Gray Line, Inc. v. Keaton
This text of 428 A.2d 360 (Gray Line, Inc. v. Keaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Appellant Gray Line challenges on various grounds the judgment entered after a jury verdict in favor of appellee June Keaton in the amount of $16,000 for personal [362]*362injuries she had allegedly suffered as a result of appellant’s negligence.
Appellee testified that appellant’s bus backed into the bus she was driving, but had temporarily parked, and so jolted her as to leave her with a permanent back injury. An orthopedic surgeon who had first examined her some months after this collision and then once again before trial testified that in his opinion she was suffering from a lumbosacral strain (Record at 83) and that her condition was of a permanent nature (Record at 90) and “consistent” with the “history” of the accident she had recounted to him. (Record at 84.)
The expert witness for appellee was confronted on cross-examination with evidence that between the date her bus had been struck by appellant and his examination she was in another vehicular accident. (Record at 96-97.)1 He acknowledged that he did not know about this accident at the time he examined her. (Record at 97.) The physician testified that the injured condition of her back could be related to either the first accident in September 1976, which was the subject of this suit, or her second accident, which occurred less than two months later in November 1976 and prior to his examination of her.2 (Record at 98-99.)
There was also evidence that appellee had incurred a back injury in June 1975 necessitating medical treatment (Record at 36, 48), and that in July 1977, prior to the trial, she had “reinjured” her back while a passenger on a Metro train. (Record at 40-41.)
Appellant argues that in light of all these injuries to appellee’s back occurring prior to trial and the inability of her expert witness to state that the September 1976 accident at issue here caused her lumbo-sacral strain, the court should have taken from the jury her claim for damages for residual injury.
Appellee, in response, points to her own testimony of suffering continuing pain and undergoing continual treatment after the collision in question and argues that even in the absence of medical testimony concerning the exact cause of her condition, the jury could still properly consider the issue of the permanency of her injury. American Marietta Co. v. Griffin, D.C.App., 203 A.2d 710, 712 (1964). In Jones v. Miller, D.C.App., 290 A.2d 587, 590 (1972), this court recognized the need for expert testimony, in addition to a complainant’s testimony, when recovery is sought for permanent injury, or “complicated medical questions must be resolved.” See Early v. Wagner, D.C.App., 391 A.2d 252 (1978).3
The narrow issue presented then is whether within the meaning of Jones the evidence in this case on the permanency of the injury is “medically complicated” so as to have required medical testimony that appellee’s back condition was caused by appellant’s colliding with her bus in September. We conclude that given the unique circumstances of two vehicular accidents occurring to appellee within less than two months of each other in 1976 and the occurrence of two other accidents prior to trial in which she incurred injury to her back and for which she received medical treatment, this was a medically complicated case. Accordingly, it was necessary for appellee to present medical testimony that the particular collision she had with appellant’s bus directly caused permanent injury to her back. Since she did not do so the trial court, in our view, erred in permitting the jury to consider her claim for permanent injury.
[363]*363Appellant argues that the trial court also should have directed a verdict in its favor on the issue of negligence. We are not so persuaded given the testimony of appellant’s employee that he deliberately rolled his bus backward down an incline in order to jump-start it and thereby ran into appellee’s bus.4 Nor are we persuaded that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to declare a mistrial when appellee’s counsel during his opening statement to the jury stated to the jurors, before opposing counsel’s objection interrupted his remarks, that “by making us prove all this in court, the bus company [appellant] has laid the checkbook squarely in your hands .... ” (Record at 10.) We agree with appellant that such remark was inflammatory and so we concur with the admonition given appel-lee’s counsel by the trial judge. However, we do not consider this remark to have had sufficient impact to prejudice appellant and require the declaration of a mistrial.
Accordingly, the finding of negligence on the part of appellant is affirmed, but we set aside the verdict and reverse the judgment and remand the case for a new trial on the issue of damages.5 Early v. Wagner, supra.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
428 A.2d 360, 1981 D.C. App. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-line-inc-v-keaton-dc-1981.