Laurelli v. Shapiro

206 A.2d 308, 416 Pa. 308, 11 A.L.R. 3d 1241, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 681
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1965
DocketAppeal, 294
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 206 A.2d 308 (Laurelli v. Shapiro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laurelli v. Shapiro, 206 A.2d 308, 416 Pa. 308, 11 A.L.R. 3d 1241, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 681 (Pa. 1965).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

On Christmas Day of 1954, Anthony Laurelli, then 50 years of age, was injured when a rescue truck of the City of Philadelphia which he was driving, was struck by an automobile owned by the defendant William Shapiro. The jury returned a money verdict in favor of Laurelli. 1 Laurelli had been previously injured in an accident in 1948, and it is the contention of the defendant, who has here appealed, that whatever may be Laurelli’s symptoms of illness or disablement, they are not the result of what happened on December 25, 1954. The plaintiff admits his accident of 1948 but insists that the mishap in 1954 reactivated and aggravated his previously existing ailment. The defendant also claims that the plaintiff’s infirmities do not rise to the state of disablement claimed by him.

When the defendant’s automobile collided with the city truck being driven by the plaintiff, an oxygen bottle in the truck broke loose from its moorings and hit the plaintiff, his chest then violently came into contact with the steering wheel and the left side of his head struck the door of the truck. He was rendered unconscious and was taken to the Nazareth Hospital but transferred, at his request, to the Philadelphia General Hospital, which maintains a special ward *311 for firemen. He returned to work about a month after the accident, but, because of the constant head pain which assailed him, he was re-hospitalized for treatment. In July, 1955 he was unable to continue at his regular employment in the fire department and the city assigned him to odd light duty jobs, at which he continued until 1958. During this period he received every five days, at the Philadelphia General Hospital, histamine injections. In 1958, the pains had reached such a state of severity that Dr. Olson operated on him in an attempt to give him relief. He described the operation as follows: “We go in through the skull and lift the base of the brain off the floor of the skull and pick up this little tiny nerve and cut it.”

This cerebral surgery apparently afforded the patient some relief but in time the pains returned in all their severity and he had again to go into the municipal clinic for treatment and medication. As late as May, 1963, he was hospitalized for ten days and up to the time of the trial (September, 1963), was receiving histamine injections every five days.

Five doctors testified to the plaintiff’s condition: Dr. Olsen, surgeon; Dr. Oaracciolo, city physician; Dr. Brunetti, Chief Police and Fire Department Surgeon for City of Philadelphia; Dr. Channick, specialist in internal medicine. Dr. Olsen diagnosed the plaintiff’s disability as histamine cephalalgia and explained: “Histamine cephalalgia is a name given to a group of symptoms such as Mr. Laurelli describes of recurring episodes of pain involving one side of his face and the lower part of the head, coming frequently at night, wakening the patient from sleep, lasting for an hour or two and subsiding, and during the episodes of pain the patient has flushing of the face on that side, injection of the eye, tearing of the eye, and usually mucous running from his nose.”

*312 The plaintiff himself expressed in rather vivid language the pain he underwent the night of the accident: “It got to the roof of your mouth and then it came up to the lip, up to the nose, over the eye, in the middle of the forehead, all around. God, you could almost feel every hair on your head. It was enough to make you commit suicide, for God’s sake, terrible, I can’t describe it.”

The defendant showed that the plaintiff did not enjoy good health prior to 1954, that he had .suffered from neuralgia and kindred infirmities. The plaintiff admitted that his life had not been free of physical torment after 1948, but insisted that, in comparison to what he suffered after 1954, his life prior to that was a “picnic.”

The defendant’s principal argument for a new trial is that the lower court erred in allowing the plaintiff’s doctors to testify to the plaintiff’s alleged pain. It is the defendant’s thesis that it is impossible for a doctor to know whether a patient is in pain or not. Defendant’s counsel in his brief categorically declares that there is a “unanimity of view that pain is completely subjective” and that, therefore, the trial court erred in permitting “plaintiff’s doctors to testify that plaintiff actually had the pain he complained of and to further testify as to the severity of the alleged pain.”

A court cannot prevent a doctor from testifying to his diagnosis of a patient, so long as the testimony is relevant. The doctor may speak what the judge may not believe, but it is not for the judge to gag him. He may, of course, in his charge, tell the jury his estimate of the doctor’s testimony but he may not, in the absence of any. impropriety, order a doctor not to testify to what the doctor states he found right or wrong with the patient. The doctor may be compelled to give reasons for his estimate of the plaintiff’s condi *313 tion, but the court has no power to order him not to testify that the patient has suffered pain.

Moreover, there is no authoritative medical work which asserts that pain is wholly and always subjective. There is not a doctor who would not declare that a person will suffer pain if he holds his hand over a blazing torch, or loses a finger in a grinding machine, or takes poison which throws him into bodily contortions with accompanying grimaces, cries and twitching, bloodshot eyes. There are very few absolutes in medicine as perhaps there are few, if any, in the law, but the fact is that pain can be very objective and it can be detected by persons other than the one who states he feels it. There are symptoms of pain that write their story on one’s countenance as clearly as lightning scribbles in the sky its fiery message of nature’s discomfiture.

With X-ray machines which reveal what is invisible to the human eye without it, with cardiographs that record the story of the heart locked in the bony vault of the chest, and with stethoscopes that relate the concealed functions of the pulmonary apparatus, it is too much to declare scientifically that a doctor cannot and can never discover pain in others. A patient may speak of a pain that has no basis, he may simulate an anguish which does not exist, he may complain and shed artificial tears, but there are few doctors who, armed with training and experience, cannot, after conducting a sufficient number of examinations, determine what is sham and what is automatic reaction, what is genuine hurt and what is purposely contrived.

Dr. Brunetti, Chief Police and Fire Surgeon, testified that the plaintiff Laurelli “chaffcured” him around to fires, buildings collapses and other emergencies from 1949 to 1952, when he had occasion to note that the plaintiff would complain of pain in his face, and that he observed an augmentation of those *314 symptoms following the accident of 1954.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bailets, R. v. Pa. Turnpike Commission, Aplt.
181 A.3d 324 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Gallagher v. Marguglio
632 A.2d 1309 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1993)
Boggavarapu v. Ponist
542 A.2d 516 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1988)
Commonwealth v. Bali Bra Manufacturing Co.
377 A.2d 1036 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1977)
Singer v. Sheppard
346 A.2d 897 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1975)
Reist v. Manwiller
332 A.2d 518 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1974)
Flick v. James Monfredo, Inc.
356 F. Supp. 1143 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1973)
DiChiacchio v. Rockcraft Stone Products Co.
225 A.2d 913 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 A.2d 308, 416 Pa. 308, 11 A.L.R. 3d 1241, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurelli-v-shapiro-pa-1965.