Grant v. Stoyer

10 P.3d 594, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 97, 2000 WL 1516966
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 2000
DocketS-9016
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 10 P.3d 594 (Grant v. Stoyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grant v. Stoyer, 10 P.3d 594, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 97, 2000 WL 1516966 (Ala. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Catherine Grant sued Peggy Stoyer for causing an automobile accident that injured Grant. Stoyer admitted negligence and Grant's case went to trial only on causation and damages. Although the uncontroverted trial evidence established that the accident had caused Grant painful injuries requiring medical treatment, the jury awarded her no damages. The superior court denied Grant's motion for a new trial. Because the evidence that Stoyer's negligence caused Grant to suffer painful injuries requiring medical treatment was uncontroverted, we reverse and remand for a new trial on Grant's claim of damages.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

On December 19, 1994, Catherine Grant was entering the intersection of University Avenue and Geraghty Avenue in Fairbanks when Peggy Stoyer drove her Jeep Eagle station wagon into the right front side of Grant's ten-month old Plymouth Acclaim; the collision severely damaged Grant's car. The responding paramedics recorded that Grant complained of a sore chest and pain in her shoulder, lower back, and left knee. They applied a backboard and cervical collar and transported her to the emergency room by ambulance. The emergency room admitting nurse noted that Grant complained of pain in her shoulder, knee, chest, and back. The emergency room physician diagnosed an acute cervical strain, a mild chest wall contusion, and a left knee contusion. Grant was given a soft neck brace and released from the emergency room.

Grant sought additional medical treatment soon after the accident, visiting the Tanana Valley Clinic on December 28, 1994. Her physician recorded Grant's complaints of pain in her neck and right shoulder, and noted that her chest had been bruised. Grant sought physical therapy on January 3, 1995, still complaining of pain in her left knee, neck, and right shoulder because of the accident. Grant returned to the medical clin-ie on January 25; the notes for that visit record her complaint of "[nJeck, right shoulder, lower back and left knee pain, status post MVA." Grant continued to receive medical attention from her orthopedic specialist, who prescribed anti-inflammatories and pain medication; she received physical therapy through the summer of 1996. She had shoulder surgery in 1996 and again in 1998.

Grant and her husband, Douglas Grant, sued Stoyer, alleging that Stoyer's negligence caused personal injuries to Catherine Grant. They claimed damages for medical expenses, loss of wages, loss of consortium, loss of services, pharmacy and therapy expenses, mileage expenses, and loss of enjoyment.

The parties agreed not to try any claim for past medical expenses because Grant's insurance company had a subrogated right to recover those expenses. Stoyer admitted her own negligence, and the trial focused exclusively on causation and damages.

At trial, the parties disputed the seope and extent of the injury Grant claimed to have suffered because of the accident. Grant testified about the pain, suffering, and inconvenience she had experienced. Members of Grant's family testified about limitations on *596 her home activities, and how the family had to take over many of her household duties. Grant's husband testified about her ongoing pain and the damage to the marital relationship. During cross-examination, Stoyer's counsel did not contest testimony by Grant or her family about Grant's pain and suffering.

Perhaps because she had shoulder surgery in 1996 and 1998, the testimony of Grant's treating physicians at trial focused on the injury to her shoulder; they testified that she had developed secondary shoulder impingement syndrome in her shoulder as a result of the accident. They also testified about her other recurring complaints of pain. Stoyer's expert witnesses disputed the extent of Grant's injuries. They primarily opined that Grant could not have suffered the kind of shoulder injury she claimed to have suffered as a result of the accident. But even Stoyer's experts conceded at trial that the accident may have caused at least some of Grant's injuries.

The jury returned a special verdict finding that Stoyer's negligence was not "a legal cause of the damages" to Grant or her husband. The special verdict form also contained blanks for the amounts of damages the accident legally caused Grant for past wage loss, "past non-economic loss" (including pain and suffering), and "future non-economic loss" (including pain and suffering). The jury, having found no legal causation, was not permitted to determine the amount of damages. The superior court entered judgment for Stoyer and denied the Grants' motion to vacate the verdict and declined to order a new trial. The Grants appeal.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard of Review

The decision to grant or deny a new trial is within the trial court's discretion. 1 We will only reverse a decision to deny a new trial "if the evidence supporting the verdict was so completely lacking or slight and unconvincing as to make the verdict plainly unreasonable and unjust. 2 In conducting our review, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. 3

B. The Injury

The jury's special verdict found that Stoyer's negligence was not "a legal cause of the damages." We consequently review the record to determine whether the evidence permitted the jury to find that the collision was not the legal cause of any compensable loss to Grant.

The evidence is uncontroverted that this accident injured Grant. An ambulance took her in a backboard and cervical collar to the emergency room, where she repeated her complaints of neck, knee, shoulder, and chest pain. The collision was sufficiently violent to blow out a tire and erush the fender on her car and to cause her airbag to deploy; Stoyer does not dispute trial testimony and Grant's assertion on appeal that her car was totaled. Grant's daughter, riding in the right front seat, could not open her door and had to exit through the driver's side. At trial, Stoyer did not claim that Grant had faked or exaggerated her injuries at the hospital and did not dispute her truthfulness in reporting her symptoms to the paramedics and doctors who examined her. The medical records of the paramedics, emergency room, Tanana Valley Clinic, and Grant's initial treating physician, all memorialized within six weeks of the accident, include consistent reports of pain and injury attributable to the accident.

One of Stoyer's expert witnesses, Dr. John Ballard, testified that he thought that Grant had been injured in the accident:

I think for sure [Grant] had a whiplash injury, which would have been a cervical sprain. Probably had it when she came forward and back, had a contusion where the-where the seatbelt came across her chest. She also hit her knee against the dashboard, which can cause some anterior knee pain, and in worse situations where it-where it doesn't get better, it can dam *597 age the—the cartilage underneath the knee cap.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 P.3d 594, 2000 Alas. LEXIS 97, 2000 WL 1516966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grant-v-stoyer-alaska-2000.