Jakoski v. Holland

520 P.2d 569, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 282
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1974
Docket1724 and 1795
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 520 P.2d 569 (Jakoski v. Holland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jakoski v. Holland, 520 P.2d 569, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 282 (Ala. 1974).

Opinions

OPINION

BOOCHEVER, Justice.

Jacqueline and Carl Jakoski appeal from the August 9, 1972 final judgment in the superior court, pursuant to a jury award to them of $18,000 in their action against H. Russel Holland. The main appeal raises two evidentiary questions — whether the trial judge erroneously excluded relevant evidence and admitted irrelevant, prejudicial, evidence — and challenges the award as being contrary to the weight of the evidence. The cross-appeal initiated by defendant Holland raises the question of whether Mr. Jakoski’s loss of consortium claim was barred by the running of the statute of limitations and challenges the awards of plaintiffs’ and defendant’s attorneys’ fees.

On November 13, 1968 at about 8:15 a. m., Jacqueline Jakoski was proceeding north on the Seward Highway near its intersection with Lewis Lane on the outskirts of Anchorage in her 1963 Mercedes sedan. There she stopped her vehicle to avoid colliding with a possibly-disabled car which had itself stopped in her lane. H. Russel Holland was also proceeding north on the Seward Highway some distance behind Mrs. Jakoski. tie first noticed the stationary Jakoski vehicle when approximately 100 feet from it. He immediately applied the brakes and skidded approximately 27 paces (in the estimate of the state trooper who investigated the accident) before colliding with the rear end of the Ja-koski Mercedes.

On September 11, 1970, Mrs. Jakoski filed a complaint charging Holland with negligence. On November 12, 1971, a pretrial conference was held. Pursuant to the pre-trial order on November 18, 1971 (3 years and 5 days after the date of the accident), Mrs. Jakoski filed an amended complaint adding a claim by her husband Carl Jakoski for loss of consortium. This added claim was based on the same facts as Mrs. Jakoski’s personal injury claim.

On January 24, 1972, Holland filed an offer of judgment pursuant to Civil Rule 68 offering entry of judgment against him for $25,000 plus- $2,600 in costs and attorney’s fees. The Jakoskis rejected the offer by failing to respond within the 10-day period prescribed by Civil Rule 68.

[571]*571On January 25, 1972, Holland moved to dismiss Carl Jakoski’s consortium claim as barred by the applicable 2-year statute of limitations, AS 09.10.070. The court took the motion under advisement but never ruled on it. Undaunted, Holland moved on March 6, 1972 for partial summary judgment to dismiss the consortium claim on the same grounds. After argument by both parties, the court denied the motion.

Trial commenced on March 28, 1972. Mrs. Jakoski attempted to demonstrate that the accident had caused cervical nerve root damage, severe chronic headaches and resulting mental and physical impairment. In the course of plaintiffs’ case, their counsel sought to introduce testimony of certain lay witnesses, fellow employees of Mrs. Jakoski both before and after the 1968 accident, to show that in their opinions she was unemployable after the accident because she was suffering great pain from headaches. The court sustained defense objections and ruled that the lay witnesses must confine their testimony to their observations and would not be allowed to relate their opinions as to whether she was able to work.

During cross-examination of Mrs. Jako-ski, defense counsel sought to question her about her son’s having been indicted in April 1968 for the felony of assault with a dangerous weapon. Over objection of plaintiffs’ counsel, the court allowed the questioning. Mr. Jakoski, subject to the same objection, was also questioned regarding the criminal proceedings against his son.

In summation to the jury, plaintiffs’ counsel called for a verdict of $545,000. Defense counsel, by contrast, suggested that if the jury believed Holland liable, they should return a verdict of $15,000 for Mrs. Jakoski and $2,000 for Mr. Jakoski. The jury returned its verdict on April 10, 1972, awarding Mrs. Jakoski $16,000 and Mr. Jakoski $2,000 on his consortium claim.

From the judgment entered pursuant to the jury verdict, the Jakoskis’ appeal and Holland cross-appeals.

I

EXCLUSION OF LAY TESTIMONY

Briefly recapitulating, the court allowed Mrs. Jakoski’s co-workers, Carol Sturgeon and Ann Reid, to relate their observations but upheld objections to their expressing an opinion on her ability to work. The Jakoskis argue that the prevailing authority favors receiving lay opinion in such circumstances, citing 32 C.J.S. Evidence § 546(23) at 164-165:

Such an observer may also infer and state that a person’s ability to help himself or to work has or has not been impaired ; that he continued his usual work in the customary manner; that after the injury he tried to do all the work he could; and that certain work exhausted a diseased person and required nearly all the strength he had, as bearing on the physical condition of another. The witness may also state the inability of such person to follow an occupation because of his condition and whether there has or has not been an impairment of his faculties, or the use of his limbs or other parts of his body, or his earning capacity (footnotes omitted).

In Houger v. Houger,1 we addressed a nearly identical issue. Houger was a divorce case, which raised, inter alia, the question of the fairness of a child support decree. The trial court had modified the decree on the ground that a recent automobile accident had rendered the father medically unfit to work. Faced with the subsidiary question of whether the father’s father and brother, who were his fellow workers, were competent to testify that since the accident he was incapable of working in their business as a floor finisher or carpenter, we held that they were, stating:

If a question of the nature or character of appellee’s injuries were involved, [572]*572some special skill would be needed, and expert testimony by someone qualified in medical science would be required. But as Professor Wigmore points out,'there are numerous related matters involving health and bodily soundness, not exclusively with the domain of medical science, upon which the ordinary experience of everyday life is entirely sufficient. One of such matters is a man’s capacity or lack of it to perform certain types of work as it relates to an injury he has received. On this subject there is probably no one better informed than the injured man himself, or his associates who observe his efforts to perform such work.2

We agree with the appellants that Houger is dispositive, and that the lower court erred in excluding the proffered opinion testimony of Mrs. Jakoski’s coworkers, Sturgeon and Reid. Their testimony, as far as we can perceive from the record before us, would not have included technical assessments of the nature or character of Mrs. Jakoski’s injuries. Rather, these witnesses would have testified only that in their opinion, appellant was experiencing such pain in the days immediately following the accident that she was unable to work at all. We think that there are only two foundational prerequisites to the admission of lay opinion testimony concerning the effect of an injury upon an individual’s capacity to perform certain types of work.

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Bluebook (online)
520 P.2d 569, 1974 Alas. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jakoski-v-holland-alaska-1974.