Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Craighead

175 S.W. 453, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 11, 1915
DocketNo. 421. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 S.W. 453 (Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Craighead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Craighead, 175 S.W. 453, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 341 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HARPER, C. J.

This is a suit by Charles A. Craighead against the Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff while a passenger on one of defendant’s trains. Plaintiff alleged that defendants’ employes brought its passenger 'train to a sudden stop, and that he was thereby thrown against the arm or some other portion of the berth of the Pullman car, striking same with his right shoulder and chest, and that by reason of the severity of the impact, the shoulder, right arm, chest, and lungs, etc., were seriously and permanently injured. The defendant denied liability, and specially pleaded that if plaintiff received any injuries, they were neither serious nor permanent. The trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for $9,000, from which this appeal is perfected.

The appellee objects to a consideration of appellant’s assignments because they do not comply with the rules, of this court. While, possibly, not strictly in compliance with the rules, they are sufficiently so to require us to pass upon them. In'the five assignments there is really but one question raised, i. e., that the verdict is so excessive as to show that the jurymen were influenced in some other way than by the law and facts.

The testimony relied on to sustain the verdict is fully quoted as follows:

Plaintiff, Craighead:

“When the train stopped, it throwed me forward, and I struck something hard, and the effect it had on me was it hurt me. It numbed me for some little bit, it kind of made me sick. I didn’t have good use of my arm. It was numbed. I tried to pick up a suit case with my right arm and could not do so. I picked up a hat box, with just a lady’s hat with my right hand, and took a suit case in my left. I went straight home from the train. When I got home, the effect of the lick was it made me kind of sick. My shoulder swelled some, just *454 in a few minutes. I remained at home that morning, sent for Dr. Mahon about 10 o’clock, was hurt about 5 o’clock. The reason I did not send for a physician before was I didn’t know there was anything broke. I just felt it was a jar, a bruise, and it wouldn’t amount to much, tried treatment, first my wife rubbed some liniment on it. The pain had increased right smart before I sent for a doctor. When the doctor got there he told me there was a rib broken, bandaged it up, and the bandages remained on it for 12 days or two weeks. The effect of the injury is that I have no strength in the right arm. I can’t do any heavy work or lifting. I can’t handle a rope, can’t use a Winchester from that shoulder, as I ought to, can’t hardly saddle my horse; it is just here the last few days that I got so I can push saddle up, when I attempt to do that it hurts, it hurts any time I try to use it, it hurts all the time a little when I am riding, I haven’t got very good use of the arm in handling it, lots of time I go to put my hand and miss what I go to put it on. I can’t handle a pistol without I take both hands, and I can’t get my pistol quick with that hand at all. I suffer pain at night; if I turn over on that shoulder at night it begins to ache right away and wakes me up, and 1 generally have to get up and sit up awhile. If I sleep sound all night I have to lay on my left side. I went back to work in 12 or 14 days after the injury. I haven’t missed any time from my work. I am a river guard for the government, get $90 per month wages, and $30 per month for horse feed. There has been no complaint that I am not earning my wages.”

The accident happened on April 15th, and judgment was entered August 18th, same year, 1914.

Dr. Hardy, for plaintiff:

“I know O. A. Craighead, the plaintiff in this case, and have made a physical examination of him. I examined him about two weeks ago in my office, and again this afternoon. At my examination of plaintiff two weeks ago I found there was atrophy of the scapular muscles and tenderness over the scapular and clavicular regions (the scapular is the shoulder blade and the clavicular the collar bone) and partial loss of function of the right shoulder joint, I mean that he is unable to use it fully, completely, and accurately. I found a difference in measurement from the median line over the right shoulder and the left; the difference I found was one inch; the right side was the smaller. The effect of atrophy of the muscles of .the scapular would have on the arm and shoulder would depend. on the degree of the atrophy, it would impair the usefulness of the shoulder and strength.
“Q. What was his ability to use the arm and his shoulder? A. The movements of the right arm were slow, evidently painful, and rather uncertain. I have examined the plaintiff with a view to determining the probable consequence of his condition, and my opinion 'is the probability is that he will never fully regain the use of his arm and shoulder; the probable effect is that his shoulder will be more or less impaired. I mean that it will be loss of strength, partial loss of functions of the shoulder and arm.
“Q. What effect do you think it will have in the future upon his ability to swing a rope in roping wild animals? A. Well, probably he will not be able to do it as skillfully as he once did. The probabilities are that the nerves of the arm have been permanently impaired.
“The reason I examined the patient was that he came to my office and requested me to do so, to my office at Alpine. Yes, sir; I examined him again to-day. No, sir; I have not been paid for my services yet. Tes, sir; pain is a subjective symptom. Yes, sir; we medical men have what we call objective symptoms and subjective symptoms. Objective symptoms are symptoms you can determine yourself; you are not limited though to seeing and feeling. Subjective symptoms are symptoms that you determine by what the patient tells you. Yes, sir; pain is principally a subjective symptom. Under certain circumstances, yes; you can look at a man or any portion of his anatomy and tell whether or not he is suffering. Eor instance, suppose that you have a painful shoulder, one that causes you pain when you move it; I can divert your attention and move that arm constantly, and I elicit pain before you have time to make up your mind whether you are going to suffer pain or not. No, sir; that is not just my idea about that. The reason I know that you haven’t made up your mind is because I don’t think you can make up your mind quite that quickly. No, sir; I deny that it is a fundamental primary principle of medicine that you can’t tell whether a man is suffering pain, except what he tells you. It is not always a fact that you can only tell when a man is suffering by what he tells you. The reason I said that he evidently suffered pain instead of saying he did suffer pain is because in my profession, Mr. Kemp, we don’t make absolute ' statements without absolute grounds for them. Yes, sir; I found slowness of motion, of movement; that is an objective symptom. Yes, sir; I could tell that by looking at him; I could tell it by looking at him by having him perform certain motions.
“Q. But after all, didn’t he control his motions? A. Yes, sir.
“You remember that I didn’t state definitely that there was a slowness of motion; I said that there was evidently.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 453, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galveston-h-s-a-ry-co-v-craighead-texapp-1915.