Murphy v. Virginia Carolina Freight Lines, Inc.

213 S.E.2d 769, 215 Va. 770, 1975 Va. LEXIS 226
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 28, 1975
DocketRecord 740559
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 213 S.E.2d 769 (Murphy v. Virginia Carolina Freight Lines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy v. Virginia Carolina Freight Lines, Inc., 213 S.E.2d 769, 215 Va. 770, 1975 Va. LEXIS 226 (Va. 1975).

Opinion

Harman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Gail Yeatts Murphy (plaintiff) was injured in an automobile crash on January 12, 1972, on U.S. Route 58 in Pittsylvania County approximately five miles east of Danville. The case was first tried before a jury in the trial court on all issues. That jury returned a verdict against Virginia Carolina Freight Lines, Incorporated (defendant), in favor of the plaintiff for $25,000. 1 *771 The trial court set aside the verdict on the ground that it was excessive. At a second trial on January 29, 1974, where the sole issue was the amount of damages, the jury returned a verdict for $10,000. The trial court entered judgment upon that verdict.

We granted the plaintiff a writ of error to test the trial court’s action in setting aside the verdict awarded at the first trial. The defendant, conceding its liability for the plaintiff’s injury, assigns cross-error to the court’s ruling at the first trial denying defendant’s motion for a mistrial.

To review the trial court’s action in setting aside the first verdict, we must review the relevant evidence adduced there, and an incident which occurred at that trial.

Plaintiff, the mother of three young children, was a 26-year-old married woman. She was injured when the car she was driving was struck from the rear. After the crash, plaintiff went to the emergency room of Memorial Hospital in Danville where she was examined by Dr. R. E. Musgrave, an orthopedic surgeon. When X-rays failed to disclose any bony injury, Dr. Musgrave diagnosed that plaintiff was suffering from “a sprain of the muscles and ligaments involving the neck and upper back.” She was fitted “with a collar which supported the neck,” was given medication for pain and discomfort, and was released. Five days later, on January 17, Dr. Musgrave saw the plaintiff who was “having more pain in her neck and upper back.” He arranged for her to be admitted to the hospital on January 18.

Upon her admission to the hospital, plaintiff received “medications for her pain, heat and some muscle relaxant.” Her treatment included “physical therapy” several times daily to the areas involved. Plaintiff improved sufficiently to be discharged from the hospital on February 1.

Plaintiff was next seen by Dr. Gross, an associate of Dr. Musgrave, on February 11. At that time she was suffering from “a flareup of pain, a recurrence of it, and also had some [pain] in the lower back.” Dr. Musgrave related her low back pain to the January 12 injury. On this visit the plaintiff was fitted with a corset for the lower back. On February 18, after the plaintiff had contacted him by telephone, Dr. Gross ordered a refill of her prescriptions for pain and muscle relaxants.

On February 28 Dr. Musgrave found that plaintiff “was making very slow progress, she wasn’t much better.” At that *772 time the affected areas were injected with an “adrenal cortical extract,” which is given to “improve the soreness in muscles, ligaments and joints, used some in arthritis.”

When next seen by Dr. Musgrave on March 21, plaintiff was found to be making “slow improvement.” The physician found “some soreness in the muscles of the neck and upper back mostly and some limitation of motion in the spine on movement.”

Dr. Musgrave next saw her on April 24 and found her “improved as far as the neck and upper back was concerned.” On May 25, Dr. Musgrave felt that she had sufficiently recovered to resume her normal activities although “she was having some symptoms in those areas [neck and back].”

The plaintiff was last examined by Dr. Musgrave on August 22, 1972. He testified that he “did not feel that she had any permanent disability” as he then found her to be completely asymptomatic. When asked if she had completely recovered, he responded that “[s]he had no symptoms relative to her injured area.”

Plaintiff testified about her discomfort and the treatment she received following her injury. Upon her discharge from the hospital on February 1, the plaintiff and her family went to the home of plaintiffs mother where plaintiff remained “on bed rest” until March 16, when she moved, with her family, to a nearby trailer rented by her husband. There, she “got along pretty well — [but] still couldn’t do any heavy housework.”

Plaintiff wore the collar from the day of the accident until she entered the hospital on January 18. She wore a low back corset from February 11 until April 1. On the date of the first trial, July 24, 1973, Mrs. Murphy testified that she was still taking the pain killing and analgesic drugs prescribed by Dr. Musgrave. She testified that her back continued to hurt if she did “strenuous housework.” She told the jury that she had never had difficulty with her lower back prior to her injury in January, 1972.

Cross-examination of Mrs. Murphy disclosed that she had received an injury to her neck and ear in another automobile crash in June, 1971. She testified, however, that she had recovered from those injuries prior to the second crash in January, 1972.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff’s out-of-pocket expenses *773 in connection with her injuries amounted to $1,249.35, of which $1,009.35 represented the cost of medication, hospitalization and professional fees and $240.00 was spent for care of her three children while she was hospitalized and “on bed rest.”

After the luncheon recess at the first trial, the court, after conferring with counsel, called the plaintiffs husband, Jerry Wayne Murphy, into chambers. The judge, who thought he had observed Mr. Murphy in a conversation with a particular member of the jury during the recess, questioned him. While he denied that he had conversed with that member of the jury, Murphy’s evidence showed that Larry Yeatts, father of the plaintiff, did speak to one of the other jurors during the recess. Mr. Yeatts was then called by the court and testified that he spoke to Mr. Emerson, another member of the jury. When examined by plaintiff’s counsel about this conversation, Yeatts related that he “[n]o more than spoke . . . and said, ‘How are you’ — this is all that was said . . . .” The court, after stating that he “could have been wrong” in thinking that there had been conversation, overruled defendant’s motion for a mistrial.

Here, the plaintiff argues that the damages awarded at the first trial were clearly fair and reasonable and that this verdict should be fully reinstated.

The defendant says that the trial court was clearly right in setting aside, as excessive, the damages awarded at the first trial. To sustain this position, defendant’s counsel argues that the plaintiff, seven months after the accident, “was asymptomatic with no limitation of motion, no disability and no complaint,” and that she had “no fractures, no head injury, no permanency of injury and no scarring.”

While the trial court, in its letter opinion, did not refer to or appear to consider the contact between the juror and a member of the plaintiff’s family, defendant’s counsel points to this, as an additional reason, why we should sustain the trial court’s action in setting aside the first damage award.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.E.2d 769, 215 Va. 770, 1975 Va. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-virginia-carolina-freight-lines-inc-va-1975.