Johnson v. Williams CA3

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 7, 2021
DocketC088920
StatusUnpublished

This text of Johnson v. Williams CA3 (Johnson v. Williams CA3) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Williams CA3, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 7/7/21 Johnson v. Williams CA3 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT (Placer) ----

MICHAEL JOHNSON et al., C088920

Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. SCV0037100)

v.

JONATHAN WILLIAMS,

Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiffs Michael Johnson and Amae El’shloyh brought this negligence action seeking compensatory damages against a driver, Jonathan Williams, who rear-ended their vehicle at a low speed. After trial, the jury returned a verdict that defendant’s negligence was not a substantial factor in causing harm to either plaintiff. On appeal, plaintiffs argue substantial evidence does not support the jury’s verdict and the trial court abused its discretion in denying their motion for a new trial. These claims fail because plaintiffs had the burden of proof and the evidence did not compel a finding in their favor as a matter of law. El’shloyh further argues the trial court abused its discretion in allowing defendant’s counsel to question her about a bioweapon experiment. To the extent she has

1 preserved the issue for appeal, she has failed to establish any error. We will affirm the judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. The Accident On December 26, 2013, Johnson left the office of his chiropractor, Dr. Geiger, and was stopped at an intersection with El’shloyh in his passenger seat when they were rear- ended by defendant. The jury was told that, if he had testified, defendant would have indicated that his best estimate of his speed was 10 to 15 miles per hour at the time he struck Johnson’s car. The defense expert on accident reconstruction and biomechanics testified that the impact speed of defendant’s car was five to nine miles per hour. Johnson never made any repairs to his car as a result of the accident. Both plaintiffs were wearing seatbelts at the time of the collision, and the airbags did not deploy. El’shloyh called 911, and plaintiffs were taken to the emergency room. CT scans were taken of each plaintiff’s brain and cervical spine before they were released. El’shloyh’s scans were normal, and Johnson’s showed no change from prior scans. B. Evidence of Prior Injuries To understand plaintiffs’ claim that the accident was a substantial factor in causing them harm, we must first summarize the evidence pertaining to their prior injuries. 1. Johnson Johnson had been involved in several previous traffic accidents. After an accident in 1995, he had numbness in his arms. In 2002 or 2003, Johnson was attacked by his roommate. After this incident, Johnson had neck pain, body stiffness, and numbness and tingling in the legs. He was diagnosed with degenerative spine disease and a possible spinal cord injury.

2 In 2008, Johnson was riding a bicycle when he was struck by a car. He lost consciousness for several minutes and was later diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury. He suffered headaches and had pain in his neck, back, arms, and legs. He also complained of numbness in his lower extremities. Johnson began seeing Dr. Geiger after this accident. In December 2012, Johnson was rear-ended at a stop sign by a vehicle traveling over 30 miles per hour. After that accident, Johnson had pain in his head, neck, low back, arms, legs, and fingers, as well as numbness in his low back and hip. Dr. Geiger concluded Johnson would have permanent pain in his neck and back as a result of the 2012 accident.1 During his visit to Dr. Geiger just before the December 26, 2013 accident, Johnson complained of neck and back pain, and tingling in his legs. An MRI was taken of his lumbar and cervical spine. 2. El’shloyh When El’shloyh was six years old, she was hung from a tree, which scarred her neck and damaged her trachea such that she was unable to speak for two years. In 1994, she suffered a facial fracture in a car accident. In 1997, she fractured her spine in a fall. In 1998, her skull was fractured when she was assaulted. Dr. Geiger first treated El’shloyh in 2009. At that time, she complained of neck pain, right shoulder pain, low back pain, and hip pain. C. Post-Accident 1. Johnson Johnson testified that after his most recent car accident, he had trouble sleeping, and his arms and legs were numb. Additionally, his neck pain, back pain, joint pain, head pain, and soreness all increased after the collision.

1 Dr. Geiger’s deposition testimony was read for the jury.

3 The day after the accident, Dr. Geiger examined Johnson again. At that time, Johnson complained of neck pain that radiated to the left trapezius muscle, elbow pain, mid-back pain, pain in his shoulder joints and sacral base, clicking and popping in his jaw, wrist pain, shoulder pain, sleeplessness, difficulty concentrating, difficulty with memory, difficulty with balance, and forgetfulness. Dr. Geiger’s tests supported Johnson’s complaints, some of which were new, but some of the conditions, “as far as neck pain, mid back pain, and lower back pain, were the same, except that the pain intensity had increased.” Dr. Geiger opined that the exacerbation of old symptoms and the new symptoms, such as jaw issues and neck pain that radiated to the left trapezius muscle, were caused by the latest accident. Dr. Geiger stopped treating Johnson in March 2014. Johnson also introduced testimony from a chiropractic radiologist, two additional chiropractors, and a neurosurgeon, all of whom examined him at some point after the 2013 accident. The defense played the video deposition testimony of Dr. Eyster for the jury. Dr. Eyster is a neurosurgeon, and he examined Johnson in August 2017. Dr. Eyster opined there was nothing objective to support any of Johnson’s complaints of new or further injury after the accident, though the accident may have caused a cervical strain. A cervical strain is like a pulled muscle; the cervical muscle is attached to the base of the skull. 2. El’shloyh El’shloyh testified that after the accident she had problems with her head, jaw, neck, mid-back, hip, and shoulder. She also had double vision. The day after the accident, El’shloyh saw Dr. Geiger for the first time since 2009. She complained of occipital pain that radiated to the right side of her face and jaw, mid- back pain, pain in both shoulder joints, clavicular pain, headache, hazy vision, neck pain, a popping sensation in her right hip, numbness or tingling in her right leg, right wrist

4 pain, and popping in her right wrist. El’shloyh also complained that her bite was off, chewing was painful, her balance was off, “her guts and stomach were off, [and] that she had these urges to urinate or defecate.” Dr. Geiger indicated his findings supported her complaints. He ultimately opined that even though the collision was low-impact, the forces were enough to have caused her problems: “My opinion was that she had suffered from a low-impact collision; that those forces were enough to cause damage to those ligamentous structures; and that forces in hypertension were bad enough, when she hit the headrest, it caused her [jaw] problems, which were exacerbated by the fact that she had previous injuries and probably weakness in the structures due to the previous injuries.” Dr. Geiger did not see El’shloyh after April 2014. Starting in March 2014, El’shloyh saw the same additional chiropractors that Johnson relied on. They also testified as to their evaluation of El’shloyh. Additionally, a dentist testified he first saw El’shloyh in January 2014 and then not again until 2016.

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Johnson v. Williams CA3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-williams-ca3-calctapp-2021.