Guttman v. Civet

327 P.2d 232, 161 Cal. App. 2d 816, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1811
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 3, 1958
DocketCiv. No. 22606
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 327 P.2d 232 (Guttman v. Civet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guttman v. Civet, 327 P.2d 232, 161 Cal. App. 2d 816, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1811 (Cal. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

WOOD (Parker), J.

Action for damages for personal injuries allegedly resulting from an automobile collision. Judgment upon a verdict was in favor of defendant. Plaintiff appeals from the judgment.

Appellant asserts that the court erred (1) in rulings as to [818]*818the admissibility of evidence; and (2) in making certain remarks in the presence of the jury.

. There was testimony on behalf of plaintiff that on July 21, 1954, defendant drove his automobile against the back of plaintiff’s automobile while plaintiff’s automobile was stopped at the entrance to an intersection where a red signal light required plaintiff to stop her automobile; and that plaintiff, who was in the driver’s seat of her automobile, sustained personal injuries.

Defendant testified that when plaintiff stopped her automobile at the intersection, he stopped his automobile behind plaintiff’s automobile; when the signal light changed to green, plaintiff proceeded across the intersection; defendant followed about “half a car length behind” plaintiff’s automobile; when plaintiff’s automobile had gone about 70 feet beyond the intersection and was at a place near the next intersection, plaintiff stopped her automobile suddenly without giving a signal; then defendant’s automobile struck the rear of plaintiff’s automobile; the impact moved plaintiff’s automobile approximately one foot.

Appellant contends that the court erred “in not permitting a proper showing [by plaintiff] of the psychosomatic injuries of plaintiff I" alow, resulting in her amnesia and consequent inability to recollect clearly the sequence of events and her prior conditions.” Appellant does not refer specifically to the questions, objections, and rulings which are involved in this contention, but she cites three pages of the reporter’s transcript. In order to more clearly understand this contention, certain testimony of appellant on cross-examination should be referred to. It appears that, as a result of such cross-examination, the matter of appellant’s credibility was brought into question. On cross-examination, appellant was asked if she had been in an accident of any kind sine** the accident involved here. She answered in the negative. Counsel for appellant asked her if it was a fact that she had filed a lawsuit in New York for damages for personal injuries arising out of an accident in April, 1955 (a date after the accident involved here). She answered in the affirmative. She stated further that she had misunderstood him (counsel for defendant) and she thought he was referring to a car accident—that the accident in New York was in a subway. Then counsel for defendant referred to her deposition (in the present action) and asked her if she had testified therein that she had not been in any accident since July 21, 1954 (the date [819]*819of the accident involved here). She replied that she had so testified. Then counsel for defendant referred to an affidavit which appellant had made in connection with her claim against the New York Transit Authority, and he asked her if she had stated therein (after the accident involved here) that she had never been involved in any other accident in which she was injured or in which she made a claim against anyone by reason of an injury to herself. She answered that question in the affirmative.

As above stated, appellant does not refer specifically to the questions, objections, or rulings which are involved in the above-mentioned contention to the effect that she was not permitted to make a proper showing as to the cause of her alleged inability to remember the sequence of events. In addition to referring generally to three pages of the reporter’s transcript, she states that a reading of the transcript will convince the court that at the time of the trial plaintiff “had not fully regained her memory, due to traumatic amnesia and shock treatments that were administered to her in the Psychiatric Hospital in Philadelpia about one year after she was injured at Los Angeles, consequently she was still confused and frustrated on the witness stand about the various details and incidents that took place or intervened after she was first injured.”

The three pages of the transcript, referred to by appellant, show that appellant’s counsel asked her questions, on redirect examination, regarding injuries she received in an accident in New York in 1955; and regarding the medical treatment she received for those injuries. In answer to those questions, appellant testified to the effect that she was in an accident in New York in April, 1955; that directly after that accident, as far as she could recall, she was treated ‘ ‘ for hysteria, nervous insomnia and shock”; that she was not injured physically in that accident, but was injured emotionally and mentally, and that her arm was hurt “in the manner” in which she was caught in a subway door (her pocketbook was caught in the door, causing her to fall on her knee), and directly after that accident she suffered pains in her arm and the lower part of her back; that she was treated for hysteria and was given shock treatments in a hospital in Philadelphia. There was no objection or ruling with respect to those questions or answers. The above-mentioned transcript references also show that on redirect examination, appellant’s counsel asked her as follows: “Now, you at no time intended to hide or conceal any [820]*820occurrence in New York to this jury, have you?” Defendant objected to the question on the ground that it assumed something that was not in evidence and it was contrary to the evidence. The objection was sustained on the ground that it called for a conclusion. Then her counsel asked her: “When you were under direct examination the only accident I asked you about was the one that took place in Los Angeles on July 21st, 1954 and you restricted your answers to that accident; is that correct?” Defendant objected to the question on the ground that it was leading. The judge said: 1 ‘ Sustained. I think the record will show what questions were asked her and the jurors will rely on their own memory in that respect.” It thus appears that appellant was not precluded from presenting evidence regarding the happening of the New York accident or regarding the medical treatments she received. The two questions, as to which objections were sustained, related to appellant’s appraisal of her own testimony. The court did not err in sustaining objections to those questions.

Appellant also contends that the judge erred in remarking, as follows: “Is the plaintiff going to change her testimony?” Appellant does not state the circumstances under which the remark was made. Immediately preceding the making of the remark, counsel for appellant had asked a physician questions, on redirect examination, which purported to be hypothetical questions regarding personal injuries. One of those questions was in substance, as follows: If plaintiff sustained an injury to the soft tissue of her back on July 21, 1954, “and later on some other injury took place” such as falling on a subway platform in New York and there was an added injury to that part of the back, “would they be related in any way or connected, or would they be aggravated by the second injury?” Defendant objected to the question on the ground that the hypothesis was incomplete. The objection was sustained. Counsel for appellant asked the judge, as follows: “Am. I to understand . . . that ... a later injury could not aggravate a pre-existing condition?” The judge said that there would be no change in the ruling.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
327 P.2d 232, 161 Cal. App. 2d 816, 1958 Cal. App. LEXIS 1811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guttman-v-civet-calctapp-1958.