Pinter v. Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad

245 S.W.2d 88, 362 Mo. 887, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 14, 1952
Docket42512
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 245 S.W.2d 88 (Pinter v. Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pinter v. Gulf, Mobile & Ohio Railroad, 245 S.W.2d 88, 362 Mo. 887, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 595 (Mo. 1952).

Opinion

*890 ELLISON, J.

The defendant railroad appeals from a judgment against it for $40,000, recovered by the plaintiff-respondent in the circuit court of the City of St. Louis, for personal injuries sustained while repairing one of appellant’s railroad bridges near Philadelphia, Mississippi. His petition prayed judgment for $100,000 damages. The jury’s verdict was for $45,000. The trial court enforced a remittitur of $5,000. The defendant-appellant’s brief here *891 concedes its negligence, but complains of fifteen alleged errors during the trial. Its Points and Authorities narrow these down to three: (1) erroneous admission of expert opinion testimony of respondent’s medical witnesses, none of whom had ever treated respondent or seen him, except to qualify as an expert witness in his behalf; (2) error in giving an instruction No. 2 on the measure of damages; (3) complaint that the judgment was excessive, and the jury’s verdict the result of prejudice.

The underlying facts were that respondent, while employed as a member of appellant’s Bridge and Building gang, was engaged in repairing the bridge on October 8, 1948. The work included the replacement of some old heavy timbers, or “cap sills”. As plaintiff and other workmen were rolling one of the cap sills off the bridge with cant hooks, they failed to secure the end resting on the bridge while the other end projected out to one side without support. In consequence the unsupported end suddenly tilted down and the other end “kicked up”, causing respondent’s cant hook to strike him and knock him off the bridge. He fell to the ground 16 feet below, landed on his feet on some old timber, and toppled over backward.

The circuit court trial began over two years later on November 20, 1950. The respondent’s petition claimed serious permanent injuries resulting from the casualty to his head, neck, back, spine, vertebrae, sacrum, ilium, buttocks, sides, left and right legs, feet and toes, internal and external male organs, hips, bladder, and the bones, joints, muscles, tendons, ligaments, cartilages, discs, intervertebral spaces, membranes, skin, tissues, glands, nerves and vessels thereof. His chief injuries were to his back in the sacroiliac region. His medical testimony came from three surgeons or physicians as expert witnesses, who had first seen him about two years after the casualty.

Under its first point appellant complains of the testimony of Dr. Sigmund Tasham, an X-ray expert, who took three pictures of respondent’s back on September 27, 1950, a little less than two years after the casualty. He testified these pictures, one in particular, showed a small piece of bone missing between the fifth lumbar vertebra and the sacrum. And he estimated that condition had developed within a year. Another picture showed a decided narrowing of the space between that vertebra and the sacrum. In fact the doctor said the space was obliterated. He attributed this condition to rupture or degeneration of the disc between the two, and said that usually resulted from trauma. Later on cross-examination the witness estimated the condition had existed for l-% years, then he said a year, and finally approximately a year. Appellant’s counsel objected below, and does here, on the ground that the pictures were taken at too remote a time to have probative value under the doctor’s testimony. ’

This assignment is not referred to in the argument in appellant’s brief. We overrule it on the ground that the doctor’s testimony *892 clearly stated such injuries usually result from trauma, the date of which could only be estimated approximately from the pictures themselves. The doctor’s estimate ranged from “within a year” to a year and a half, and “approximately a year”, showing the time element was uncertain. Actually the pictures were taken a little over a year and eleven months after the casualty. We think it was not improper to admit the testimony to the jury.

Appellant’s second assignment under its first point refers to this incident. When respondent’s expert witness Dr. Fox was testifying, respondent’s counsel asked him a hypothetical question including the following assumption: “that prior to that time on October 8, 1948, (when respondent fell off the bridge) for at least three, four or five years, he had absolutely no pain of any kind in his back, legs, hand, or fingers, or any other part of his body.” (Parenthesis and italics ours). Counsel for appellant objected because it included an assumption not supported by the evidence that respondent “had no pain or suffering in his back from three to five years before.”

' After a colloquy between the court and counsel out of the hearing of the jury respondent’s counsel announced: “I promise to supply that when the plaintiff takes the stand.” In reliance on that promise and thé foregoing assumption Dr. Fox was permitted to answer: “It would appear as though the patient was suffering from one of several lesions. He could either have a severe sprain of the sacroiliac and the lumbro-sacral joints or he could have a herniated disc.”

Appellant contends here that respondent’s counsel did not keep his promise by adducing from respondent testimony concerning the absence of pain in his back during the period stated, upon which the doctor’s answer was based, and that the omission therefore was erroneous, citing Root v. K. C. Southern Ry. Co., 195 Mo. 348, 375-7 (7), 92 SW. 621, 630-1(9); Hahn v. Hammerstein, 272 Mo. 248, 262 198 SW. 833, 837(8).

This necessitates a review of plaintiff-respondent’s testimony on the foregoing issue about pain in his back. But it must be first determined what the hypothetical question meant in assuming that for “three, four, or five years” before respondent fell off the bridge in October, 1948, he had absolutely no pain of any kind in his back. As to this time element the question was in the disjunctive. In our opinion Dr. Fox would and did understand he could base the answer he gave on the assumption that respondent had had no pain in the back within the minimum time of three years stated in the question, and that if the difference between that minimum and the stated maximum of five years would have made any difference in his answer, he would have said so.

Respondent testified he had worked for the appellant railroad steadily from September, 1945 to the date of his injury, October 8, 1948, as a member of its bridge gang. The work was heavy. During *893 that time he had had no disability affecting his capacity to work, and he was in goocl health. Prior to that he had worked for the railroad in other capacities since April, 1942, or earlier. He did have trouble with his hands, back, body and legs and slight pains all over his body in 1942, including numbness and weakness. He was on a carpenter j.ob, and for a brief time worked as a fireman. At that time his illness was attributed to malaria and neuritis, and on' the advice of the railroad doctors he had two teeth extracted. This was late in 1942 and after four or five months in the spring of 1943, he was in good condition and didn’t have any pain until he fell off the bridge.

On cross-examination respondent admitted that in 1942 he had trouble with his arm, leg, hand, foot and side. It didn’t involve his back.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W.2d 88, 362 Mo. 887, 1952 Mo. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pinter-v-gulf-mobile-ohio-railroad-mo-1952.