Markowitz v. Lindeman

164 A.D. 679, 150 N.Y.S. 345, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8509

This text of 164 A.D. 679 (Markowitz v. Lindeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Markowitz v. Lindeman, 164 A.D. 679, 150 N.Y.S. 345, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8509 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

Laughlin, J.:

The plaintiff was in the employ of the department of street cleaning of the city of New York as a street cleaner, and he claims that while engaged in the performance of his duties in West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street between Amsterdam avenue and Broadway on the 11th day of January, 1913, he was run down by an electric brougham driven by the defendant and sustained substantial injuries.

The only question presented by the appeal relates to the sufficiency of the damages awarded by the jury. There is medical testimony in the case tending to support the plaintiff’s claim that after the accident he was suffering from some disability which, if caused by the negligence of the defendant, [680]*680would have entitled him to a larger verdict; but whether the abnormal physical conditions of which he complains resulted from the accident on the occasion in question, depends, I think, entirely upon the testimony of the plaintiff, which was not corroborated.

He testified that the accident occurred between eleven and twelve in the forenoon; that he was working on the southerly side of the carriageway, about three or four feet from the curb and between it and his can-carrier; that he was using a shovel and broom and emptying the sweepings into a large can ón a can-carrier on wheels which he moved about with him; that he was bent over, picking up a pile of sweepings when he was struck “right in my left part, right here (indicating), this side;” that he did not see the vehicle approaching, but that the defendant stopped after the accident and gave him her card and asked if he was seriously hurt, to which he made no reply; that he was able to and did walk — but says, “I had my pains,” — after the accident and reported to his section foreman, and then went home, traveling by street car part of the way; that his wife called Dr. Mencke, and that after that he called on Dr. Kornblum, who examined and treated him; that he went to a hospital for deformities and joint diseases in One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street, and had an X-ray picture taken, and that after that and on the eighteenth of January he went to Mt. Sinai Hospital and remained there until the second of February, and was subsequently treated at a dispensary for a time, and then went to the Harlem Hospital and remained a week, and later went to Mt. Sinai Hospital for a week and received treatment; that the treatment he received was for an internal condition and consisted of injections and applications of electricity; that during this time he was able to walk about but used crutches three or four months and suffered pain; that he left the Mt. Sinai Hospital the last time on the twenty-fourth of November, and called there again on the second of December; that during this time the only work he did was light work for the city for about six weeks from July thirtieth to September fourteenth; and that in part of his left leg he had no sensation of feeling at the time of the trial. This is the substance of his direct testimony relating [681]*681to the accident and to the injuries. He said nothing on his direct examination with respect to having been knocked down, and it is highly- improbable that such an important matter would have been omitted if he had informed his counsel that he had been precipitated to the pavement by the collision. On cross-examination, however, on being asked if he was knocked down, he answered that he was.

One Cummings, called for plaintiff, testified that he was returning from Amsterdam avenue, presumably on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, although he does not state the fact, and that his attention was attracted by a noise, and he looked and saw plaintiff lying on his side on the street and groaning, and he and another man picked him up and helped him to the curb, and then plaintiff walked away. One Bell, a colored minister and teacher, seventy-eight years old, who was with Cummings, testified that he saw plaintiff in the act of rising to dump sweepings into the can “ when he got struck on the left side with the automobile;” that the plaintiff fell and £ £ threw both hands out like that, and fell flat upon his stomach (illustrating); ” and in answer to a question as to how long he remained with the plaintiff, he said, “Why, I judge about a minute after he got up; ” that an officer then arrived and Cummings £ £ went his way, ” and that he had known Cummings between fifteen and eighteen years. One Egan testified that he was going east on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street; that he heard the rattle of a can and somebody halloaing, and turned around and saw two men picking plaintiff up, but he did not see whether or not plaintiff was struck by anything and he did not go back to the scene of the accident.

The physician first called to attend plaintiff did not testify, and no explanation was offered for the failure to call him. Dr. Kornblum was called by plaintiff and testified that he first examined plaintiff at his office on the 13th of January, 1913, which would be two days after the accident; that he found no mark, bruise, abrasion, black and blue spot, or other evidence on the surface of plaintiff’s body to indicate an injury; that there was a sagging of the left buttock, and on examining plaintiff rectally he found an abnormal condition, the cause and exact nature of which he was unable to discover, but [682]*682that it might have been caused by “an enlarged prostate, or it might be extravasation of blood to that part,” and might have existed “for some time;” that he found points of tenderness “at the sacrum and at the left part of the hip,” and found evidence of partial paralysis of some of the muscles and lack of sensation in the back part of the leg, and he found a reaction of the muscles that could not be stimulated; that on the seventeenth of January he advised plaintiff to go to a hospital to have an X-ray picture taken; that his diagnosis at the time of his first examination was “inflammation of the nerve and a possible fracture of the pelvis. What part of the pelvis I did not know; ” that with the exception of this abnormal rectal condition, and the reaction of the muscles, and the condition of the left buttock, the complaints of the plaintiff depended entirely upon his truthfulness. A medical examiner for a fraternal society testified that he examined plaintiff for admission thereto about three weeks prior to the occasion in question, and apparently found nothing that would bar plaintiff from admission; but it appears that his examination was superficial and would not have disclosed the conditions of which plaintiff complained, and he could not and did not testify that none of these conditions existed or were present when he examined plaintiff. Two other doctors called by plaintiff, one who examined him at the Mt. Sinai Hospital and another who examined him for the purposes of the trial, gave testimony corroborative of that given by Dr. Kornblum with respect to plaintiff’s condition, and one of them said that' an X-ray plate should be had, and testified that he had a fracture of the sacrum and traumatic neuritis, which is an inflammation of the nerve due to injury caused by violence; but neither of them professed to be able to state how long these conditions had existed or what caused them, excepting that one of them said in answer to a hypothetical question that they might have been caused by such an accident. One of them also testified that plaintiff told him that he was struck in the back by an automobile but did not fall when he was struck, or experience any pain until five or ten minutes after, when he felt severe pain in his back and down his thigh, and was just able to hobble home.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A.D. 679, 150 N.Y.S. 345, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markowitz-v-lindeman-nyappdiv-1914.