Krengiel v. Lissner Corp., Inc.

621 N.E.2d 91, 250 Ill. App. 3d 288, 190 Ill. Dec. 222, 1993 Ill. App. LEXIS 1093
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 23, 1993
Docket1-91-2379
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 621 N.E.2d 91 (Krengiel v. Lissner Corp., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krengiel v. Lissner Corp., Inc., 621 N.E.2d 91, 250 Ill. App. 3d 288, 190 Ill. Dec. 222, 1993 Ill. App. LEXIS 1093 (Ill. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

JUSTICE GIANNIS

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff instituted this action seeking damages for personal injuries allegedly sustained as a result of the negligent conduct of the defendants. After trial, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the amount of $10,000, and the trial court entered judgment on the verdict. Plaintiff appeals, contending that (1) the verdict returned by the jury was against the manifest weight of the evidence and clearly inadequate, and (2) the trial court erred in admitting into evidence a statement contained in the emergency room record that plaintiff had a history of chronic back pain.

The record reveals that plaintiff filed suit on April 14, 1983, seeking recovery for personal injuries allegedly sustained in an automobile collision. The complaint asserted that plaintiff was injured on April 19, 1981, when the vehicle in which she was riding was struck from behind by a truck owned by defendant Lissner Corporation, Inc. (hereinafter Lissner Corp.), and operated by defendant Pelzer. The complaint asserted that Pelzer was liable for his negligent operation of the truck and that Lissner Corp. was vicariously liable for the acts of its agent under the doctrine of respondeat superior. The complaint requested damages as compensation for plaintiff’s personal injuries, medical expenses, and lost earnings.

In her answers to defendants’ interrogatories, plaintiff stated that she had suffered soft tissue injuries to her neck and back and had been treated by Dr. Josephine Sobol. Plaintiff stated further that she had paid $520.48 in hospital expenses and $121.85 for medications, but the cost of her treatment by Dr. Sobol was unknown. Plaintiff denied that she had suffered any serious personal injury, been treated by a physician, been confined to a hospital, or received X rays during the five years immediately prior to the accident. Plaintiff also denied that she had suffered any personal injury or serious illness since the date of the accident. Plaintiff did not answer the defendants’ interrogatory which requested the name of her employer, the dates on which she was unable to work, and the amount of her lost wages.

The pretrial memorandum filed by the plaintiff described her injuries as “soft tissue injury to neck — right cervico-thoracic spine muscle spasm — injury to lumbar sacral” and stated that she had paid $1,145 to Dr. Sobol for treatment and $43.10 for medication. These amounts were in addition to the medical expenses previously disclosed in plaintiff’s answers to the defendants’ interrogatories. The pretrial memorandum did not identify plaintiff’s employer or specify the dates on which she was unable to work, but stated that the amount of her lost wages was “unknown at this time.”

Plaintiff’s answers to defendants’ supplemental interrogatories stated that she had paid Dr. Sobol an additional $2,000 and had paid Dr. Sydney Morgenstem $200 for treatment. In response to defendants’ supplemental interrogatory regarding lost earnings and time off from work, plaintiff stated only that she had none other than that previously noted in written and oral discovery.

Plaintiff’s medical expenses disclosed prior to trial totalled $4,030.43.

Defendants retained Dr. Boone Brackett, M.D., as their expert witness, and he examined the plaintiff on May 25, 1989, eight years after the accident occurred. In the report of his examination, Dr. Brackett stated that he had considered, inter alia, the plaintiff’s medical history, which included “some chronic back pain prior to the accident.” Brackett concluded that he “could not say within the reasonable degree of medical and surgical [certainty] that this disc [syndrome] eight years later was caused by the accident.”

Prior to trial, plaintiff filed a motion in limine seeking exclusion of a statement contained in the Northwest Hospital emergency room report. The statement sought to be excluded indicated that plaintiff had a history of chronic back pain prior to the date of the accident. In her motion in limine, plaintiff asserted that she was a Polish national, spoke no English, had arrived in the United States only one week before the accident, and could not have made any admission or statements to the hospital staff. Plaintiff asserted further that she had not suffered any back injury or had chronic back pain before the accident, and neither she nor her daughter ever made such a statement to the hospital staff.

Although the record on appeal does not contain a written order disposing of plaintiff’s pretrial motion, the trial court apparently denied plaintiff’s motion in limine seeking exclusion of the statement contained in the emergency room report.

Defendants filed a motion in limine seeking to bar plaintiff from testifying as to her lost income and her inability to pay for medical treatment. The record does not, however, reflect the disposition of this motion.

The partial transcript which is included in the record on appeal reflects that at trial, plaintiff’s daughter, Wanda Podgorski, testified that she went with her mother to the emergency room at Northwest Hospital the day after the accident. Ms. Podgorski stated that the nurse in the emergency room did not speak Polish, and, although Ms. Podgorski did not speak English fluently, she informed the nurse of her mother’s name and address and indicated that her mother had been involved in an automobile accident. Ms. Podgorski denied that she gave the emergency room nurse a medical history of her mother and denied that she ever told a member of the Northwest Hospital staff that her mother had suffered a previous back injury or had a history of chronic back problems.

The partial transcript of plaintiff’s testimony reflects plaintiff testified that she went to the hospital with her daughter the day after the accident. Plaintiff testified that she was able to understand only that the nurse wanted to know whether she had undergone an operation, and plaintiff answered that she had not. Plaintiff stated that she did not know what information the nurse had written down.

The portion of plaintiff’s testimony which has been included in the record on appeal does not include any evidence of plaintiff’s medical expenses or lost earnings, nor does it reflect any questioning as to a history of back pain or a prior injury. In addition, the transcript does not include any evidence of the pain and suffering caused plaintiff as a result of the accident.

Dr. Boone Brackett, called as an expert for defendants, testified at length as to plaintiff’s physical condition at the time of his examination in April 1989. Brackett stated that plaintiff suffered from osteoarthritis of the spine and from spinal stenosis, which he described as a narrowing at the fourth and fifth vertebrae, causing pressure on the fifth nerve root. Brackett testified that the osteoarthritis was not caused by trauma and that spinal stenosis was a degenerative disease, resulting from the normal aging process, and not a result of trauma. Brackett concluded that the plaintiff’s condition was not caused by the accident in 1981. Brackett stated that he relied upon plaintiff’s X rays, CT scan, MRI report, X ray report, and the Northwest Hospital emergency room report in forming his opinions.

In testifying as to the basis of his opinion, Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
621 N.E.2d 91, 250 Ill. App. 3d 288, 190 Ill. Dec. 222, 1993 Ill. App. LEXIS 1093, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krengiel-v-lissner-corp-inc-illappct-1993.