Henshaw v. Brunson

1929 OK 159, 278 P. 645, 137 Okla. 180, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 428
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 9, 1929
Docket18975
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1929 OK 159 (Henshaw v. Brunson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henshaw v. Brunson, 1929 OK 159, 278 P. 645, 137 Okla. 180, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 428 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

DIFFENDAFFER, C.

This is an action instituted in the district court of Canadian county by G. G. Brunson, defendant in error, hereinafter referred' to as plaintiff, against George A. Henshaw and G. T. Lackey, receivers for the Oklahoma Railway Company, a corporation, plaintiffs in error, 'hereinafter referred to as defendants, to recover damages for personal injuries arising from a collision between a street car operated by defendants and an automobile, driven by one Robert Knie, in which p1 aintiff was riding as a passenger. The injuries alleged to hare been sustained by plaintiff were:

“That he sustained a severe blow upon the head, a concussion of the brain and was rendered unconscious thereby; that his back was severely wrenched, twisted and injured;
the bones of his spinal column broken and displaced, and the muscles, tendons and ligaments and the nerves thereof injured. That the bones of his pelvis were crushed and broken in such a manner as to affect the connection of the hips and the legs with the pelvis, and thereby rendered the plaintiff lame and cripp.ed; that he sustained a severe internal injury to his kidneys, bladder and urine, the 'exact nature and extent of which he is unable to describe at this time. Plaintiff alleges that he sustained a severe and profound mental and nervous shock as a result of said injuries; that he has suffered‘great pain and anguish, both of mind and body; that his injuries are permanent, and that he will continue to suffer thereby; that by reason of said injuries, the various glands of his body 'have be'en injured and swollen and failed to function.”

. Plaintiff al.'eg'ed that he was engaged in the real estate business, and had an earning capacity of $4,000 per annum, and that as a result of the injuries he has been deprived of his earnings and is permanently disabled from engaging in his work and vocation; that he lias obligated 'himself to expend the sum of $100 for medical advice and attention, and will be required in the future to expend large sums of money for medical treatment and advice, the amount of which could not be known. He, alleged damages in the amount of $50,000, for which sum he prayed judgment.

.Defendants answered by general denial and a plea of contributory negligence.

A trial to a jury was had resulting in a verdict of $10,000 in favor of plaintiff. After unsuccessful motion for a new trial, judgment was entered for plaintiff for the amount of the verdict, and defendants bring this appeal.

There are 24 assignments of error, but defendants in their brief say they rely upon four of them, viz.:

(1) That said court erred in overruling motion for a new trial of said plaintiffs in error, defendants below.

(18) That the verdict of the jury is outrageously excessive, and appears to have ■been given under tlie influence of passion or prejudice.

(19) That the verdict of the jury is not supported by the evidence.

(20) That the verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence.

Under these four assignments defendants present the single proposition that th'e verdict of the jury is excessive and appears to *181 have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice.

The eo.lision out of which this action arose occurred on the 23rd day of March, 1920, at the intersection of Shartel avenue and Thirty-first street, in Oklahoma City. Shartel avenue runs north and south; Thirty-first street runs east and west. The street car operated by defendants was going north on Shartel avenue, and the automobile in which plaintiff was riding was going west on Thirty-first street. Immediately after the collision, plaintiff was taken in an ambulance to St. Anthony’s Hospital, where he was examined and his injuries were treated. The physician and surgeon who treated him was Dr. W. K. West, surgeon for the defendant receivers. X-ray photographs of the bone structures of his body were made, and a general examination as to his condition was made by the hospital staff. There is no substantial conflict as to the nature of the injuries received. Dr. West, a witness for defendants, testified:

“Q. Well, as a resu't of your examination, or, from the X-rays, did you ascertain the injuries, if any, which Mr. Brunson had sustained in the accident? A. Yes. Q. What were they? A. He had three injuries; he had a fracture of the ascending ramus of the pelvis on the left side; also the descending ramus of the pelvis on the left side which is the fracture of both pronrnenees of the bone of the left side, and they are between the hip bones and the m'd-line; and then, he also had a piece of bone fractured off the spine or the projection, what we call the transverse process off of the right side of the third lumbar vevte ra: he also.had’ some minor injuries that he cal'ed to.my attention on his hands, bruises, which didn’t amount to anything; those three fractures were his real injuries.”

There is some evidence tending to show that one rib was fractured. Plaintiff was placed in a plaster cast extending from his arms down to his knees. He remained in the plaster cast five or six wTeeks. X-ray view’s were again taken on April 30th, five and one-half weeks after the first ones were taken. After the cast was removed, plaintiff remained in the hospital about five w'eeks. For a part of that time he used a wheel chair, and after that he could walk about by the aid of crutches. He used crutches until some time in August, after Which he was able to walk without them. There is some conflict in the evidence as to whether he used a cane or not until about the following November, at which time he collapsed While sitting in his office, and was taken to the hospital of Dr. Hubbard, wdiere he remained under treatment for about four w eeks.

The controversy here arises not so much over the nature of the injuries as the extent and effect thereof. Plaintiff contends that his injuries are permanent, and defendants contend that at the time of the trial plaintiff had entirely recovered, and that he did not then and did not later suffer any trouble or discomfort by reason of the accident, and that a verdict of $10,000 as compensation for pain and suffering and loss of wages during a period of less than one year is excessive.

On the question of the permanency of the injuries, the evidence is in conflict. Aside from the evidence of plaintiff himself, We are left largely to evidence of expert witnesses on this point. X-ray views were tak’en at El Reno shortly before or during the trial, and several physicians, Dr. Joseph T. Phelps of Oklahoma City, Dr. Ralph Myers of Oklahoma City, Dr. James T. Riley of El Reno, and Dr. W. K. West, all qualified as 'experts in reading X-ray photographs, testified in substance that from examination of the various X-ray views, including some taken by Dr. Sullivan in August, 1926, in their opinion the fractures of the bones had heal'ed, and that the union was practically perfect, and that in their opinion, plaintiff shou d not be and was not then suffering from any inconvenience or disability on account of the injuries. Th'ey all testified, however, chat as to the fractures of the pelvic luie, the picmres show that the union of the bone was perfect, but that the bone was not perfectly plae'ed together; that there was a slight misplacement in that the bone on one side of the line of fracture was slightly higher than on the other side.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 159, 278 P. 645, 137 Okla. 180, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henshaw-v-brunson-okla-1929.