Porter v. Green

745 S.W.2d 874, 1987 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3042
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 4, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 745 S.W.2d 874 (Porter v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. Green, 745 S.W.2d 874, 1987 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3042 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

LEWIS, Judge.

This is an appeal by defendant Lisa C. Green from judgments entered on the jury verdicts returned against her and in favor of (1) plaintiff Charlie Porter, individually, in the sum of $20,000.00; (2) plaintiff Charlie Porter as executor of the estate of Mae Katherine Porter in the sum of $13,000.00; and (3) plaintiff Betty Jo Sweat in the sum of $3,000.00.

This case arose out of an automobile accident that occurred on Highway 31 at its intersection with Sumner Hall Road in Gal-latin, Sumner County, Tennessee. Plaintiffs were slowing to make a right-hand turn when the vehicle driven by defendant struck the rear of plaintiffs’ vehicle and “knocked [it] a complete 180 degree turn.”

Defendant has presented three issues for our consideration, the first of which is “[w]hether the Trial Court erred in admitting evidence in the form of deposition testimony of a physician for the jury’s consideration at the trial of this case over objections that the evidence was incompetent and inadmissible.”

The defendant objected to the testimony of Dr. James E. McGriff regarding permanent disabilities of both Charlie Porter and Mae Katherine Porter. She argues that Dr. McGriff's testimony was insufficient to show that as a result of the injuries they received in the accident they would have any permanent disability and that they would therefore be entitled to recover for future pain and suffering, the loss of income, etc.

Defendant also objected to Dr. McGriff’s testimony regarding the history and diagnosis of each of the plaintiffs which was taken by the emergency room physician on the ground that this testimony was hearsay.

We first discuss her objection to Dr. McGriff’s testimony regarding permanent injuries.

In the case of Charlie Porter, Dr. McGriff testified in part as follows:

Q. You’ve seen Mr. Porter on how many occasions as a result of this automobile collision?
A. I’ve seen him about three or four times. I’m not sure.
Q. Will Mr. Porter or not, in your opinion, have any permanent disability as a result of this automobile collision? Permanent disability or a permanent impairment to the body as a whole as a result of this?
A. Yeah, we got some abnormal thing on Mr. Porter that cropped up whenever he had the accident. I don’t know if he’ll ever — we don’t even know if we’ll ever make a diagnosis without bone biopsy and a few other things.
I think since this, he’s been referred to an orthopedist. I don’t know. I don’t even know what his initial problem is. I don’t know. I do know that he’s going to hurt in his back or probably will hurt in his back. It may be from the original problem or the exacerbation of the problem. We don’t have a diagnosis for Mr. Porter right now.
I know it seems as though these two people walking around well and had an accident and come up with malignancies, and that’s very, very hard, but maybe *876 that’s what has come out of both of them.
He has abnormal x-rays, which can’t be explained totally by the injury. There’s something else there. But how much do you go on a person who, quote, just shows something on x-rays. Can you go in and cut his bone and get biopsies of it? You know, you can’t do it.
Q. Attributable to the accident only, what percentage of permanent disability do you allocate, or impairment?
A. Ten percent, five or ten percent. I just don’t think Mr. Porter is going to be worth a dime, to be honest with you.
I attempted to treat him on an outpatient basis with muscle relaxants and pain medication, but he during that time exhibited some abnormal back films, and he continued to hurt. We put him in the hospital. He also exhibited straight leg raising as though a pinched nerve was present. We put him in the hospital to make sure he didn’t have a disk rupture. So we hospitalized him like a week or so after the accident.
Q. What did your initial examination reveal?
A. He had a straight leg raising test. He had increased pain sypmtoms \sic], mainly in his back, somewhat in his neck. The straight leg raising was the most difinitive [sic ] thing we came up with, and that means that there’s nerve irritation or could have been a disk.
But we also had outpatient x-rays on Mr. Porter which showed some abnormalities, quite a bit of abnormality really. Even to the extent that we had to get bone scans, the whole bit, to make sure he didn’t have something related to the acident [sic ]. We also thought that he could have had cancer in the bone.
Q. What was Mr. Porter’s condition pri- or to the* accident as far as the skeletal system was concerned?
A. He had no symptoms referable to his back or anything else. He was entirely well. He had had some lung problems because I had followed him, but he had had no problems to the extent that we would ever think he had any back pain or anything. In fact, he had worked until recently, and been totally asymptomatic, to be honest with you.
Q. So how did this automobile accident and injury he sustained in that affect his skeletal system?
A. You said how?
Q. Yes.
A. Well, with Mr. Porter having all the increased activity throughout his spine and everything, we ruled out malignancy, but we still think it could be Paget’s —the x-ray man thought so, even with the bone scan, CT scan.
MR. ESTES: Could be what?
A. Paget’s disease, which is almost like a tumor or benign like tumor of the bone. Any injury could exacerbate that or it could be non-healing. It might be quite chronic. Because of the hardening of it, I don’t know if all x-rays — x-rays wouldn’t reveal anything with him. If he has that kind of film, we have to go to bone scans, actually, to see what’s wrong with him, because you couldn’t see a fracture on x-ray.
Q. What did the bone scans reveal?
A. Increased activity throughout the lumbar spine and find suggested metastatic disease could account for this finding. So we still don’t know what’s wrong with him. Arthritis could account for a hot spine, too. Injury could account for a hot spine. There are so many things. We don’t know what’s wrong with Mr. Porter, even to today, [emphasis supplied]

In regard to Mae Katherine Porter, Dr. McGriff testified regarding permanent disability as follows:

QUESTION BY MR. HARSH: In your professional medical opinion, Dr. McGriff, will Mrs. Mary [s¿c ] Katherine Porter sustain any permanent disability as a result of the injury she sustained in this automobile collision of 6-29-85, impairment, as well?

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Bluebook (online)
745 S.W.2d 874, 1987 Tenn. App. LEXIS 3042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-green-tennctapp-1987.