Feist v. Sears, Roebuck & Company

517 P.2d 675, 267 Or. 402, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 318
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 517 P.2d 675 (Feist v. Sears, Roebuck & Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feist v. Sears, Roebuck & Company, 517 P.2d 675, 267 Or. 402, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 318 (Or. 1973).

Opinion

TONGUE, J.

This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by a four-year-old child when a cash register in one of defendant’s stores fell from a counter and struck the head of the child, causing a basal skull fracture. Defendant admitted liability. The jury returned a verdict of $35,000. Defendant appeals, based upon claimed errors in the admission of testimony and in instructions to the jury. We affirm.

The primary issue on appeal, as stated by defendant, is “whether the trial court erred in receiving testimony about the possibility that plaintiff may contract meningitis as a result of the accident and in permitting the jury to compensate plaintiff for increased susceptibility to the disease in the absence of any evidence that she is likely to contract it.”

The medical testimony can be summarized as follows: When the cash register fell on plaintiff’s *404 head- she sustained a basal (or basilar) skull fracture “in the depths of the nose back where the nose attaches to the base of the skull.” This caused bleeding through the nose and ears which continued for four days, during which plaintiff was in “intensive care” in a hospital. There was also a discharge of cerebral spinal fluid from plaintiff’s nose and ears. Dr. Johnson testified that fractures in the basilar area “that tear the lining of the skull or the brain allow the spinal fluid, which bathes the brain, to exude or flow out of the skull, into the, in this case, both the ears and the nose.”

Dr. Johnson also testified that during plaintiff’s treatment in the hospital she was given antibiotics because upon the tearing of the lining of the skull or brain in the basilar area, the “protective mechanism” of the brain is “disrupted” and that “Once there is an outside entrance, particularly from the nose or mouth or ears, for bacteria to get within that, it will cause infection. This is usually called meningitis * *

The hospital records, which were received without objection, included the following entry:

“The concern about ascending meningitis has been stressed with emphasis that it may resemble a ‘flu syndrome’.”

When asked to explain that entry, Dr. Johnson testified, in response to a question by defendant’s attorney “in aid of * * * objection”, as follows:

“MR. JANSSEN: Dr. Johnson, this area that you are about to go into now, was that ever anything more than a concern immediately after the accident?
“THE WITNESS: It continues to be a concern for many years, but as years go by, less of a concern.”

He then testified, over objection, as follows:

“THE WITNESS: A child is, after having had spinal fluid and having had a fracture and having *405 this problem of a torn envelope of the brain, is susceptible or is at risk of, for meningitis. In other words, getting reinfected from the bacteria that normally reside in the nose and throat. If this does not occur, in other words, if she doesn’t have an acute attack of this meningitis in the first few weeks of this, the chances that she will have it becomes progressively less, so that in the growing child, because the bones becomes more stable, the tear in the envelope is. better healed and so on.”

He also testified, over continuing objection, that:

“Q Doctor, how long will this child be susceptible to this type of infection?
“A There are reports in the literature * * *, after having basilar skull fracture, of developing meningitis secondary to continued leakage, ten, fifteen, twenty years. These are unusual cases.
“Q Doctor, could you describe for the jury and define for the jury ‘spinal meningitis’?
“A This is an infection of these enveloping, specifically of the two inner envelopes that I talked about before, the arachnoid and the pia. And, in fact, is invasion by bacteria into that lining and this causes a very inflammatory reaction, along with high fever, seizures or convulsions, some brain damage because it does obstruct the drainage of the veins from the brain, and a variety of other like illnesses, like symptoms.”

And, on cross-examination:

“Q Doctor, are you really talking about a possibility when you are talking about spinal meningitis, or meningitis in this ease?
“A Yes.
“Q Nothing more than a possibility?
“A That is a better somatic [semantic?] use.
“Q And you are not saying at all that, based upon reasonable medical probability, this young child will develop meningitis, are you?
“A No.”
*406 * # #
“Q But the incidence is very rare, isn’t it?
“A Yes, it is very rare.
“Q Has Mrs. Feist, or anyone in regard to Dana Feist, brought the child in to see you where you thought there was any clinical evidence of meningitis?
“A No.”

And, on re-direct examination:

“Q I have one question.
“Doctor, in regard to this meningitis, is it your opinion that, based upon a reasonable medical probability, that she is susceptible to contracting it?
“A She is susceptible, yes.”

A motion to strike all of this testimony was then denied.

There was other testimony, however, relating to other continuing effects, of the injury. Thus, there was medical testimony that, as a result of nerve damage, the pupil of one eye was slightly larger than the other, that the lid of one eye “drooped” and that these conditions would be permanent, although not resulting in any “functional problem.”

The parents also testified that the child had headaches; that she had become irritable and short tempered, and complained of loud noises, although her hearing was normal. There was no evidence, however, that her intelligence was impaired or that she suffered any permanent brain damage.

The child also had two scars on the top of her head, one on the left side toward the front and the other “up on top.” The child was shown to the jury, but was not subjected to examination by counsel.

*407 1. The trial court did not err in the admission of testimony of susceptibility to meningitis.

First of all, it is important to recognize the distinction between (1) the question of the admissibility of evidence of susceptibility to meningitis from (2) the question of whether, as a matter of sufficiency of evidence, the evidence in this case was such as to satisfy various rules of substantive law. Cf. Henderson v. U.P.R.R. Co., 189 Or 145, 160, 219 P2d 170 (1950).

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Bluebook (online)
517 P.2d 675, 267 Or. 402, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feist-v-sears-roebuck-company-or-1973.