Kristin Althoff v. Clair Jecklin and Gary Jecklin

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJuly 8, 2026
Docket25-1371
StatusPublished

This text of Kristin Althoff v. Clair Jecklin and Gary Jecklin (Kristin Althoff v. Clair Jecklin and Gary Jecklin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kristin Althoff v. Clair Jecklin and Gary Jecklin, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 25-1371 Filed July 8, 2026 _______________

Kristin Althoff, Plaintiff–Appellant/Cross-Appellee, v. Clair Jecklin and Gary Jecklin, Defendants–Appellees/Cross-Appellants. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Dubuque County, The Honorable Thomas A. Bitter, Judge. _______________

REVERSED ON APPEAL, AFFIRMED ON CROSS-APPEAL, AND REMANDED _______________

Sara Riley (argued) of Tom Riley Law Firm, P.L.C., Cedar Rapids, attorney for appellant.

Christopher C. Fry (argued) and Alyssa M. Carlson of O’Connor & Thomas, P.C., Dubuque, attorneys for appellees. _______________

Heard at oral argument by Tabor, C.J., and Chicchelly and Sandy, JJ. Opinion by Tabor, C.J.

1 TABOR, Chief Judge.

An injured motorist appeals the district court’s decision to strike a jury award for $50,000 in future pain and suffering damages. In granting the defendants’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict ( JNOV), the court decided that plaintiff, Kristin Althoff, did not offer substantial evidence of “permanent injury and how long [she] might continue to suffer” pain in her left hand. On cross-appeal, the defendants argue Althoff was not entitled to damages tied to replacing her specialized vehicle because she did not cover those costs herself. They also argue the jury awarded Althoff duplicative damages. We find Althoff presented substantial evidence of her future pain and suffering and was entitled to both the challenged damage awards.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Althoff is a third-grade teacher. Beyond teaching, she works with her brother, Jered, raising Belgian draft horses to show at competitions and fairs. Althoff’s mother, Victoria, described her as “a very strong-willed person” who has “worked very, very hard all her life to get where she has gotten.”

When she was nine years old, Althoff suffered a life-altering spine injury and was paralyzed from the chest down. She now uses a wheelchair and other adaptive technologies to maintain her lifestyle and independence. For instance, in 2020, Althoff purchased and customized a truck with a motorized door and chair lift. Althoff operates the truck with hand controls. She testified that it took about eight months to get the truck fully adapted for her use.

The Collision. In September 2022, Althoff was driving her truck near Jered’s farm when Clair Jecklin ran a stop sign in front of her. Althoff testified that when she realized Jecklin was not stopping, she “slammed on” her

2 handbrake with her left hand “with as much force as” she could. Still, Althoff “t-boned” Jecklin’s car and pushed them both into a ditch. Bystanders called 9-1-1 and helped Althoff as she waited for her brother.

While being treated by emergency responders, Althoff complained of pain and bruising on her shoulder, caused by her seatbelt. She reported no other pain or injury that day and returned to her normal activities almost immediately, helping with chores on her brother’s farm, including feeding the horses twice a day.

Althoff’s Truck. Unfortunately, her truck was inoperable, so she and her family began the process of finding and adapting a new truck. Eventually, they found a suitable used truck in Minnesota, and Althoff—along with her mother and brother—drove Victoria’s Jeep north to pick it up. Then, Victoria and Jered drove the truck to an Indiana shop that specializes in adapting vehicles. They then rented a car and drove back to Iowa. A few months later, when the truck was ready, Victoria bought plane tickets to Indiana so that Althoff and Jered could pick it up. They drove the truck back to Iowa and then to another specialist in Grimes for installation of the hand controls. All told, Althoff was without her own vehicle for four months.

Althoff’s Wheelchair. Meanwhile, Althoff’s wheelchair was damaged in the collision. At her appointment for occupational therapy, she identified “issues with the arm rests, brakes, axles, [and] back canes/rigidizer bar.” But her insurance would not reimburse her for a replacement chair. 1 Althoff testified that the damage to her wheelchair meant that, instead of “gripping onto the railing” of the wheel, she had to push the tire. She testified that

1 Althoff testified that “at the time of the accident, this chair was only a year-and- a-half old and you’re not allowed to get a chair—only every five years.”

3 pushing the tire “tear[s] your skin up” and “[y]ou can get hand sores from it.” Jered also noticed that she developed greater calluses on her left hand than on her right.

Medical Evidence. In the collision’s immediate aftermath, Althoff had no major physical complaints other than her shoulder. But about a month later, she visited her primary care provider, complaining of left arm pain and a reduced range of motion in her wrist. By the time of that October 22 visit, she was struggling to lift things at work and strained when propelling her wheelchair, especially going uphill.

Althoff’s primary care provider, advanced registered nurse practitioner (ARNP) Amber Jaeger, ordered x-rays of her arm and shoulder, which revealed no abnormalities. Jaeger next recommended physical therapy, which Althoff started in December 2022, attending appointments and doing home exercises. In physical therapy, she also complained about pain in her left hand. But she reported enough improvement in her pain symptoms by January 2023 to be discharged from therapy. At another check-up later that same month, Althoff complained again of pain in her left hand. ARNP Jaeger noted Althoff reported weakness and numbness in that hand. In April, she ordered an EMG,2 which was negative for signs of nerve damage. A repeat EMG in September was also negative. But Jaeger testified that the negative EMGs did not mean that Althoff was not suffering pain and weakness.

In March 2025, about a month before trial in this lawsuit, Althoff complained about her left hand again to ARNP Jaeger. She reported weakness in her left hand and wrist, decreased rotation in the wrist, numbness, and tingling. She also reported that her symptoms were worse

2 The record referred to the EMG (electromyography) as a “nerve test.”

4 when she used her wheelchair. From her own observations, Jaeger noted weakness in Althoff’s left grip, tenderness on the back side of her hand, and trace swelling but no bruising or redness. Jaeger also recorded good capillary refill, meaning “circulation down into the tips of her fingers” was normal. Jaeger noted “weakness with flexion and extension” of the wrist. As to the cause, Jaeger testified she “assume[d]” that the pain came from the collision because Althoff reported it afterward. Jaeger said Althoff also believes that to be the source of her pain, exacerbated by her wheelchair use. Shortly before trial, Jaeger recommended Althoff see an orthopedic surgeon, but that appointment had not been scheduled yet at the time of trial.

Asked what “crash-related” injuries she had at the time of trial, Althoff said, “Pain in my left hand yet. . . . And weakness.” She elaborated: [I]t starts in the middle finger. It’s mainly in my middle finger, and it runs to the pointer finger and sometimes to the thumb, not necessarily always in the thumb, but it feels almost sometimes like it’s been shocked. . . . And, like, the strength in it is not there. Like, I can’t pull things. . . . [T]he propelling, the motion of the wheeling on the rims [of the wheelchair], it basically kills me, so I use a different way to wheel.

Althoff testified she experiences pain in her left middle finger daily and pain in her left index finger two to three times per week, making it difficult to grip things and harder for her to push her wheelchair. She occasionally took over- the-counter pain medication.

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Kristin Althoff v. Clair Jecklin and Gary Jecklin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kristin-althoff-v-clair-jecklin-and-gary-jecklin-iowactapp-2026.