Moody v. RPM Pizza, Inc.

659 So. 2d 877, 1995 WL 456207
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1995
Docket92-CA-00328-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 659 So. 2d 877 (Moody v. RPM Pizza, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moody v. RPM Pizza, Inc., 659 So. 2d 877, 1995 WL 456207 (Mich. 1995).

Opinion

659 So.2d 877 (1995)

A.J. MOODY
v.
RPM PIZZA, INC., d/b/a Dominoes Pizza and Stennis Butler, Individually and as Employee, Agent and Servant of Dominoes Pizza.

No. 92-CA-00328-SCT.

Supreme Court of Mississippi.

August 3, 1995.

*878 John L. Hunter, Cumbest Cumbest Hunter & McCormick, Pascagoula; Donald P. Sigalas; J. Brice Kerr, Pascagoula, for appellant.

William E. Whitfield, III, Bryant Clark Dukes Blakeslee Ramsay & Hammond, Gulfport, for appellee.

Before HAWKINS, C.J., and SULLIVAN and McRAE, JJ.

SULLIVAN, Justice, for the Court:

Alfred J. Moody filed a complaint against Dominoes Pizza and Stennis Butler, individually and as employee, agent and servant of Dominoes, on January 23, 1990, alleging that while driving his automobile on May 5, 1989, he was rear-ended by a vehicle driven by Butler. Moody claimed damages in the form of physical pain, mental anguish and loss of wage earning capacity. Dominoes filed a response admitting that it was vicariously liable for any of Butler's negligent acts involved in the accident at issue. The trial commenced on January 14, 1992, and the jury returned a verdict on January 17, 1992, awarding Moody $17,740.74 in damages. The court entered judgment on the verdict on January 23, 1992.

The defendants filed a motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict on January 29, 1992, claiming that the verdict of the jury was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence on the issue of liability. Moody filed a motion for a new trial as to damages only, or in the alternative, for an additur. The court denied the motions filed by both sides on March 16, 1992. Moody presents the following assignments of error on appeal:

I. WHETHER THE VERDICT OF THE JURY WAS CONTRARY TO THE OVERWHELMING WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE?
II. WHETHER THE VERDICT OF THE JURY EVINCES BIAS, PASSION AND PREJUDICE AGAINST THE PLAINTIFF AND REPRESENTED ONLY AN AWARD FOR MEDICAL EXPENSES IN TOTAL DISREGARD OF THE INSTRUCTIONS OF THE COURT REGARDING DAMAGES THAT SHOULD BE AWARDED IN THIS CASE, AND PARTICULARLY IN VIEW OF THE LACK OF ANY EVIDENCE OF CONTRIBUTORY NEGLIGENCE?
III. WHETHER THE COURT ERRED IN ALLOWING HEARSAY TESTIMONY BY DR. FINEBURG REGARDING STATEMENTS BY HIS EMPLOYEES?
IV. WHETHER THE COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO SUBMIT TO THE JURY THE $553.05 MEDICAL BILL FROM SINGING RIVER HOSPITAL SINCE IT WAS SUFFICIENTLY AUTHENTICATED AND SHOWN TO BE REASONABLY RELATED TO TREATMENT OF PLAINTIFF'S INJURIES?

Dominoes and Butler present the following assignment on cross-appeal:

V. WHETHER THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING DEFENDANTS' MOTION FOR JUDGMENT NOTWITHSTANDING THE VERDICT?

THE FACTS

This lawsuit stems from an automobile accident in which Moody was allegedly injured when an automobile driven by Butler rear-ended Moody's car while stopped at an intersection in Moss Point, Mississippi. At the time of the accident, Butler was operating his vehicle in the course and scope of his duties as an agent and employee of Dominoes Pizza.

*879 Pat Hinkle was several cars behind Moody when Butler rear-ended Moody. Hinkle testified on cross-examination that the accident did not appear to be too severe, and that Moody only complained that he was shaken up after the accident. Moody did, however, get out of his car clenching his neck. Hinkle testified that he and a few other individuals operated Moody's shrimp boat after the accident since Moody was in pain and unable to do so himself. He testified that any records of their business together were destroyed when the boat on which they were stored sank.

Leonard Click, a commercial fisherman, had been close friends with Moody for the majority of the last ten years. Prior to the time of the accident, he saw Moody perform the physically demanding tasks required for shrimping on numerous occasions. However, he responded to a radio call on June 6, 1989, the opening day of shrimp season, and found Moody lying on the deck of his boat (the "Agnes Marie") rubbing his neck and "scratching his hand or something." Click helped Moody run his boat during the remaining portion of the afternoon because of his severe pain. The next day, they went out again only to return to shore because of Moody's pain. Click said Moody did not take his boat out again until December of 1989. Click testified that Moody is now in the live bait business because it was less physically demanding than commercial shrimping.

On June 19, 1989, Moody complained to a chiropractor, Dr. Drake, about pain in the right side of his lower neck, pain in his right arm and numbness in his right hand. Moody told Dr. Drake that his symptoms began the day after the May 5, 1989, car accident, and that he had been in no other accidents. Dr. Drake's examination basically confirmed Moody's complaints. His diagnosis was subluxation, abnormal movement of vertebra, at the C5-C6-C7 area with possible disk involvement. He also stated that Moody suffered a 30-40% reduction of motion in his neck area. He advised Moody to see a medical doctor because of the severe pain and numbness in his right hand.

Moody also went to the emergency room, on June 19, 1989, and either he or his wife related the following history to the hospital staff:

Thirty-one (31) year old white male complains of pain in right shoulder, shoulder blades, radiating to right arm and into back. Pain started two days ago out on a shrimp boat. Pain continuous, Nuprin and Bengay, pre-hospital treatment, no relief, denies injury or trauma.

In the same document, there was a box next to the words "place of accident" which had not been marked. Also, the word "none" was indicated in the box next to "Accident." On another medical document, filled out June 24, 1989, there was nothing marked in the box next to "place of accident," and "no" was indicated next to "accident." Moody also indicated that he had suffered a history of falls. In a form filled out June 27, 1989, three days after Moody was admitted to the hospital on an out-patient basis, the history reads that the patient "had an accident at work and M.V.A." Moody claimed at trial that he never had an accident at work. Interestingly, on Moody's discharge notice from the hospital, dated June 28, 1989, the "place of accident" says Main Street in Moss Point. Again, Moody did not know whether he or his wife filled out the forms introduced at trial.

Dr. Fineburg, a family practitioner, examined Moody on June 20, 1989. Dr. Fineburg testified by deposition that he treated the patient for muscle spasms by administering local creams. There was also an indication in his records that Moody came to the office on August 3, 1989 and directed the office manager to mark on his medical records that his injuries had not been caused by a fall, but by a motor vehicle accident.

On July 5, 1989, Moody visited a neurosurgeon by the name of Dr. McCloskey. His deposition was admitted in evidence, and it documented Moody's medical history as follows:

My records indicate that this thirty-one year old commercial fisherman reported that he was injured in an automobile accident on May 5th, 1989. At first he didn't think there was any serious problem. His neck, though, was stove up, but within a few days the problem began to worsen *880 instead of getting better. He developed more neck pain, stiffness, and shoulder pain, and gradually evolved a syndrome of severe pain and aching, radiating down the right arm.

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Bluebook (online)
659 So. 2d 877, 1995 WL 456207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moody-v-rpm-pizza-inc-miss-1995.