Michalski v. Wagner

100 N.W.2d 354, 9 Wis. 2d 22, 1960 Wisc. LEXIS 272
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 100 N.W.2d 354 (Michalski v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michalski v. Wagner, 100 N.W.2d 354, 9 Wis. 2d 22, 1960 Wisc. LEXIS 272 (Wis. 1960).

Opinion

Currie, J.

The brief of the appellant plaintiff raises these assignments of error as a ground for securing a new trial:

(1) The exclusion of a portion of the deposition of Dr. Young of the Mayo Clinic of certain testimony relating to the percentage of disability of the plaintiff.

(2) The exclusion of any testimony by Dr. Sanfelippo relating to subjective symptoms communicated to him by the plaintiff.

(3) The exclusion of evidence of the expenses incurred by the plaintiff at the Mayo Clinic.

Exclusion of Dr. Young’s Testimony as to Percentage of Disability.

The accident occurred on the evening of May 3, 1956, in the city of Milwaukee. Following the accident the plaintiff was taken to the Milwaukee County Emergency Hospital by police ambulance for first-aid treatment, and after examination by the hospital physicians he was released and went home. The next morning he attempted to work but after an hour he gave it up because of pains in his head and his right chest. He then sought treatment from Dr. Jacob M. Fine, a physician. Dr. Fine’s diagnosis of the injuries was a contusion to right forehead with laceration; a contusion to the right chest; and an abrasion to the calf of the right leg with hematoma formation. The plaintiff did not complain to Dr. Fine of any neck or back pain. He was last seen by Dr. Fine on May 12, 1956.

The plaintiff was also treated by Dr. M. L. Sanfelippo, an osteopathic physician and surgeon, after consulting an *25 attorney. Such treatment extended from May 11, 1956, to April 12, 1957. Dr. Sanfelippo had X rays taken of the plaintiff’s spine at the Milwaukee Hospital on May 14, 1956. The early treatment consisted principally of diathermy and traction to the neck. The diagnosis was that of a whiplash injury to the cervical region of the spine. Dr. Sanfelippo found that there was a displacement of the fifth upon the sixth cervical vertebra. He testified that in his opinion the plaintiff had sustained a permanent injury as the result of the accident which will produce future pain, and that such condition will continue throughout the plaintiff’s life. Dr. Sanfelippo estimated that there was about a 15 per cent disability in the cervical region and about a 10 per cent disability in the sacral region. He referred generally to the existence of muscle spasm and restricted motion, but gave no description of the extent of either.

On the other hand, Dr. James R. Regan, defendants’ medical witness, gave testimony in direct conflict with that of Dr. Sanfelippo. Dr. Regan is an orthopedic surgeon and on January 27, 1958, he made a detailed examination of the plaintiff on behalf of the defendants. Dr. Regan interpreted various X rays, including those taken at the Milwaukee Hospital and the Mayo Clinic, as well as his own. He found that there was some overhang of the fifth cervical vertebra on the sixth, and of the fourth on the fifth. In his testimony Dr. Regan stated that this was a developmental or congenital condition not caused by trauma. It was his opinion that the plaintiff sustained no permanent disability in either his neck or low back as a result of the accident.

In April, 1957, the plaintiff had gone to the Mayo Clinic where he was seen by a number of staff doctors, including Dr. IT. H. Young, an orthopedic surgeon, and had received traction and physical-therapy treatment under Dr. Young’s direction. Dr. Young’s deposition was taken later by the plaintiff and the instant assignment of error relates to the *26 ruling of the trial court in excluding parts of such deposition.

Counsel for the plaintiff read into evidence Dr. Young’s deposition except as to certain parts which were excluded upon objection of the attorneys for the defendants. Dr. Young testified that he saw the plaintiff on April 20, April 24, and May 3, 1957, and X rays were taken under his direction of the plaintiffs back. He stated that the plaintiff “had excellent spine motions in all directions.” The extent of Dr. Young’s orthopedic findings, as testified to, was that the plaintiff had narrowed lumbosacral facets, and a slight lateral curvature of the cervical spine with a slight forward subluxation of the fifth cervical vertebra upon the sixth. The following questions were then put to Dr. Young and he gave the following answers thereto:

“Q. Doctor, can you then state, as to whether in your opinion the collision that Mr. Michalski was in, produced, with reasonable medical certainty, the injury which you found in the cervical portion of his spine? A. Well, assuming the history as given to me by the patient as being correct, that he had no difficulties prior to the accident, and allowing for the fact that I am seeing the patient almost one year following the accident, the most I could possibly say is that such an accident might have caused the condition that I found present. . . .
“Q. Have you any opinion, doctor, as to the cause of the condition found in the lumbar sacral facets, that is the narrowing of them? A. Yes, something happened to them, but whether due to the injury or simple degeneration of the joint, I cannot tell in this particular instance.”

Dr. Young was then asked questions relating to the extent of the plaintiff’s permanent disability and it is this portion of the deposition which was excluded. The material questions and answers so excluded are as follows:

*27 “Q. Now with reference to the cervical area of the spine, is there any permanency in connection with the condition that you found present in Mr. Michalski? A. Well, I assume that subluxation will remain.
“Q. And for how long a period of time, doctor? A. Probably always.
"Q. And state whether in your opinion there is any degree of disability with the subluxation which is present? A. Yes, I think anybody with a subluxation has a degree of disability.
“Q. Well, have you an opinion as to the degree of disability present in so far as Mr. Michalski is concerned? A. Yes. I would estimate about a 15 per cent disability.
“Q. And will you state of what that 15 per cent disability is? Is that the whole body? A. Well, I related that to the body as a whole.”

It will be observed that as far as Dr. Young would venture, in stating an opinion as to whether the accident had caused the abnormality to the cervical vertebrae which he had found, was to state that it was a possibility. Nowhere did he testify that it was likely or probable. We, therefore, deem that the trial court properly excluded that portion of his testimony wherein he attempted to evaluate the extent of the plaintiff’s permanent disability.

One of the leading Wisconsin cases dealing with the sufficiency of medical opinion evidence bearing on permanent disability is Hallum v. Omro (1904), 122 Wis. 337, 99 N. W. 1051.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 N.W.2d 354, 9 Wis. 2d 22, 1960 Wisc. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michalski-v-wagner-wis-1960.