Maciukevicius v. Zagorski

526 N.E.2d 569, 172 Ill. App. 3d 303, 122 Ill. Dec. 310, 1988 Ill. App. LEXIS 962
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 30, 1988
DocketNo. 87—1283
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 526 N.E.2d 569 (Maciukevicius v. Zagorski) 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
Maciukevicius v. Zagorski, 526 N.E.2d 569, 172 Ill. App. 3d 303, 122 Ill. Dec. 310, 1988 Ill. App. LEXIS 962 (Ill. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

JUSTICE LINN

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff, Vida R. Maciukevicius, filed an action against defendants, Kenneth Zagorski and his employer, Stevens Meat Company, after she was injured in an automobile accident in September 1981. The jury awarded her $100,810 in damages but determined that her own negligence had contributed 9% to her injury. The trial court accordingly entered judgment in favor of plaintiff in the reduced amount of $91,737.10.

Defendants appeal, contending that the verdict is against the manifest weight of the evidence; plaintiff’s “emotional outburst” warranted a new trial; her attorney’s conduct resulted in prejudice to defendants; and the award of damages is excessive.

We affirm.

Background

The incident occurred on September 19, 1981, when the parties’ automobiles collided near the intersection of Southwest Highway and Kedzie Avenue in Chicago, Illinois. Both drivers had turned left from Southwest Highway onto northbound Kedzie, a four-lane road, about two blocks before the collision. The right rear bumper of a delivery van driven by Zagorski became locked with the front left bumper of plaintiff’s Volkswagen Rabbit. Thus joined, both cars swerved off the roadway over the right-hand curb until plaintiff’s car struck a fire hydrant.

The trial testimony conflicted in several respects. In essence, plaintiff claimed that defendant drove his van into her lane without signaling, causing her car to become locked with his van. Of the two northbound lanes of Kedzie, plaintiff stayed in the outermost or right-hand lane after turning off of the highway. She first noticed the van when it was alongside her left and slightly in front of her. When defendant’s van cut in front of her, she was forced off the road into a fire hydrant.

In contrast, defendant maintained that he never moved out of his lane and that plaintiff must have been attempting to pass his van. At the intersection when he turned onto Kedzie he noticed that a car was in front of him in the inner or left lane of Kedzie and he felt that traffic in general was gaining on him. He did not recall seeing plaintiff’s bright yellow car behind him. He felt an initial impact when the two vehicles locked together. His van was forced toward the left into oncoming traffic and then the car dragged the van toward the right-hand curb, where he felt a second impact as the Volkswagen struck the hydrant.

A police officer who had spoken to the parties and another witness at the scene of the collision testified that plaintiff had told him that she attempted to pass the van on the right when the bumpers hooked. Defendant had told the officer that he felt an impact and then saw that the plaintiff’s car had become hooked with his. The officer concluded that plaintiff had tried to pass on the right and that after the two vehicles had linked, their combined weight had pushed them over onto the curb.

On cross-examination, however, the officer acknowledged that he had investigated over 1,000 accidents since the one in issue. While he had testified from independent recollection that the defendant’s van was blue, he admitted being shown photos of the van by defense counsel. He did not remember the color of plaintiff’s car. The officer also stated that he had reviewed his police report with defense counsel before trial. The police report was blank in the section labeled “Explanation of Accident,” where statements of parties would normally go. The police report also lacked a diagram of the accident, although a space is provided for such depictions.

The police officer finally acknowledged that he could have been mistaken as to what plaintiff had said and that the physical evidence that he observed was consistent with either party’s theory of the occurrence.

Plaintiff’s medical evidence was presented through two physicians, Dr. Jonas Byla and Dr. Robert Scapino. Dr. Byla is a board-certified neurologist. He first met plaintiff approximately one year after the collision. She had noticed headache and neck and lower back pain immediately after the impact, as well as dizziness and nausea. After treatment in the emergency room of a hospital, she had been under the care of her family doctor. Her doctor ultimately referred plaintiff to Dr. Byla.

Plaintiff complained to Dr. Byla of continuing jaw pain as well as pain in the cervical spine and lumbar regions. Dr. Byla treated plaintiff with muscle relaxants and referred her for physiotherapy, which included massage, cervical traction, and injection of anesthetics directly into the areas of pain and spasms. The doctor diagnosed plaintiff’s condition as fibromyositis, or muscle spasms, a chronic condition causing a limitation of motion and pain. At the time of trial, plaintiff’s prognosis was “guarded” and Dr. Byla testified that her muscle inflammations and fibromyositis are permanent conditions directly and causally related to the injuries she suffered in the auto accident.

Dr. Scapino testified regarding plaintiff’s temporomandibular joint dysfunction, an internal derangement of the jaw joint. In his opinion, the condition was caused by the collision. The condition causes pain and jaw dysfunction which affects plaintiff’s ability to open her mouth and chew. He further testified that her jaw condition appeared to be permanent. Dr. Scapino stated that there is a correlation between the cervical muscle spasms plaintiff suffers and the jaw condition. He concluded that she "will require continuing treatment for her condition in the future.

Plaintiff testified as to her injuries and the resulting restrictions on some of her activities. She related her loss of income attributable to the accident and the damage sustained to her car.

Opinion

I

Defendants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s determination that defendants were 91% liable for plaintiff’s injuries. According to their interpretation of the evidence, Zagorsky “had no reason to change lanes and plaintiff has offered none.” Plaintiff, however, may have been in a hurry to get home after meeting friends at the beach; that would explain her attempt to pass the van on the right. Moreover, the physical evidence is consistent with Zagorski’s version of the facts because the scraping damage on the van is “consistent only with a vehicle passing another on the right. In other words, a side swipe.” Finally, the police officer gave his opinion that plaintiff had passed on the right and plaintiff herself had admitted it to him. Moreover, plaintiff’s mother, who was supposedly present during this admission, failed to testify and the jury accordingly should have assumed that the mother’s testimony would have been unfavorable to plaintiff.

We find each of these assertions unpersuasive. The reasons why either driver may have changed lanes are unimportant in this case; what matters is whose driving, based on the evidence, the jury believed was instrumental in causing the accident. The jury found plaintiff’s testimony of greater credibility than defendants’. The record, including photographs of the damaged vehicles, does not undercut plaintiff’s version of the events, nor require the inference that she was passing the van improperly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
526 N.E.2d 569, 172 Ill. App. 3d 303, 122 Ill. Dec. 310, 1988 Ill. App. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maciukevicius-v-zagorski-illappct-1988.