Hurr v. Johnston

65 N.W.2d 193, 242 Minn. 329, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 649
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 11, 1954
Docket36,110
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 65 N.W.2d 193 (Hurr v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurr v. Johnston, 65 N.W.2d 193, 242 Minn. 329, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 649 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

Two negligence actions were consolidated below for jury trial. Plaintiff Sophie Caroline Hurr sued for her personal injuries, and her husband, Lawrence L. Hurr, sued to recover property damages to his automobile, the cost of medical care and services for his wife, *330 compensation for loss of her services, and other items of special damage. Actions by the plaintiffs were based on the claimed negligence of the defendant.

The jury returned verdicts for wife and husband in the amounts of $100 and $180.50 respectively. Plaintiffs thereafter moved for an order granting new trials on the issue of damages alone, or, in the alternative, new trials on all issues. The motion was denied. Plaintiffs appeal from the order of the court below.

The accident in question occurred shortly after noon January 16, 1949, while plaintiffs were driving home from church. The plaintiff Lawrence L. Hurr was, at the time, driving an automobile of which he was the owner; the plaintiff Sophie Caroline Hurr, his wife, was seated beside him in the front seat; their son and a friend occupied the rear seat. Plaintiffs were proceeding south on Lyndale avenue, and after crossing the intersection of Twenty-seventh street they came to a stop in a long line of traffic for the signal light on Twenty-eighth street. Within a few seconds an automobile owned and driven by defendant, Roscoe C. Johnston, collided with plaintiffs’ automobile from the rear. According to the testimony of the defendant, he had been traveling from 18 to 20 miles per hour but had slowed down to 12 miles per hour while crossing an intersection before reaching the point of collision. There was a sharp dispute in the testimony as to whether there was a patch of ice immediately behind where plaintiffs’ automobile had stopped. Plaintiffs’ witnesses testified that there was not; defendant and his witnesses testified that there was. The impact from the collision was of sufficient force to drive plaintiffs’ automobile into the car immediately ahead. It appears without dispute that the impact of the collision was of such force that it damaged the car ahead of plaintiffs’ to the extent of $15, plaintiffs’ automobile to the extent of $95.90, and defendant’s automobile to the extent of $160. It also appears from the testimony that plaintiffs’ automobile and that of the defendant were interlocked and so remained until separated by a wrecker approximately 45 minutes after the accident. It appears that an ambulance was *331 called by defendant which arrived some five or ten minutes after the accident.

There is in the testimony a sharp controversy as to Mrs. Hurr’s conduct immediately after the accident. She testified that she “blacked out” immediately following the impact and could not talk or remember any incidents following the accident until on the way home, some 45 minutes later. The driver of the car which had stopped ahead of plaintiffs’ car testified that he spoke to Mrs. Hurr following the accident and that she told him then that she was not hurt. Both this driver and the defendant testified that Mrs. Hurr was entirely conscious and that she severely reprimanded defendant at the scene of the accident. There was álso testimony that she told the ambulance physician that she did not need any medical attention and as a result the ambulance was used only to carry defendant’s wife to the hospital.

Mrs. Hurr, however, testified that she became nauseated and suffered from a headache the night of the accident and later awoke with a stiff spine and sore swollen right foot and ankle. She went to Dr. R. T. LaVake on Wednesday following the accident and he referred her to Dr. John F. Pohl, an orthopedic surgeon, who examined and treated her at somewhat regular intervals between that time and into the month of October 1949. This is undisputed. It appears that Dr. Pohl, after examining the X rays, diagnosed her condition as a strain of the neck, right shoulder, and right ankle and prescribed heat and other treatment including X ray, for some of the painful areas. It appears from the testimony that upon subsequent examinations made by Dr. Pohl, Mrs. Hurr continued to complain of the pain in her neck and shoulder, and Dr. Pohl later discovered slight atrophy of her right arm indicating that she was not using her right arm normally. She was also examined by a neurologist at the suggestion of Dr. Pohl. During the months between the time of the accident and October of the same year Mrs. Hurr also underwent several heat and exercise treatments as had been prescribed by Dr. Pohl.

*332 Dr. Jacob H. Strickler examined Mrs. Hurr at defendant’s request on August 12, 1949. After October 1949 she had no more medical care. She was again examined by Dr. Strickler at defendant’s request in the fall of 1952. The testimony of Dr. Strickler is to the effect that he found no residuals of any injury, and his opinion was that Mrs. Hurr could only have sustained muscle strains which would have originally healed in a few days to two months. Dr. Strickler, testifying at the request of the defendant, also discovered by X rays that Mrs. Hurr was suffering from osteoarthritis of the cervical spine and that such symptoms were also apparent on the X rays taken only three days after the accident occurred. Dr. Strickler also found Mrs. Hurr to be suffering from varicose veins, although there was controversy between the doctors testifying as to whether such veins could cause pain in the legs. Plaintiffs did not commence their actions until July 10, 1950.

In the instant cases the evidence presents sharply conflicting versions of the facts surrounding the accident and also the issue of the extent of plaintiff Mrs. Hurr’s injuries and whether all the medical expenses incurred were reasonably necessary and connected with injuries arising out of the accident. Plaintiff testified that for better than two months she was unable to do any of her work and was confined to her bed most of the time; that she was only able to do a part of her work by October 1949 ; and that she continued to suffer as a result of this accident at the time of trial. The only evidence to dispute this claim on the part of plaintiff Mrs. Hurr is to be found in statements made by her, according to defendant’s claims, at the scene of the accident and in the medical testimony of defendant’s witness Dr. Strickler. On the other hand, she continued under the care and treatment of Dr. Pohl from the third day following the accident until near the end of October 1949, undergoing heat, therapy, and other treatments as prescribed by him and incurring a doctor’s bill for examinations and treatments administered on his part alone in the sum of $189.

The evidence discloses the following special damages alleged to have been incurred by the plaintiff Mr. Hurr due to the accident:

*333 Car damage to Mr. Hum's car...........................$ 95.90

Glasses ................. 6.90

Hr. LaVake, services to Mrs. Hurr........................ 10.00

Curative workshop and therapy for Mrs. Hurr............ 6.00

Drs. Challberg and Anderson for therapy for Mrs. Hurr.. .. 33.00

Dr. Harold F. Buchstein for neurological examination of Mrs. Hum ........................................... 15.00

Dr. Malcolm B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 N.W.2d 193, 242 Minn. 329, 1954 Minn. LEXIS 649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurr-v-johnston-minn-1954.