Manning v. Herrin Transportation Company

201 So. 2d 314
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1967
Docket2611
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 201 So. 2d 314 (Manning v. Herrin Transportation Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manning v. Herrin Transportation Company, 201 So. 2d 314 (La. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

201 So.2d 314 (1967)

Mrs. Ethel Irene LEONARD, wife of/and Frank W. MANNING
v.
HERRIN TRANSPORTATION COMPANY, Theodore E. Guerin, Rex General Contractors, Inc. and Walter R. Chevalier.

No. 2611.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

July 5, 1967.

*315 John E. Jackson, New Orleans, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Christovich & Kearney, W. K. Christovich, New Orleans, for defendants-appellants.

Before McBRIDE, SAMUEL and HALL, JJ.

SAMUEL, Judge.

This is a suit for personal injuries and other damages resulting from a rear end collision involving an automobile and two trucks. Plaintiffs are husband and wife. The husband sues for special damages; the wife seeks damages for her personal injuries. Defendants are the drivers of the two trucks, Theodore E. Guerin and Walter R. Chevalier, and their respective corporate employers, Herrin Transportation Co. and Rex General Contractors, Inc.

The accident occurred during the morning of May 21, 1965. The plaintiff vehicle driven by Mrs. Manning was stopped in obedience to a red traffic light. Just behind her car was the Rex vehicle, a pickup truck, which also was stopped for the light. The Herrin tractor truck ran into the rear of the pickup truck. That impact pushed the pickup truck into the rear of the plaintiff car.

Plaintiffs' suit against Rex and Chevalier was dismissed by summary judgment. After trial on the merits of plaintiffs' claims against Herrin and Guerin on November 14 and 15, 1966, there was judgment against those defendants, in solido, in favor of Mr. Manning in the amount of $1,686.28, and in favor of Mrs. Manning in the amount of $15,000. Herrin and Guerin have appealed.

The appeal is limited to the following defense contentions: (1) the award to Mrs. Manning for her personal injuries is grossly excessive; and (2) a portion of the award to Mr. Manning, for additional household help, is not justified by the evidence and should be disallowed.

Mrs. Manning has answered the appeal seeking an increase in her award from $15,000 to $30,000. In that answer Mrs. Manning states she continues to be in severe pain as a result of the injuries incurred by her in the accident and had been hospitalized for six days, from January 7 to January 13, 1967, with added complications resulting from those injuries. But she does not ask for a remand; and as the alleged continued pain, hospitalization and complications occurred subsequent to the time of trial and form no part of the record, we cannot consider those allegations. We must decide the case only on the record.

Testimony pertinent to the issues before us was given by the plaintiffs and seven medical experts, three of whom, Drs. Dugas, Brent and Haindel, testified on behalf of plaintiffs and four of whom, Drs. Lewis, Levy, Burkett and Cahen, were called by the defendants.

Mrs. Manning testified as follows: When the impact occurred she was thrown against and over the steering wheel. She was upset and incoherent and went into a nearby building for help. Her husband and a secretary from the office where she was employed came for her and took her first to the office and then to a hospital where they were met by Dr. Joseph E. Dugas, Jr. She was examined, x-rayed, put in traction and given medication. She was unable to tolerate some of the drugs and, although she was given diathermy on one or two occasions, it aggravated her condition. After her discharge from the *316 hospital she was treated by Drs. Dugas, Walter H. Brent, Jr. and Christian J. Haindel. Since her discharge she has endured pain in the neck, shoulders, lower back and ear, and sometimes experiences difficulty in walking. This pain was extreme for many months and has continued to persist to the time of trial, eighteen months after the date of the accident. She was advised to wear a cervical collar but after some time was unable to do so because it aggravated the pain behind her ear. Even though she has tried a mattress board and sleeping with the collar on, she has had difficulty in sleeping because of pain in all positions and in different areas of her body. Mrs. Manning is a housewife and secretary. She also does public relations work in connection with her job. Although she has received her salary regularly, other than two and one-half weeks during December of 1965 she has been unable to return to the office since the accident and does her work from her home. That work has consisted not only of typing but also of some speaking and social engagements and several trips to San Antonio, Washington, and other cities. At the time of trial she complained particularly of pain in the neck, shoulder and at the base of the spine, and earaches after periods of two days of typing. If she prorates her work over a period of a week she has pain at the end of the week. Continuous pain in the chest lasted several months and she still has occasional chest pain which she first felt after striking the steering wheel. While her neck has shown gradual improvement, on occasions she feels fine and the next day horrible with an intense earache which would last 4 to 7 days. If she aggravates her shoulders she still gets the earache and she still has back and neck pain. However, at this time if she carefully limits herself she is able to avoid most of the pain and discomfort.

Mr. Manning testified: After her return from the hospital his wife was in terrific pain for months. She could hardly sleep because of the pain. Even now, although she uses a special couch in order to get her neck in a more confortable position, she has trouble sleeping. She is still unable to perform her usual activities and her work has been extremely limited in the household and elsewhere.

Dr. Joseph E. Dugas, Jr., a general surgeon, saw plaintiff in the emergency room at Hotel Dieu shortly after the accident. She complained of pain in her neck and chest, the latter apparently caused by striking the steering wheel. Examination revealed limitation of motion with tenderness and spasm of the musculature. He diagnosed her principal injury as a sprain of the cervical spine. After admitting her to the hospital he treated her throughout her hospital stay (from May 21, to May 30, 1965) and for some time thereafter as an outpatient. He referred her to Dr. Walter H. Brent, Jr., an orthopedic specialist, for consultation and treatment of the cervical sprain. Mrs. Manning continues to be under Dr. Dugas' care. Although regular office visits were discontinued after seven months because she was no longer receiving any benefit from treatment, she still calls him for advice and relief of her troubles which reoccur. During hospitalization Mrs. Manning had severe pain. She was placed on analgesics and muscle relaxants. She had a very poor tolerance for drugs. Codeine made her sick, and she was allergic to demerol. Muscle relaxants didn't agree with her. Initially diathermy aggravated the neck pain. She did receive mild sedatives and tranquilizers and she was placed in intermittent cervical traction at the hospital and then discharged to outpatient care, continuing the tranquilizers and mild analgesics. Mrs. Manning finally managed to tolerate robaxin, a muscle relaxant, and eventually diathermy helped somewhat. She had quite a bit of pain in the right ear, so Dr. Dugas referred her to Dr. Christian J. Haindel, an ear, nose and throat specialist, for that condition. Dr. Dugas felt the ear trouble probably was related to the neck injury. In addition to the chest injury there was a contusion of the chest. Plaintiff's symptoms were sprains of the muscular *317

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Bluebook (online)
201 So. 2d 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-herrin-transportation-company-lactapp-1967.