Judith E. Gregory and William H. Gregory v. Philip D. Hardgrove

419 F.2d 589, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 9585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 1969
Docket164, Docket 33637
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 419 F.2d 589 (Judith E. Gregory and William H. Gregory v. Philip D. Hardgrove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Judith E. Gregory and William H. Gregory v. Philip D. Hardgrove, 419 F.2d 589, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 9585 (2d Cir. 1969).

Opinion

MEDINA, Circuit Judge.

This diversity case involves a collision between two automobiles at the crest of a hill on a narrow, typical, back country road in Vermont. As the cars approached each other from opposite directions it is understandable that neither driver was conscious of the nearby presence of the other until almost the moment of impact. There was ample evidence of excessive speed by Hard-grove and of his failure to keep his car on his side of the road. Moreover, the jury was warranted in finding no contributory negligence on the part of Mrs. Gregory, who testified she kept as far to her right as she could when “she caught this flash of pink coming very fast” and that she was driving at about 20 or 25 miles an hour. Her version was corroborated by other proof, including the testimony of the passenger in the Hard-grove vehicle and the fact that the force of the collision pushed her car backwards about 10 feet. The verdict .of $65,000 was, if anything, less than it might have been in the light of her extreme suffering and the extensive nature of her injuries. In the light of F. R.Civ.P. 54(c) and Riggs, Ferris & Greer v. Lillibridge, 316 F.2d 60, 62-63 (2d Cir. 1963), Hardgrove had sufficient notice that the recovery by Mrs. Gregory might exceed the amount of the insurance carried by him. The following points argued by appellant Hard-grove are governed by Vermont law.

On the basis of what appellant calls “undisputed physical facts” it is claimed that Mrs. Gregory was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law and that the complaint of the two Gregorys should have been dismissed at the trial. This is because State Police Officer Robinson, one of the witnesses called by the Gregorys, interpreted one or more of the photographs as showing skid marks indicating that the Gregory car was somewhat to the left of the unmarked center of the road. The difficulty with this argument, as pointed out by Judge Leddy, is that the facts are not undisputed. To begin with, it is not clear just which skid marks appearing in the photographs were made by the Gregory car. Officer Robinson did not see the accident. And, even if he had seen it, there was a question of how much of his testimony the jury chose to accept and how much of it the jury chose to reject. The testimony of Mrs. Gregory was, as above stated, that as soon as she saw “this flash of pink” she kept as far to her right as she could. Other proof substantiated her testimony. Of course, the fact that Robinson was called as a witness by the Gregorys did not require the jury to accept any part of his testimony as credible.

We find the cases cited by appellant are distinguishable 1 and the point requires no further comment.

*591 The Hardgrove claim that there was no competent evidence to support a recovery of future dental expenses for repair work to Mrs. Gregory’s fractured jaw must also be rejected. This point' was presented by a motion to strike certain testimony by Dr. Massucco and by certain requests for instructions that were refused.

When Mrs. Gregory reached the hospital, it was found that the entire side of her face was so torn and gaping that the operating surgeon was able to put the various pieces of her fractured jaw together without going into her mouth. One piece of jawbone fell out on the operating table and this was drilled and fitted into place. The contiguous pieces of fractured jaw on both sides of this piece of bone that had dropped out were fastened together with several stainless steel wires. During the ensuing weeks Mrs. Gregory had to be fed by a tube. She could not open or close her mouth. Later some of the wires were removed, but at the time of the trial she still could not open and shut her mouth in a normal manner.

Dr. Lawrence P. Massucco examined Mrs. Gregory and described in detail the condition of her teeth and jaw, supplementing his testimony with a reading of the X-rays taken shortly after the accident. He said the wires that were still in place “now serve their purpose no longer adequately” because of the shifting of the teeth, the lack of proper alignment, the difficulty of cleaning the teeth properly and so on. He described in simple, clear terms the dental work that would be necessary to remedy the unsatisfactory condition and gave his opinion of what the cost of this dental work would be. All this without any objection on the part of counsel for Hardgrove. No reasonable person, we think, having heard the testimony of Mrs. Gregory and of Dr. Leonard R. Johnston, who performed the difficult operation immediately after the accident, could have had any doubt whatever of the fact that the condition described by Dr. Massucco and the future dental work he said the circumstances required were due solely to the accident which the jury found was caused by the fault of appellant Hardgrove.

This brings us to the cross-examination of Dr. Massucco. Counsel asked the following questions and received the following answers:

Q. Doctor, are you able to state conclusively that all of the future dental work that you have told us about here today was necessitated by the accident, or, can you tell us what portion was necessitated by the accident, and what portion was necessitated by the condition of Mrs. Gregory’s mouth prior to the accident? A. I absolutely could not tell you that.
Q. So actually,— A. All I can tell you is the mouth as I see it today, and what is needed. As to what caused it, that is beyond me. I don’t know whether she lost these teeth through decay, or whether they were out of line and removed or got them knocked out in the accident has no bearing on my diagnosis of what her mouth is today and what she needs today, regardless of how she arrived at this condition. I don’t particularly care. All I know is what this young lady, at 22, needs at the present time to put this mouth in shape, if this were my patient, which she is not.
Q. So doctor, you can’t state with reasonable medical probability that the future work that she may require is a result of the accident injury which she sustained on May 21, 1966 ? A. Absolutely, I could not.

These answers, together with Dr. Mas-suceo’s testimony that he had no knowledge of the number of teeth, if any, Mrs. Gregory had lost prior to the acci *592 dent and whether or not she had worn some prosthetic appliance prior to the accident, are supposed to prove that Dr. Massucco’s testimony is of no probative value and should have been stricken. This is absurd.

The number of teeth, if any, lost prior to the accident had no real bearing on the smashing of her jaw into fragments and the placing of the wires that Dr. Massucco said no longer served their purpose. What Dr. Massucco was trying to say, and what he did say, is that he knew nothing about the accident but he did know the condition of Mrs. Gregory’s teeth at the time of the trial and what it was necessary to do to rectify, as far as it was possible to do so, the condition of her teeth as he described it.

It would be sufficient to dispose of appellant Hardgrove’s contention that the supporting medical proof is insufficient to point out that here Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
419 F.2d 589, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 9585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/judith-e-gregory-and-william-h-gregory-v-philip-d-hardgrove-ca2-1969.