Preuitt v. Marshall

115 P.2d 507, 46 Cal. App. 2d 169
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 1941
DocketCiv. No. 12428
StatusPublished

This text of 115 P.2d 507 (Preuitt v. Marshall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Preuitt v. Marshall, 115 P.2d 507, 46 Cal. App. 2d 169 (Cal. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

DESMOND, J.,

pro tem. — This appeal is from a judgment, entered upon a jury verdict, in favor of plaintiffs, in an action in which damages were claimed for the death of Peyton L. Preuitt, who died of pneumonia at a Los Angeles hospital on July 4, 1938. One of the plaintiffs is the widow of deceased; the other two plaintiffs are his daughters.

It is claimed that errors arose in connection with admission and rejection of evidence; that the evidence offered is insufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment; also, that the injection of the element of insurance into the case by the plaintiff widow while a witness on the stand requires a reversal of the judgment; further, that error arose when the trial court denied a motion for a mistrial proffered immediately thereafter.

Appellants’ principal exceptions to the rulings on evidence relate to hypothetical questions propounded by counsel for each side; citing in the one instance, the overruling of an objection by defendants to inclusion of the date June 10th as the date on which pneumonia developed, the claim being that there was no evidence to that effect; in the other, sus[171]*171taining an objection to the inclusion by defendants of a reference to an injury to the left side of deceased. In view of testimony given on both these subjects, part of which we shall quote in this opinion, we do not feel that any prejudicial error resulted from these rulings.

On May 6, 1938, at about 4:00 o’clock p. m. on a clear day, the deceased was driving his automobile in a southerly direction on one of the streets of Los Angeles, accompanied by one of his employees. As he was traveling through an intersection his car was struck on the left side by another automobile which had approached the intersection in a northerly direction and then turned to the left within the intersection. Neither car traveled more than twenty or twenty-five feet from the point of impact, nor did either car overturn.

Mr. Olympius, the workman who was riding with Mr. Preuitt, stated on direct examination at the trial: “Well, we were quite excited, more or less. I asked Mr. Preuitt, I said, ‘Are you hurt?’ and he said, ‘Yes.’ I said, ‘Where?’ He said, ‘My side and chest, it hurts me.’ So I started to get out and the door kind of jammed on the right side, but I got it opened; and when I got out I started to stand and my knees budded up, and I almost fell down, I guess it was the jolt I got myself, and then I helped Mr. Preuitt out.”

The car which collided with the Preuitt automobile was being driven at the time of the accident by defendant Virginia Marshall and belonged to her father, co-defendant. A Miss Peterson was riding with her. There is nothing in the record to indicate that either of these young ladies was injured; but Mr. Preuitt called a doctor that evening who attended him and taped his chest, principally on the right side.

It may be noted at this point that the witness Olympius had signed a statement prior to the trial, which read as follows: “Mr. Preuitt received no external cuts or injuries as far as I was able to see but I understand he sustained some cracked ribs on his left side.” Also that Dr. Bidwell, an interne at the hospital where Mr. Preuitt was taken, in making a record of the history given by Mrs. Preuitt recorded that “patient had had pneumonia on right side and pleurisy for three weeks . . . Complains of slight pain in left side . . . Had an automobile accident six weeks ago, was struck on left chest.”

[172]*172Mrs. Preuitt testified that Dr. Gordon, the physician who was called to attend the deceased on the evening of the accident, “examined his chest and then taped him up and said he had a fractured rib ... on the right side.” She also stated that after a day or two he tried to return to his business “and he complained about pains in his right side.”

Although, as may be seen from the foregoing, there was a suggestion that the deceased suffered some injury to his left side, it does not appear from the testimony of Dr. Frank K,. Webb, chief autopsy surgeon of the county of Los Angeles, that he found any evidence on the date of the autopsy, July 6th, of injury to the left side, but according to his autopsy report: “Further examination showed the lateral wall of the right side of the chest showed in the deep tissues a faded out bruise and the ribs were intact. The area of the pleura opposite the bruised area was thickened and adherent to the right lung. The right lung was pneumonic with areas of red and gray hepatization, and on cutting the surface was bathed with a seropurulent exudate. The left lung was partly red hepatized. The heart and other vital organs were commensurate with his age. His age was 59 years. From these findings it was determined that the primary cause of death was acute right lobar pneumonia contributory to contusion of right side of chest.”

In explanation of the rather technical description contained in the foregoing excerpt from the autopsy report, Dr. Webb testified further as follows: “Well, the side of the chest, as stated here, shows a faded out bruise. Now, a bruise after a period of time fades out. At first it is quite dark, a bluish color, or black almost; then it gradually fades out to a purple, and that purple color remains for quite some time. Eventually as the blood and pigment is absorbed that disappears. So the color there will indicate to a certain extent the age of the bruise. A faded out bruise would be a bruise that had been received at quite some previous time to the time of the examination. Now, a bruised part of the chest — if there were any broken ribs, I could not see them. The ribs may have been cracked by his injury, but healing of a rib takes place very rapidly and there was no evidence at the time of the autopsy of any broken ribs. Any injury to the chest wall creating an inflammatoz’y condition of the pleura or lining of the wall is likely to bring about adhesions between the lung [173]*173and the wall. Ordinarily the lungs are free inside the chest, grating back and forth on the chest wall as they expand or contract; but adhesions will form if there is any inflammation, and you see it after a pleurisy, from pneumonia, you see it after injuries or broken ribs, there is an adhesion. In this case there was such an area of adhesion corresponding to the bruised area, and around this area and throughout that right lung was a pneumonic condition. The first stages of pneumonia are usually a solidification of the lungs — we call it hepatized, hepa referring to the liver; and the lung, instead of being soft and puffy, is of a liver-like consistency, hard and red because it is engulfed with blood and inflammation. As the pneumonic condition progresses the reaction, or the action of the bacteria or infection creates a grayish color which goes on to a stage where the disease is expressed by expectoration. Now, in this lung there showed evidences of the red and gray hepatization. In other words, there had been an established and continuous pneumonia in that right lung for some period of time. In the left lung, which is more of a sympathetic action, there had begun to show a red pneumonic condition. I think that explains the picture. . . . The pneumonia developing later was due to the lowered vitality of the lung tissue at the site of this adhesion which allowed the pneumonia to start from that region. I would consider the injury as tributary to his condition. The Court: In other words, you give the cause of death as pneumonia? A. Yes. The Court: The contributory cause as what? A.

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115 P.2d 507, 46 Cal. App. 2d 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preuitt-v-marshall-calctapp-1941.