Pasqualucci v. Kronz

171 A.2d 873, 195 Pa. Super. 462, 1961 Pa. Super. LEXIS 663
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 15, 1961
DocketAppeals, 54, 55, and 56
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 171 A.2d 873 (Pasqualucci v. Kronz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pasqualucci v. Kronz, 171 A.2d 873, 195 Pa. Super. 462, 1961 Pa. Super. LEXIS 663 (Pa. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

Opinion by

Wright, J.,

In the late afternoon of April 17, 1956, Alfredo Pasqualucci was operating a Cadillac two-door sedan in a line of traffic proceeding north on Washington Road, Mt. Lebanon Township, Allegheny County. Seated on the front seat with him were his wife, Columbia, and his sister, Jenny. The first vehicle following the Cadillac was a panel truck. Behind the panel truck was a dump truck owned by Raymond J. Kronz and operated by his son and employe, Donald Kronz. The Pasqualucci car stopped for a red traffic light near the intersection of Crestwood Avenue. The dump truck did not stop in time, collided with the panel truck, and drove it into the rear of the Cadillac.

As a result of this collision, two trespass actions were instituted in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County at January Term 1958. The defendants admitted liability and the case was contested solely on the issue of the extent of the injuries to the Pasqualuccis and the amount of their damages. After a three-day trial the jury returned a verdict at No. 1294 in favor of Alfredo Pasqualucci in the amount of $560.00, and in favor of Columbia Pasqualucci in the amount of $800.00. At No. 1295 the jury returned a verdict in favor of Jenny Pasqualucci in. the amount *464 of $1,900.00. The court en banc refused plaintiffs’ motions for a new trial and directed that judgments be entered on the verdicts. These appeals followed.

At the time of the trial, April, 1960, Alfredo Pasqualucci was fifty-one years of age. His wife, Columbia, was forty-seven, and his sister, Jenny, was forty-two. Immediately after the accident appellants were taken to the St. Clair Memorial Hospital, examined by a doctor, and discharged. On April 20, 1956, appellants consulted Dr. Benjamin Super, their family physician. Dr. Super made a physical examination of each, and suggested to Alfredo and Jenny that they should have x-rays taken. Alfredo’s x-rays did not disclose any bone injury, but did reveal some arthritis of the spine. Jenny’s x-rays showed no abnormality in the curvature or alignment of the vertebrae, and gave no indication of anything which could be related to recent trauma. Dr. Super saw Alfredo and Columbia at weekly intervals for about a month, but did not render any treatment. He did advise Jenny to wear a turkish towel collar.

On May 25, 1956, Alfredo consulted Dr. Paul B. Steele, an orthopedic surgeon. Further x-rays were taken. On the basis of his examination, Dr. Steele concluded that there was a marked arthritic condition of the spine which had been aggravated by the accident. He testified that it was normal for the aggravation of such an arthritic condition to wear off after a period of time. Dr. Steele prescribed a brace or corset to support the lumbar region of the back and prevent side movement. On September 12, 1957, seventeen months after the accident, Alfredo complained of discomfort in his neck, and at that time Dr. Steele prescribed a collar for him to wear. In April, 1958, Alfredo claimed that he had an acute attack of back pain, which he attributed to the accident. On this occasion, Dr. Steele placed him in the Allegheny General Hospital. Dr. *465 Steele conceded that this particular aggravation could have occurred regardless of the accident. Alfredo denied that he had ever had any back trouble prior to the accident. However, the records of the Vesta Coal Company, for which concern he had worked as a miner until 1948, were introduced to show that in 1939 he had been off work for one week because of a sprained back, and that in 1944 he was off work for two months with lumbago. In March, 1956, Alfredo was treated by Dr. Super for a kidney stone condition, which required hospitalization.

In 1948, Alfredo quit mining and went into the tavern business. During 1955 and the first few months of 1956, he and Columbia had been operating the New York Cafe in Washington, Pennsylvania. A short time before the accident they sold this business, and were awaiting the transfer of the liquor license to a new location, known as Garner’s Tavern, also in Washington. It was opened on May 25, 1956, five weeks after the accident, and was still being operated by Alfredo and Columbia at the time of the trial. Their daily routine at that time was the same as when they started the tavern business. Columbia would open up in the morning and Alfredo would take over sometime later in the day and stay until closing time. The books and records of Garner’s Tavern were produced in court and showed that, in the last seven months of 1956, Garner’s Tavern did almost as much business as had been done in the whole year of 1955 at appellants’ previous location, New York Cafe. In 1957, it did the largest business that the parties had ever done since they had been engaged in tavern operations. Claim was made that it was necessary to hire additional help because of the inability of Alfredo and Columbia, due to the accident, to perform many of the duties which they had previously done. However, the records showed that the payroll for waitresses, bartenders, janitor service et cetera *466 at Garner’s Tavern was the same as it had been at the New York Cafe, before the accident.

With regard to Columbia Pasqualucci, Dr. Steele testified that he first examined her on June 28, 1956, at which time he found the motions in her neck to be fairly good in all directions. He stated that she manifested a tear in the ligamentum nucci but that this condition healed up with no danger of any recurrence. He prescribed a collar for Columbia, which she wore off and on for about a year.

Jenny Pasqualucci consulted Dr. Steele on May 25, 1956. He also prescribed a collar for her. At the time of the accident she was employed as a seamstress and presser for a cleaning firm, earning approximately $20.00 a week. She never returned to this employment. In May, 1957, she was admitted to the Washington Hospital for a duodenal ulcer and gastritis. She testified that she did not know whether she would have been able to work despite this condition. In March, 1958, she was injured in another automobile accident in which it was claimed that she had aggravated a pri- or injury to her neck. She was married on November 15, 1958.

On behalf of the defendants, Dr. George E. Clapp gave each of the appellants a general physical examination in February, 1957. It was his opinion that there was no disability in any of the three individuals, as of the date of his examination, which would prevent them from performing their customary duties. Dr. Cyrus P. Markle, a specialist in orthopedics and senior surgeon at the West Penn Hospital, also examined Alfredo and Jenny for the defendants on March 80, 1960. At that time he had x-rays taken. At the trial, Dr. Markle compared these x-rays with those taken for Dr. Steele in May, 1956. Dr. Markle testified that in his opinion there was no substantial change in the appearance of the bony structure in the four-year interval. *467 We feel that a portion of Dr. Markle’s report, elicited on cross-examination, had significance for the jury. His comment was as follows: “I feel that this patient [Alfredo] is claim minded and that he most likely received no disability as a result of his alleged accident on April 17th, 1956. This patient was a miner for 30 years and it is not unusual to have some back symptoms following such an occupation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 A.2d 873, 195 Pa. Super. 462, 1961 Pa. Super. LEXIS 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pasqualucci-v-kronz-pasuperct-1961.