MacDonald v. Firth
This text of 121 S.E.2d 369 (MacDonald v. Firth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
Mrs. Firth sued MacDonald for personal injuries allegedly received in an automobile accident which occurred on June 27, 1958, when the MacDonald car struck the rear of the Firth car which had stopped for a traffic light. The case was tried before a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of Mrs. Firth in the sum of $15,000, on which, over the objection of the defendant, judgment was entered on August 2, 1960. We granted MacDonald a writ of error.
There was but one issue before the jury, i.e., the amount of damages the plaintiff should receive for the injuries proximately resulting from the automobile accident. The defendant admitted liability in his Instruction A (1) for any injuries caused by him. The point of difference between the parties was the question of whether or not the injuries claimed by Mrs. Firth were proximately caused by the automobile accident, or by a later accident, or arose from some other cause.
It is disclosed that the automobile accident occurred in Hampton, Virginia, on June 27, 1958, wherein Mrs. Firth claimed to have received a whiplash type of injury to the cervical spine along with other injuries of a minor nature to her left leg and ankle. Thereafter, on July 23, 1958, she was involved in a swimming pool accident in Poughkeepsie, New York, after which she was taken to a hospital and there treated for a supposed “compression fracture of the D 6th vertebra of the dorsal or thoracic spine.”
At the time of the swimming pool accident Mrs. Firth was on a business trip for her employer, and after the accident she filed a claim with the Industrial Commission of Virginia for personal injuries resulting in her being compensated for the injuries allegedly sustained in the swimming pool accident.
Five doctors testified either in person or by deposition. Their evidence regarding the extent of Mrs. Firth’s injuries resulting from the automobile accident as contrasted with those received in the swimming pool accident was in conflict. One doctor suggested that the ailments *902 complained of resulted from neither accident but were congenital. This conflicting evidence, under proper instructions, presented a jury question. It is not necessary for the disposition of the case to consider the conflicting medical evidence in detail.
The first assignment of error relied on by the defendant is that the $15,000 judgment was excessive. Regarding this, it was stated in oral argument that the assignment would be without merit if the jury had been properly instructed.
Several instructions were offered by the defendant, among which were Instructions A-l,* (2) B, (3) and C. (4)
*903 The court granted Instructions A-l and C but refused to grant Instruction B, holding that it was covered by Instructions A-l and C. Defendant excepted to the court’s refusal to grant Instruction B and argued that the same was a “succinct statement of the law” and should be given.
Rather than being a succinct statement of the defendant’s theory of the case, the instruction (B) is argumentative, it is too long, and merely an attempt on defendant’s part to have the court argue his case for him. The same principles enunciated in Instruction B are clearly set forth in Instructions A-l and C, which the court granted. In addition, the court orally instructed the jury as follows:
“COURT. All right now gentlemen, we come again in this case to the place where it’s my duty to instruct you in regard to your verdict and instruct you in regard to the law that you shall consider in arriving at your verdict. In this case it’s agreed that the plaintiff is entitled to a verdict. The question is the amount of the verdict and the injuries, whether the plaintiff suffered these injuries in the automobile accident. The only thing that this defendant, MacDonald, is responsible for is for the injuries that she received in the accident on June 27. That’s all that you can find your verdict for in this case.”
We hold that Instruction B was properly refused.
MacDonald next complains of the Court’s granting Instruction No. 4. (5) Defendant’s objections to this instruction were vigorously argued before the trial court. It was pointed out first that the instruction allowed the jury to consider the “reasonable value of time lost” from plaintiff’s employment as an element of damages whereas the true test should have been the loss of earnings, if any, which the plaintiff had sustained.
*904 We cannot find in the record any evidence as to the “value” of plaintiff’s services. Regarding plaintiff’s loss of earnings, the jury should have been told that they could only take into consideration plaintiff’s loss of earnings occasioned by the automobile accident if any had been proved.
The second objection to the instruction, which appears more harmful to the defendant, is to the part which told the jury: “You may also consider the nature, character, extent and duration of her injuries, whether temporary or permanent and their effect, if any, in the future * * As vigorously argued before the trial court, there was no evidence of any “permanent” injury. The case was tried approximately two years after the accident, and at the trial Dr. Wheel-don testified:
“Q. Doctor, what is the condition of Mrs. Firth now, the last time you examined her concerning her neck and compression?
“A. Well, right at the present time she’s having a flare-up. She’s having pain, irritation in her neck and in her low back. I think that her neck is doing very well. She seems to continue to have these flare-ups especially in between — between her shoulders.
“Q. Do you have any — or do you have an opinion concerning how long this condition will continue?
“A. I’m of the impression that — that the neck itself is going to respond to treatment so that in a very reasonable length of time I think that the neck will be all right. The condition between the shoulder blades where the compression of the spine was present continues to give trouble and I’m not so sure, sir. I think that’s going to be prolonged.” (Italics supplied)
This is the only evidence upon which the instruction could have been predicated. There is a vast difference between a “permanent” injury and a “prolonged” injury. The word “permanent” implies an injury from which there will be no recovery. While the term “prolonged” means indefinite in duration, the term “permanent” does not. “Prolonged” implies ultimate cure. “Permanent” implies that there will be no cure.
For the reasons indicated, the giving of Instruction No.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
121 S.E.2d 369, 202 Va. 900, 1961 Va. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-firth-va-1961.