Pulliam v. Wheelock

3 S.W.2d 374, 319 Mo. 139, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 650
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 374 (Pulliam v. Wheelock) 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
Pulliam v. Wheelock, 3 S.W.2d 374, 319 Mo. 139, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 650 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*143 RAGLAND, J.

Plaintiff, while in the employ of the defendants as locomotive engineer, and while so engaged, suffered personal injuries through a head-on collision of two freight trains, caused by the mistake of one of defendants’ telegraph operators in transcribing a train order.- This action was brought under the Federal -Employers’ Liability Act to'recover damages for the injuries sustained. That' both the plaintiff and the defendants were at the time of the occurrence engaged in interstate commerce and that plaintiff’s injuriés, whatever they are, were caused by the defendants’ negligence are tacitly conceded. The trial below spent itself on questions relating to the nature and extent of plaintiff’s injuries; appellants’ principal contention here is that the damages awarded plaintiff by the jury, $50,000 are grossly excessive.

The collision just referred to occurred in the early morning of October 19, 1922. The train of which plaintiff had charge as engineer was moving east at the rate of thirty-five miles an hour, and while so moving it collided with another freight train moving west at the rate of ten miles an hour. Just before the one crashed into the other plaintiff jumped from the cab of his engine. Shortly afterward he was found lying clear of the wreckage, not far from the track. He was quite helpless so far as locomotion was concerned, but appeared to be conscious and entirely rational. He was put on a cot and carried to the caboose of one of the trains; and then taken to Mexico, Missouri, twenty-five or thirty miles distant, where he was placed in a hospital. He remained there until October 25th; on that date he was removed to a hospital in Kansas City, and placed in charge of one of defendants’ surgeons there. He was discharged from this latter hospital November 7th.

The plaintiff was forty-four years old and weighed something over 200 pounds. The visible injuries sustained by him were these: A cut over the left eye; a cut over the right eye and one across the right eye, injuring to some extent the eye ball; a cut across the nose; a cut and bruise on the back of the head; and a large bruise' on the left side of the body just above the crest of the ilium, showing a discoloration as large as two hands or larger. The cuts across the forehead and nose soon healed, leaving nothing more than slight scars.' There was a swelling of the tissues on the back of the head which *144 raised a knot about the size oí a hen’s egg. This enlargement remained for three or four weeks, and plaintiff still experienced a soreness in that region at the time of .the trial, April, 1924. The injury to the tissues where the large discloration was did not readily yield to treatment. It was, first - thought to be a mere bruise, though a severe one. The first examination made, -at the hospital in Mexico, disclosed that the muscles were hardened and rigid, the rigidity extending from the. abdomen over the left side to the median line of the back. The tissues Avere infiltrated; the blood had soaked into them. On plaintiff’s arrival at the hospital in Kansas City this injury was diagnosed as “a severe contusion of the muscles on the left side of.the lower abdomen, a sprain of the sacroiliac joint, a contusion on the outside of the hip and lower.- down.” The results of the contusions and “sprain,” as they appeared to a physician who examined plaintiff about a month before the trial, were described by him as follows:

“I found that his gait was very unnatural and the position of his leg in trying to walk or stand was very unnatural; that it was not only an unnatural condition, but the position of the foot was everted, quite badly everted, and on attempting to move his leg inward to its normal position .1 found it gave considerable resistance, that is, that foot, or the toe on that side,, would not move .in as readily as his-foot on the other side. On putting the patient on his back and letting that foot drop I found that it dropped outward much more easily than the one on the other side, the right foot. The position in which he stood was very, very awkward, simulating a badly crippled man. I examined the mechanism which controls the action of that foot, and that has to do with both the muscles of mechanical structure in the back and spine and those through the sacroiliac articulation that have the nerve supply for those parts. ... I examined that articulation very carefully, and found that the left sacroiliac articulation had been very badly sprained and twisted and the tissues all thickened and very sensitive and a condition of limitation of motion due to this thickening of the tissues and fibers around that joint. That is particularly with reference to the os innonvinatus on that side. . . . The ligaments and soft parts binding those two bones together had evidently suffered a traumatic condition 'or traumatism. . . . Traumatism usually results in an .infiltration of fibroid material. . . . That limits the motion of the joint and makes it very painful and it interferes with its functioning; the function of the joint is motion. ... It also brings pressure on the sensory nerves; when we have an infiltration of fibroid material we always have an impingement of the sensory nerves. . . . They (the nerves) were not functioning properly, there was a lack of sensation in the foot, particularly the .foot and leg on the left side. . . .. . There was an injury to the sensory parts and sensory nerves while the injury- to *145 the motor nerves was plainly shown- by the position in which the plaintiff stood. . . . The motor nerves carry the impulses out from the brain and spinal cord to the muscles, and are known as efferent or out.carrying nerves.. If these efferent nerves are not working normally the movement of the parts will not be normal. In his left leg that certainly was the condition that I found. . . . The left leg is everted or turned outward and there is an inability on his. part' to" carry it upward to. a normal position; not only an inability on his part but when be lies in a. passive condition there is a decided resistance to the movement of. the physician trying to carry the part to the nor mal position; that is trying to carry the foot and leg into a normal position. . It is not only out there, but it resists motion to put it back into .its proper position. - That must be due to injury to the motor nerves.”

When plaintiff left the hospital he was furnished by defendants’ surgeon with a wide, brace, or belt which fitted around his body just above the pelvic regions; he was also given a pair of crutches. At the time of the trial he was still using both appliances; he could not walk without the crutches. He suffered pain- almost constantly — in the small of the back, in the left hip and in the back of his head and neck. Any movement .-of his body caused pain; if he sat a long time, his left limb and back hurt; when he walked there was a sensation of his hips spreading apart and his spinal column pushing down between them, accompanied with pain; when he bent forward he experienced dizziness; frequently his left leg became cold and numb; he was nervous; and his sleep was often broken and fitful.

Examinations made by experts just before the trial disclosed that plaintiff’s hearing and vision were defective, and that to some extent he lacked coordination. The vision ef the right eye was only one-tentli normal; that of the left eye, one-fifth. Both optic nerves were partially atrophied.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 374, 319 Mo. 139, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pulliam-v-wheelock-mo-1928.