Johnson Freight Lines, Inc. v. Tallent

384 S.W.2d 46, 53 Tenn. App. 464, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 21, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 384 S.W.2d 46 (Johnson Freight Lines, Inc. v. Tallent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson Freight Lines, Inc. v. Tallent, 384 S.W.2d 46, 53 Tenn. App. 464, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 113 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

McAMIS, P.J.

These two suits, tried together below, grew out of a three-vehicle collision which occurred in Hamilton County July 29, 1961. The jury returned verdicts in favor of Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Tallent in the respective amounts of $7,500.00 and $5,000.00 against Johnson Freight Lines, Inc., and Don Keener, the driver of its truck. Judgments were entered on the verdicts from which the Freight Lines and Keener have appealed.

Since no question is made on the issue of negligence it will suffice to state with respect to the accident that the Smith car was struck from the rear by the truck and knocked forward into the Tallent car driven by the husband of plaintiff, Margaret A. Tallent. As a result, Mrs. Tallent was thrown about in the car but apparently sustained no visible physical injuries. In her case, which will be first considered, the declaration avers that as a result of the accident and being thrown about in the car Mrs. Tallent suffered a recurrence of a previous emotional upset from which she had recovered and had suffered a change of personality.

Mrs. Tallent did not testify. If a case was made out in her case it is upon the testimony of lay witnesses as to the behavior of Mrs. Tallent prior to psychiatric treatment in 1958 and 1959, her apparent recovery before the *467 accident, lay testimony as to her mental condition following the accident and npon answers of Dr.. Sottong, a psychiatrist, and Dr. Wood a general practitioner of medicine, to certain hypothetical questions.

Mrs. Tallent’s husband and two of her sisters testified that she had an emotional upset or nervous breakdown in 1958 for which she was given psychiatric treatment and the electric shock and insulin treatment in a Nashville hospital; that prior to these treatments she had developed hostility toward certain members of her family as well as close personal friends, discontinued social and civic contacts and responsibilities and seemed to wish to be alone and live in a state of withdrawal, but that after taking these treatments for several months her mental condition changed so that she resumed normal relations with friends and relatives and attendance at P.T.A. and church meetings in the same way as before the onset of her illness in 1958.

Mr. Tallent testified that his wife became emotionally upset at the scene of the accident and that he induced her to leave and go home, that thereafter her old symptoms recurred and that she became, in his opinion, of unsound mind. There is other testimony in the record to the same effect and none to the contrary.

Defendant insists the court erred in allowing Doctors Sottong and Wood to testify on the basis of hypothetical questions which were allegedly based upon hearsay opinions and conclusions of lay witnesses as to the state of mind of Mrs. Tallent and, particularly, that it was error to overrule defendant’s objection to the following hypothetical question:

“Assuming, Doctor, that a forty-year old woman had *468 been in normal physical and mental health prior to May of 1958; had over the years worked at public works, for T.V.A., public schools, as a drug- clerk; had worked in her home as a housewife; and who had no previous history of mental or emotional disturbance; suddenly begun first to be nervous, apprehensive and agitated, and then after that progressed to the place that she imagined persecution, that people were talking about her; depressed so that she cried, and so that she withdrew from all her normal activities, such as Parent-Teachers, church, school activities; would stay at home in bed with a complaint of backache for days, and even a week at a time; and that this woman was treated with electric shock treatments for two weeks in 1958, and thereafter was hospitalized from December 28, 1958 to March 10, 1959, receiving insulin and electric shock treatments; and that this forty-year old woman then was placed on stelazine, seeing the doctor monthly, a neuro-psychiatrist; and that from March until July 29, 1961 that she had ceased to have delusions, that she was again going to meetings, participating in community activities, and engaging in what would generally have been her normal behavior and conduct before the onset of the incident in 1958, and that on July 29,1961 she was at night involved in an accident wherein the ear in which she was riding was struck from the rear twice with such force that she was thrown forward into the windshield, and thrown about inside the car. The' seat was knocked forward in the car. The children — her two children in the back seat were thrown about in the car, and that she became nervous that night, and the next day began again to show the symptoms that I outline as having originated in 1958. The sense of apprehension, a sense of fear of *469 people, a sense of people spying on her, a distrust of her sisters, mother and father and husband; and that she developed a further delusional idea that the government controlled all the world, that we didn’t even own property, and that we were under the domination of the master government. That she withdrew again, and would stay in bed for long periods of time. Would you, Doctor, or not say that this recurrence or incidence that I have described last could have resulted from the accident of July 29, 1961?”

It is also insisted for the same reason that the Court erred in accepting Dr. Sottong’s affirmative answer as to his opinion of the cause of Mrs. Tallent’s relapse. The same insistence is made with respect to a substantially similar, if not identical, question propounded to Dr. Wood and his affirmative answer thereto.

As we read the assignments and brief it is not insisted that objection was made to the lay testimony above summarized and such objections erroneously overruled or that such evidence was improperly admitted. The insistence is that this evidence was improperly used to lay the basis for the hypothetical questions propounded to Dr. Sottong and Dr. Wood as expert witnesses and that their answers thereto should have been excluded.

In support of this insistence strong reliance is placed upon Gulf Refining Company v. Frazier, 19 Tenn.App. 76, 83 S.W.(2d) 285, where the rule was laid down that a physician whose examination was made solely for the purpose of being able to testify as an expert witness in behalf of the person examined and not in the regular course of professional treatment will not be permitted to testify as to conclusions reached from such examination.

*470 This rule was reiterated in Lemarr v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., 24 Tenn.App. 294, 143 S.W.(2d) 891, where reference was made to a previous opinion in Gulf Refining Company v. Frazier reported at 15 Tenn.App. 662 and the reason for the rule stated as follows:

“The reason for this ruling is that such testimony is open to the suspicion of symptoms having been manufactured or feigned by the patient for the purpose of influencing the opinion of the examining physician and we think the same reasoning applies to the testimony of a physician employed to investigate the mental soundness or unsoundness of a patient for the purpose of testifying for him as a witness.'’

Defendant’s brief also quotes at length from annotations at 66 A.L.R. 1087 and 98 A.L.R. 1110, 1111, including the following:

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Bluebook (online)
384 S.W.2d 46, 53 Tenn. App. 464, 1964 Tenn. App. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-freight-lines-inc-v-tallent-tennctapp-1964.