Imbimo v. Ahrens

44 Mass. App. Dec. 116
CourtMassachusetts District Court, Appellate Division
DecidedJuly 1, 1970
DocketNo. 7233; No. 1445
StatusPublished

This text of 44 Mass. App. Dec. 116 (Imbimo v. Ahrens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts District Court, Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Imbimo v. Ahrens, 44 Mass. App. Dec. 116 (Mass. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

* Parker, J.

In this action of tort, the plaintiffs seek to recover from the defendant for personal injuries, consequential and property damages resulting from an automobile accident caused by the negligence of the defendant. The declaration contained counts by the plaintiff, Anglina D. Imbimo for personal injuries, Patricia Imbimo a minor, for personal injuries, Maria Imbimo a minor, for personal injuries and Dante Imbimo as owner of a motor vehicle for property damage. There are also counts by Dante, Angelina’s husband and father of Patricia and Maria, for consequential damages. The defendant’s answer contained a general denial and defenses of contributory negligence and of violation of law.

There was evidence as follows:

The plaintiff, Angelina, was operating an automobile owned by her husband, at about [118]*1188:15 A.M., 4 February 1968. At' the intersection of Highland Avenue and Medford Street, Malden she was. involved in an accident with an automobile owned and operated by the defendant. In the car with her were the plaintiffs Maria, sitting in the front seat next to her, and Patricia, sitting on the extreme right of the front seat.

Angelina injured her right hand, left leg, left side and left chest. She was taken to the hospital where she called her family doctor, Dr. Blotnick, and was treated in the out-patient department and sent home. At the time of the accident her condition was generally good other than fluid in her legs. She had no trouble with her chest before this accident. At the end of three weeks she returned to work and was able to do her full work. On the first or second of May, 1968 she observed a lump on her left breast and recalled that in the accident she had hit her breast on the steering wheel. She went to Dr. Blotnick immediately and, following consultation with him,was admitted to the Malden Hospital, where Dr. Greary performed a radical mastectomy. She had had no trouble with her breast at all until five or six days prior to 6 May 1968, when she consulted Dr. Blotnick.

Dr. Blotnick treated Angelina and the children at the outpatient department of the hospital after the accident and saw Angelina six or seven times, the final visit being in March 1968. He saw her again on 6 May 1968 with refer[119]*119ence to the complaint of a lump on her left breast. Dr. Blotnick had been Angelina’s family physician for two years and until May of 1968 she had never complained to him of chest pain or pain in the left breast. On 20 May 1968 Dr. Geary performed surgery and a biopsy of the. mass was made which revealed lymphal growth, Dr. Geary removed seventeen lymph glands, four of which showed evidence of metarousis.

Dr. Blotnick expressed no opinion as to any relationship between the automobile accident and the ensuing carcinoma which was diagnosed in May 1968, stating that he was unable to form an opinion. He testified that the dimpling of the skin, which was observed by another physician in May 1968, was not indicative that the lesion had existed for any length of time, but was characteristic of the malignancy of the growth. Dr. Geary, the operating physician, testified that his examination of Mrs. Imbimo showed dimpling of the skin which indicated carcinoma.

Dr. Geary was asked the following hypothetical- question: Assuming that prior to the accident on February 4, 1968, the plaintiff whose general condition was good, was involved in an accident and as a result of the accident she was thrown around her vehice and struck her left chest on the steering wheel and fractured her right hand disabling her for a period of three weeks following which: she-resumed her [120]*120regular work; and assuming further that on May 6,1968 she went to her attending physician because of a lump she had discovered in her left breast some seven days previously, would you have an opinion as to the causal connection between the accident and the subsequent cancer? Dr. Geary’s answer to the question was:— “Trauma can aggravate the condition.”

“It can be a factor which could aggravate an existing condition of cancer”? It is not clear whether this is a question by counsel or whether it is a statement by the doctor. We, therefore, disregard the statement or question.

However, Dr. Geary testified that the dimpling of the skin, which he observed at the date of his first examination, indicated to him that the cancer had been in existence for some period of time and that it was probably present on 4 February 1968 when the accident occurred, and that it was possible that a blow might have aggravated the lump, that trauma can cause tissue to spread and that it was possible that the blow might have aggravated the lump, it could send off emboli of cancer cells and spread them and could spread a pre-existing* cancer condition and there was a possibility that a blow could have aggravated the quiescent condition at the time of the accident.

Dr. Thomas Alglem, a qualified physician specializing in diagnosis and treatment of carcinoma, testified that he had not examined the patient, but had studied all the hospital [121]*121records involving her treatment since her outpatient visit to the hospital on 4 February 1968 and the record of Dr. Carey who had examined the patient on April 16, 1968. In his opinion there was no connection at all between the automobile accident of 4 February 1968 and the subsequent cancer resulting in the left mastectomy performed on the plaintiff in May of 1968. On cross examination of ths doctor he stated that in surgical operations caution is taken not to traumatize an existing cancerous condition to avoid spreading the disease and that trauma, under certain conditions might aggravate existing cancer and that precautions are taken to avoid an unnecessary blow.

The defendant seasonably filed the following requests;

1. The evidence does not warrant a finding that the defendant, his agent or servants were negligent.

2. The evidence does not warrant a finding other than that the negligence of the plaintiff contributed in whole or in part to cause the alleged injuries and damage.

3. The evidence does not warrant a finding that the negligence of the defendant proximately caused the alleged injuries 'and damage.

4. As a. matter of law the defendant [122]*122breached no legal duty owed by him to the plaintiff.

5. The evidence does not warrant a finding of a causal connection between the accident and the cancer suffered by the plaintiff in May, 1968 and thereafter.

6. The evidence does not warrant a finding that the accident of February 4, 1968 caused the cancerous condition of the plaintiff’s left breast which was diagnosed in May, 1968.

7. The evidence does not warrant a finding that the alleged accident aggravated an existing condition of cancer of the plaintiff’s left breast.

8. As a matter of law the evidence is conjectured respecting any causal connections between the accident and the subsequent cancer suffered by the plaintiff in May of 1968.

The court denied all the requests except #5 and made the following finding:

“I find, as a fact, upon all of the evidence that the plaintiff was in the exercise of due care.

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44 Mass. App. Dec. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imbimo-v-ahrens-massdistctapp-1970.