Jorgenson v. Hillestad

27 N.W.2d 709, 250 Wis. 592, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 318
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 N.W.2d 709 (Jorgenson v. Hillestad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jorgenson v. Hillestad, 27 N.W.2d 709, 250 Wis. 592, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 318 (Wis. 1947).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

The principal question on this appeal is whether the proof sustains the jury’s award of $5,000 as King’s damages for injuries sustained by him as the result of Hillestad’s negligence in operating his automobile on June 28, 1945; and whether that award was warranted by the proof depends on whether there was sufficient competent, credible evidence from which the jury could find that the injuries then sustained by King as the result of Hillestad’s negligence were the cause of a heart attack which King had on August 15, 1945, by reason of a coronary occlusion.

It appears without dispute that as the result of the collision between Hillestad’s car and the cab in which King was riding, the cab rolled over on its top which caved in, and King was crushed in the cab. A police officer who was at the scene of the accident testified that King there complained of having pain in his chest and back. Plaintiff testified that he felt a rib puncturing his lung; that in the left side of his chest he felt *594 pain, which was constant and hurt when he breathed; that he was black and blue and ached all over the side of his chest; and that he was removed from the car and taken to a hospital where a cut on his thumb, which was badly lacerated, was dressed, and a fracture of the distal joint of the thumb was treated. After an hour he went to the office of his employer and then home and into bed. He had pains in his chest and could not get breath, and this lasted all day and night. Three days later he went to the doctor to see about the pains in his chest, and went back to him four times about his chest. In July, to find out what was wrong with his chest, he went to a different doctor, Dr. Werner, who told him he could not find anything wrong «with the chest. Plaintiff had to lay off from work about seven days because he had pain .in his .chest, which was worse some times than others. When he exerted himself he would get that pain which made him short-winded and hard for him to breathe.

On August 15, 1945, King three times called Dr. Werner to treat him and who told him to go to the hospital. There an 'electrocardiogram was taken and King was told his heart was in bad shape. Since August 15, 1945, King did not do any work for anybody. If he worked he got a pain and was short of breath and all in, and the pain in the region of his chest started six or eight inches below the left shoulder and .went up to the shoulder and down the left arm. After King was advised he had heart trouble he consulted Drs. Nimz and Murphy at Milwaukee, whom he had consulted in February, 1945. At that time he was not having any pains in his chest. Between June 28, 1945, and Dr. Werner’s diagnosis on August 15, 1945, nothing had happened to King outside'of his ordinary course of living to cause any change in his condition.

Dr. Nimz testified that before the accident he had examined King on February 24, 1945, and an electrocardiogram was taken and was found to be essentially normal; that he saw King again on September 15, 1945, who then complained of pain over the precordium in the chest, which was rajdiating *595 down to the abdomen, and of shortness of breath on exertion; that King gave a history of having been in an automobile accident on June 28, 1945, and immediately following the accident he had noticed a pain in the region of the heart, and that he had broken out into a cold sweat and felt weak and faint and was short of breath; that Dr. Nimz then took another electrocardiogram which revealed that there had been damage to the heart muscle, and showed evidence of damage thereto, while the earlier cardiogram did not. Dr. Nimz testified it was his conclusion that the fact that King had a normal cardiogram on February 24, 1945, in connection with the history of his having been in an automobile accident, indicated there was some damage to the heart caused by the accident and that he had had a nonpuncturing injury, — in other words a contusion in the area of the chest overlying the heart, — and that it was Dr. Nimz’s theory that some outside blow damaged King’s heart muscle at the time of the accident; and that in his opinion, based upon examinations of King, he was suffering from a myocardial damage in the front wall of the heart, which was caused by the blow or contusion to his chest in the accident on June 28, 1945. Dr. Nimz testified also that, in view of the condition of King revealed on February 24, 1945, the condition which Dr. Nimz found on September 15, 1945, could not be caused by mental disturbance, temporary exertion, or disease; and that the type of symptoms shown in the electrocardiogram was myocardial damage, the cause of which was directly related to the history of an accident and was easily distinguishable from heart enlargement or any other type of damage to the heart.

Dr. Dawson, called by plaintiff as an expert witness, testified : — in answer to a hypothetical question which, after assuming certain facts as to which no objection was then or is now being made by defendants’ counsel, concluded with the words, “Would you as an expert, based on those assumptions, be able to state any opinion as to the cause of the heart damage to the muscle,” — “I think it would be a safe assumption that *596 it has resulted from the injury.” Then, after an answer by Dr. Dawson on cross-examination, to the questions by defendants’ attorney, “Is that just speculation or guess, Doctor? Do you say that to a reasonable certainty,” there were the following questions by the court and Dr. Dawson’s answers, to wit:

“The court: Counsel’s question is, upon those assumed facts can you say to a reasonable certainty that his trouble has come from the accident? A. I gave that as my opinion. The court: That it is your opinion to a reasonable certainty ? A. Yes. The court: That you can say that to a reasonable certainty? A. Yes, sir.”

On the other hand there was the following testimony by defendants’ witnesses. Dr. Werner testified he had treated King in December, 1940, for a severe pain in the area of his left chest, which extended into the shoulder and arm and was accompanied by stomach pains; that in July, 1945, he examined King at the request of his employer’s compensation insurance carrier, to find the extent of King’s injuries from the automobile accident on June 28, 1945; that on August 15, 1945, King had pain in his chest and arms and difficulty in breathing, and all the symptoms of a coronary at that time; that the next morning he had an electrocardiogram taken and sent to Dr. R. F. Poser at Madison, who- reported a coronary condition; that when a coronary artery is plugged up the circulation is shut off and you get an infarct into the muscular tissue of the heart, which means a stoppage of the blood going through the coronary artery; and that he prescribed complete rest for King. It was his opinion, based on the examinations he had made of King and the treatment rendered to him that his heart condition was not a traumatic condition, but was one he would expect to find whether or not there was any history of an accident; and that the accident was purely incidental, and it was possible King had been having heart trouble for some period of time; that such a coronary occlusion as he found on August 15, 1945, is always disabling, and if the accident was *597

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 N.W.2d 709, 250 Wis. 592, 1947 Wisc. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jorgenson-v-hillestad-wis-1947.