain cases as necessary in our analysis of the questions presented by this case.

In Wheeler, the Supreme Court set forth the following rule explaining the circumstances under which there can be a verdict for a plaintiff that awards economic but not non-economic damages:

“If there is a question whether any [noneconomic] damages were sustained, the jury may conclude that the plaintiff suffered no [noneconomic] damages but did reasonably incur wage loss and/or medical expense.

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Bluebook (online)
143 P.3d 561, 207 Or. App. 719, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 1407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatehi-v-johnson-orctapp-2006.