James v. Robeck

490 P.2d 878, 79 Wash. 2d 864, 1971 Wash. LEXIS 660
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1971
Docket41790
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 490 P.2d 878 (James v. Robeck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. Robeck, 490 P.2d 878, 79 Wash. 2d 864, 1971 Wash. LEXIS 660 (Wash. 1971).

Opinions

Hale, J.

As an alternative to a new trial, the court reduced a personal injury verdict from $17,000 to $7,500. Plaintiff appealed and the Court of Appeals affirmed. 3 Wn. App. 108, 472 P.2d 635 (1970). This court granted review (78 Wn.2d 992 (1970)), and we reverse to reinstate the verdict.

Embert James, plaintiff, was driving a Volkswagen automobile — a light, compact car — west on Post Road in Snoho-mish County when defendant drove his 1965 Plymouth car through a stop sign at the Post and Emander Roads intersection, striking plaintiff’s car on the right side near the rear. From the evidence, the jury could have found that defendant Robeck neither heeded the stop sign nor slowed down before ramming plaintiff’s car. Defendant did not testify in the case.

Plaintiff’s testimony was uneontradicted that, a moment before impact, he swerved his car to the left; and that defendant’s car struck the. Volkswagen on the right side, putting it into three or four spins, forcing it off the road down .a 30-foot embankment, and into a collision with what he described as “a great, big tree.” Issues of contributory negligence, proximate cause and negligence submitted by instruction were resolved by the jury in favor of the plaintiff, and it returned a verdict of $17,000. As the Court of Appeals stated, 3 Wn. App. 108, the only issue on appeal is whether the record supports the order reducing'the verdict to $7,500. We think it does not.

In reducing the verdict as the alternative to granting a new trial, the learned trial judge concluded that the verdict was so great as to shock the court’s conscience; was unsupported by the evidence; had been induced by passion and prejudice; and that substantial justice had not been done. In the court’s opinion, the evidence of damages was insuffx-[866]*866cient to warrant a verdict of $17,000, and the court concluded that the verdict had, therefore, been based on something other than the. evidence. In entering the alternative order for a new trial or reduction of the verdict, the court referred to counsers conduct in continually referring to plaintiff’s wage loss which had not been proved and to counsel's comments in the presence of the jury that, even though he could not understand the court’s rulings, he would abide by them. The court referred also to counsel’s mention of welfare payments, and the possibility of surgery after the court had ruled out reference to these items. The court then concluded that these statements and comments made by plaintiff’s counsel during trial were the incidents from which passion and prejudice could be in part inferred, and when taken in conjunction with the size of the verdict and the court’s estimate of its excessive size established that the verdict had been induced by passion and prejudice. Without further specification or detail, the court stated that its conclusions of passion and prejudice were in part established, too, by means of its appraisal of the effect these incidents had on the jury as shown through “the demeanor of the jury by the court’s visual observances.”

What it was that the court saw in the faces of the jurors or their demeanor to signify passion and prejudice for or against either party or the court is not delineated. Nor is there evidence in the record of either untoward or inflammatory or hyperdramatic events of such cogency and force as to be unamenable to curative instructions or admonitions, or of a kind and nature which, from their very occurrence, must be said as a matter of law to produce passion and prejudice because of their undeniable impact to induce the jury to violate its oath to deliver a true verdict upon the evidence alone. See James v. Robeck, 3 Wn. App. 108, 109, 472 P.2d 635 (1970).

Our first inquiry is whether the record sustains a verdict of $17,000, for if there is not substantial evidence to support the verdict, the issue of excessive damages becomes moot and ought not stand at all. At the outset, there was proof of [867]*867an impact of sufficient force and momentum to demolish the light car that plaintiff was driving and to impel it off the road and down an embankment into a sharp collision with a tree. There was evidence of facial cuts, pain and discomfort when plaintiff described his condition to the jury. He was, he said, 25 years old and a commercial fisherman. He said that, although he could still handle a boat, the persistent pain in his lower back after the accident prevented him from doing the heavy work of a commercial fisherman, and that he had to take pain pills twice a day. He had tried to work as a carpenter, he said, but the work proved too arduous for him to handle. He had tried long-shoring, also, but that had turned out to be too heavy for him, too.

An orthopedic specialist, Dr. Paul H. White, testified that plaintiff did not have a normal back before the accident, that it had an extra segment of bone at the end of the lumbar spine; that trauma to that area produced a greater strain on his back than it would on a normal spine, and that, although plaintiff’s back abnormality had not prevented its normal function before the accident, the injury superimposed upon a congenital abnormality produced a chronic lumbar strain which would intermittently limit plaintiff’s physical activities. The doctor found that 2% years after the collision plaintiff was experiencing back pains and physical limitations causally connected to the automobile collision of November 27,1966.

Another physician, Dr. John B. Kennedy, testified that plaintiff suffered an appreciable disability because of his injury in his lower back area. A neurologist who had examined the plaintiff at the instance of the defense testified that the accident had caused a low back strain and that the injury continued to cause the plaintiff some pain and disability at the time of trial. He said he could not predict when all symptoms due to the accident would disappear, but that eventually plaintiff would be cured. Other witnesses testified that, after the accident, plaintiff appeared to have lost considerable athletic ability and capability for the [868]*868kind of heavy work they had seen him perform before the accident.

Plaintiff acknowledged that, in Alaska during the summer following the accident, he won the 3.6 mile marathon foot race up Deer Mountain in 62 minutes against a field of 32 contestants and, too, that he had played basketball and volleyball regularly after the accident. None of the doctors testified that there would be a permanent disability or even that the injury was permanent, but each agreed that the accident had caused to plaintiff’s low back a strain or sprain superimposed upon a minor congenital abnormality of the lumbosacral region. They agreed, too;, that the sprain or strain, while not permanent, would persist for an unknown period. Plaintiff was in the hospital for only an hour after the accident while glass was removed' from his forehead. His total special damages proved for medical care and eyeglasses came to $193.41.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
490 P.2d 878, 79 Wash. 2d 864, 1971 Wash. LEXIS 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-robeck-wash-1971.