McCandless v. Maguire

78 Pa. D. & C. 291, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 184
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedApril 23, 1951
Docketno. 86
StatusPublished

This text of 78 Pa. D. & C. 291 (McCandless v. Maguire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCandless v. Maguire, 78 Pa. D. & C. 291, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 184 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Neely, J.,

— This is an action in trespass arising out of a collision of defendant’s bus with the abutment of a bridge, as a result of which plaintiff sustained injuries. The matter is before us on defendants’ motion for a new trial. Their motion for judgment n. o. v. has been abandoned. The jury brought in a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the total amount of $29,551.25, itemized as follows: $51.25 for medical expenses, $9,500 for pain and suffering, and $20,000 for loss of earning power.

In support of their pending motion, defendants maintain that the court erred in admitting testimony concerning plaintiff’s earnings with Westinghouse Air Brake Company, in Pittsburgh, and also in submitting to the jury the question of the loss of plaintiff’s earning power. It is further claimed that the amount of the verdict is excessive.

Defendants operate a bus line as a common carrier. Plaintiff on the night of September 17, 1944, was a paid passenger on defendants’ bus. He was in the Army at the time stationed at the Indiantown Gap Military Reservation. He boarded the bus at the reservation to come to Harrisburg at about midnight. According to plaintiff’s testimony, while the bus was being operated on U. S. Highway Route 22, and as it was approaching the locality known as Manada Hill in this county, traveling at a speed of 45 to 50 miles per hour, [293]*293it struck the abutment of a bridge. Plaintiff was thrown against the upright between the windows on the right side of the bus. He was rendered temporarily unconscious. When he regained his senses shortly after the crash, he had a cut on the left side of his forehead and was bleeding from this cut.

Plaintiff boarded another bus unassisted which took him and others to the Harrisburg Hospital. He was able to enter the hospital without assistance. He was given a hypodermic, and after several stitches were taken to the cut in the forehead he left the hospital and “hitch hiked” to his home in Pittsburgh. He arrived in Pittsburgh at 9 o’clock in the morning of the same day on which the accident occurred, slept until the afternoon, and then returned to the military reservation. He testified that he was in bed one week at the reservation. He was there given sedatives from time to time and the stitches were removed. Plaintiff’s testimony is that certain of his front teeth were loosened in the accident.

Before going into the Army, plaintiff was a musician, a trombone player. In the Army he likewise played the trombone in various musical organizations in this country and overseas. He was attached to a band at Indian-town Gap at the time of the accident. After the accident he was sent to other stations in this country. Pursuant to his own request, he was transferred to the infantry, and in that branch of the service was sent to the Pacific Theatre in the first part of 1945. He served in several areas in the Pacific and was finally transferred to the Two Hundred and Thirty-third Army Ground Forces Band in Manila. Plaintiff went to Japan with that organization, and then subsequently was shipped home in the first part of March 1946. He was mustered out April 6, 1946.

Plaintiff called Dr. Paul H. Franklin, who examined him after he was out of the Army, and more than four [294]*294years after the accident. The physician testified that plaintiff had suffered a permanent brain injury. He based this diagnosis on the fact that a certain test known as the “Romberg test” had proven positive. He also testified that he had given plaintiff a complete neurological examination. However, Dr. Charles W. Smith, called by defendants, disputed the validity of the Rom-berg test for the purpose of determining a brain injury. Dr. Smith testified that such test was only for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not there was an injury to the central nervous system. Plaintiff did not refute Dr. Smith’s evidence as to the invalidity of the Romberg test with respect to determining a brain injury. Since Dr. Franklin predicated his testimony that plaintiff had a brain injury on the Romberg test, made more than four years after the accident, he should have at least shown that the test was recognized as a valid test for the purpose used.

There was sufficient testimony from which the jury could have found that plaintiff’s teeth were loosened in the accident on the basis of the evidence given by plaintiff himself: Ross v. Riffle, 310 Pa. 176 (1932) ; Paul et al. v. Atlantic Refining Co., 304 Pa. 360 (1931) ; Grebe et al. v. Kligerman, 310 Pa. 60 (1933). Dr. Albert Goho testified that plaintiff’s loosened teeth would render it difficult for him to play wind instruments. Defendants’ witness, Dr. Harding, testified that the loosening of the teeth was due to malocclusion rather than, any accident.

In addition to his loose teeth, plaintiff testified that his present injuries are headaches and that he feels weak. The evidence concerning these additional ailments is almost entirely based upon plaintiff’s subjective symptoms, except that his doctor testified that he had low blood pressure. Plaintiff’s evidence concerning these subjective symptoms must certainly be weighed in [295]*295the light of his arduous military duties which he performed in the Army long after the accident.

Plaintiff testified that he “worked for Westinghouse Air Brake” in Pittsburgh for approximately two years before going into the Army, and that he terminated his employment in April of 1943 or February of 1942. Plaintiff stated that the employment was terminated in 1942, but acquiesced in counsel’s suggestion that it could have been 1943. He testified that his earnings at Westinghouse were $60 per week. Also while working there he had special musical engagements to play in an orchestra at the Westinghouse Radio Station KDKA in Pittsburgh, and in these engagements he made from $9 to $14 per week extra. In the spring and summer of 1943, when he was expecting to be drafted, he had two intermittent engagements with a professional orchestra, in which he earned approximately $76 per week. These latter two engagements were not of lengthy duration.

Plaintiff testified that after he was discharged from the Army he endeavored to obtain work with professional orchestras, but could not meet their requirements because his loosened teeth prevented him from applying the requisite pressure to play a trombone in these orchestras. He said that a different type of music was played in the Army, and that he was qualified to do that, but he could not give the instrument the required pressure in civilian life, due to his loose teeth. He went to work for his father in the clothing business in the Pittsburgh area and made from $20 to $25 per week. His father said that his work was unsatisfactory. His wife testified that when he got out of the Army he was an “old man” and irritable.

Defendants’ first objection is that we admitted evidence that plaintiff was earning an average of $60 per week at Westinghouse Air Brake Company. As we understand defendants’ objection, it was based on the [296]*296proposition that the earnings were too remote to have any probative value. The rule undoubtedly is that evidence of what a man was able to earn at his regular occupation a reasonably brief time before an injury, may be taken into consideration by a jury, along with other evidence, for the purpose of determining what his earning power was before the injury. It is true also that what a person earned several years before an accident possesses too little probative value to be admitted: Rooney v. Maczko, 315 Pa. 113 (1934).

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Related

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164 A. 913 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1932)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 Pa. D. & C. 291, 1951 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccandless-v-maguire-pactcompldauphi-1951.