Piper v. Barber Transportation Co.

112 N.W.2d 329, 79 S.D. 353, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 56
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1961
DocketFile 9866
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 112 N.W.2d 329 (Piper v. Barber Transportation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piper v. Barber Transportation Co., 112 N.W.2d 329, 79 S.D. 353, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 56 (S.D. 1961).

Opinion

SMITH, P. J.

A transport truck of defendant overtook and ran upon a farm tractor operated toy plaintiff on U. S. Highway 18 near Okreek in Todd County, South Dakota, on October 6, 1956. Plaintiff was thrown backward high in the air and landed on his lower back on the blacktop highway. A protruding intervertebral disk subsequently developed which necessitated surgery to remove the disk and fuse the two lowest vertebrae with the sacrum. In this action plaintiff sought and recovered judgment on the theory that the protruding disk and other injuries were caused by the described collision. At the trial the defendant admitted its liability for whatever damages plaintiff sustained as the proximate result of the collision, and such was the issue submitted to a jury. It returned a $39,529.29 verdict for plaintiff. Subsequently to the entry of judgment the defendant made and the trial court denied an application for a new trial. A partial development .of facts will be useful in the treatment of several of the matters urged by defendant. Other facts will be brought out in connection with particular contentions.

The force of the collision wrecked the farm tractor and jackknifed the transport into the ditch. Plaintiff testified that while in the air, with his feet uppermost, he looked through his crotch and watched the transport go forward and into the ditch. As it passed him it struck his elbow. After landing on his back, he was unconscious for a brief *356 period, and thereafter was suffering severe pain in his back and elbow, and was made uncomfortable by burns from battery acid which was splashed over his person.

At the Winner hospital, where he was taken,, he was examined by Dr. Studenberg. Although he was in obvious pain when he attempted to move his torso, X-rays then taken and read by the doctor revealed no abnormalities he could detect except a broken toe. Plaintiff was released from the hospital the following day. Rest on a firm bed and sedation for pain was prescribed. A brace purchased at the local drug store was suggested as support for the back. When he was next seen by Dr. Studenberg in connection with these injuries on November 23, 1956, he was .complaining of weakness and numbness in his arm and persistent stiffness and soreness in the lumibar region of his back, all dating from the October 6, 1956 collision. He was then referred to Dr. Van Demark of Sioux Falls, an orthopedic specialist. He remained in the care of this doctor for a period just short of a year during which the doctor saw him ten times.

The first examination included X-rays. The doctor continued the use of the brace purchased at Winner and built up one shoe. Plaintiff was told to return in thirty days.- In January 1957 the doctor placed plaintiff in a cast jacket , which caused him to walk with a slight stoop. He wore this jacket in its original state for two months and thereafter ,for a. period .so cut-as to permit its temporary removal. Thereafter he wore a brace prescribed by Dr. Van Demark. Duing this time activity and work were encouraged by the doctor. Plaintiff testified that work would produce such intense pain he had to lie down. Periods of reduced activity brought relief from suffering he said.

•. - i On April 22, 1957 while plaintiff was- in the care of- Dr. Van Demark, and while wearing the opened jacket c'ast he ■was kicked by a horse. He received a glancing blow in the chest. Two days later, because of soreness in the chest, he p consulted Dr. Studenberg at Winner, It was found-that- cer *357 .tain ribs had been torn from the breastbone. The doctor applied an elastic bandage which relieved the pain. This was the only treatment plaintiff received for this injury. He testified that he suffered no back injury as a result of this blow. Dr. Studenberg confirmed and corroborated this opinion of the plaintiff.

Late in 1957 Dr. Van Demark referred plaintiff to the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minnesota. He reported there December 16, 1957. Dr. A. J. Bianco-, Jr., the doctor in charge, testified he gave a history of the collision of October 6,. 1956, above described, and complained he had since suffered almost constant low back pain and down the right thigh to the back of the knee. Both plaintiff and Dr. Bianco testified that the reason plaintiff was referred to the Clinic by Dr. Van Demark was because of the complaint of low back pain radiating down a leg: A thorough examination, including the reading of X-rays then taken, followed. There .was a tenderness at the right sacroiliac area of the spine. Flexion of the spine was moderately limited forward, backward and to- both sides. The X-rays disclosed what was described as “wear changes” in the lower joints between the lowest lumbar vertebrae and the sacrum, and some narrowing of the space ordinarily occupied by the vertebral disk at the lowest disk space in the back.

An intervertebral disk was described by the doctor as a cushion or shock absorberlike structure which lies between each of the vertebrae throughout the spine. It is made of cartilage or gristle and has a soft center, surrounded on the outside by a firm rind. A protrusion of a disk, he said, looks somewhat similar to a bulge seen in an inner tube where there is a weak spot. In other words, the soft material bulges or pushes out through the weak spot in the -rind.

From his original examination the doctor formed an opinion that plaintiff -most likely had a protruded or herniated intervertebral disk at the lowest level. of the spine. Thereupon a neurologist was called in -.consultation, and *358 following his examination he advised a myelogram be performed as a further diagnostic procedure. However, as plaintiff had an infected skin area at the base of his spine this procedure was delayed until plaintiffs return to the Clinic on February 12, 1958.

The doctor described a myelogram as a “test whereby an attempt is made to outline the disk protrusion, * * * by inserting a needle into' the column of fluid around the spinal cord, just behind the disk. Into this column dye is injected which shows up on x-rays, or air is injected which also shows up on x-ray, as being different from the ordinary fluid column at this area. If a disk is protruding from between the vertebrae, it often appears as a bulge,, pushing into the dye or into the air column which has been injected.”

Such a myelogram was done, using air, on February 12, 1958. It revealed a slight bulge at the lowest level and a possible bulge at the next level. Therefore, based on the facts revealed by their examinations, the doctors undertook a surgical exploration of the lower disk spaces. It disclosed a protruded disk at the second lowest space in the back which was compressing nerve roots running to the leg. Other damage to this area of the spine was revealed by these examinations. The described disk was removed, grafts were taken from the pelvic bone and placed in beds, then prepared, through the last two vertebrae and into the sacrum. After healing these grafts acted as a bridge fusing these two vertebrae and the sacrum.

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Bluebook (online)
112 N.W.2d 329, 79 S.D. 353, 1961 S.D. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piper-v-barber-transportation-co-sd-1961.