Reznick v. Hillman-Sidney Auto Sales

216 Cal. App. 2d 569, 30 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2055
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 23, 1963
DocketCiv. 26776
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 216 Cal. App. 2d 569 (Reznick v. Hillman-Sidney Auto Sales) 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
Reznick v. Hillman-Sidney Auto Sales, 216 Cal. App. 2d 569, 30 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2055 (Cal. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

ASHBURN, J.

This is an action for personal injuries received when plaintiff’s car, standing at an intersection in obedience to a traffic light, was struck in the rear by defendant’s car driven by defendant’s agent. Plaintiff claims to have suffered a whiplash injury in the accident, which occurred on December 9, 1959, and that the whiplash had developed at the time of trial (April 26, 1962) into a herniated disc. Plaintiff’s special damages aggregated $2,674.50; included therein is an item of $159.60 for repairs to plaintiff’s Borgward sedan and $36 paid to Southern California Permanente Group, of which plaintiff was a member, for three preliminary examinations of plaintiff by its doctors (total $195.60). The jury rendered a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $200, and counsel in their briefs agree that this amount represents the total of the last mentioned items.

Plaintiff appealed and urges three main points, (1) that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, in that it affirmatively shows without contradiction that plaintiff suffered physical injury in the accident which is not and could not be included within the $200, (2) that the court erred in refusing an instruction requested by plaintiff to the effect that defendant’s failure to call as a witness Dr. Blunden, who had examined plaintiff at the instance of defendant only four months after the accident (contenting itself with the testimony of Drs. Adelstein and Marinacei, both of whom saw the plaintiff not sooner than two years after the accident), raised a presump *571 tion that Dr. Blunden’s testimony would have been adverse had he been called, (3) that the court erred in submitting to the jury as a question of fact the issue of proximate cause.

It was conceded by defendant's attorney at the beginning of the trial that defendant is liable for any injuries suffered by plaintiff in the accident, which of course amounted to a concession of liability for any and all injuries proximately so caused. Because it is dispositive of the appeal we deem it necessary to discuss only the claim of insufficiency of the evidence; the other alleged errors may or may not occur upon the new trial which we find inevitable.

Counsel for respondent argue that the sole question canvassed at the trial was whether plaintiff was suffering or had suffered from a herniated disc. Their brief says “the issue before the jury was not whether or not the plaintiff had some injury, but rather clearly and simply—does the plaintiff have a herniated disc” and that the case “was tried on the sole issue as to whether or not the defendant’s negligence proximately caused a herniated disc in the body of the plaintiff.” This is an overstatement. The record shows that defendant’s aim was a trial of that single issue but it does not warrant the assertion that plaintiff’s counsel did not strive for half a loaf if he could not gain a whole one.

After visiting the Permanente doctors three times plaintiff consulted Dr. Ernest J. Penka, a well qualified specialist in neurosurgery, who examined him on December 28, 1959 and testified: “It was my opinion at the time I first examined Mr. Reznick that he was suffering from a lumbosacral strain. . . . .” Defendant’s only witnesses were Dr. Leo J. Adelstein, Dr. Alberto A. Marinaeci and the driver of defendant’s car, Miss Leslie Jean Sullivan. Dr. Harry Blunden examined plaintiff at defendant’s request on April 21, 1960 (not 1961) which was four months after the accident.

Dr. Adelstein, a specialist in neurological surgery, made one examination of plaintiff on December 7, 1961, two years after the accident. He testified that he discovered no “objective findings as such” but he “thought that he [plaintiff] probably had sustained a back sprain or strain” which, on the date of his examination, he “was unable to verify . . . with . . . what is called objective findings.” To this he added “Aside from his complaints and from the tenderness on the areas that I have described I found nothing objectively that I could use” . . . Also “Q. The mere fact that it’s termed ‘subjective,’ doesn’t mean that it’s unreal, does it? A. No, *572 sir, it does not.” and “Q. Now, then, with reference to your objective tests you did find, did you not, some tenderness on palpation over the lumbar spine on the left side? A. That is true. Q. You did find, did you not, some discomfort in Mr. Reznick’s carrying out of bending movements ? A. That is true. Q. You did find, did you not, the straight leg raising was uncomfortable but might be carried out? A. That is also true. Q. Now, you found no muscle spasm? A. On that date I did not, sir. ’ ’

Dr. Marinacci did not examine plaintiff except to the extent of making an electromyographic examination on December 9, 1961 (two years after the accident) and gave no testimony upon any other subject such as an original sprain or strain in plaintiff’s back.

Of course that is not the whole story. Drs. Penka and Friedman (the latter a specialist in medical neurology including eleetromyology and encephalography) testified to facts and opinions supporting a slow development in plaintiff of a herniated disc as a proximate result of the whiplash received by him in the accident. On the other hand Drs. Adelstein and Marinacci so testified as to create a substantial conflict in the evidence upon this issue, each of them saying that plaintiff suffered no such result. Dr. Adelstein, as well as respondent’s counsel, emphasized the absence of objective symptoms (though conceding the possible reality of suffering whose symptoms are merely subjective). This is a familiar refrain of defense lawyers — no injury because no objective symptoms.

This court, speaking through Mr. Presiding Justice Moore in Sandoval v. Southern Cal. Enterprises, Inc., 98 Cal.App.2d 240, 255 [219 P.2d 928] said “ [i]t is a scientific truism that the extent of personal injuries cannot be measured solely by objective signs. While traumatic injuries may leave few or no outward signs of bruises and contusions, yet a severe concussion of the brain or ‘injury to the nervous system may result in far greater or more lasting pain and disability than do many types of injuries which are plainly visible.’ (Deevy v. Tassi, 21 Cal.2d 109, 120 [130 P.2d 389]; Coleman v. Galvin, 66 Cal.App.2d 303, 305 [152 P.2d 39]; Johnson v. Pearson, 100 Cal.App. 503, 506 [280 P. 394].) ”

In the cited Coleman ease Mr. Justice Spence spoke for the court as follows, at page 305-306: “Defendant makes much of the fact that there were no serious fractures of the bones in plaintiffs’ bodies. He also calls attention to the fact that *573 the remaining signs of the injuries at the time of trial, which was held one year later, were largely subjective rather than objective. From these facts he argues that only very small awards would have been justified and that the actual awards were therefore excessive. While the facts to which defendant refers have some significance, they are not conclusive. As we said in Taylor v. Lowenstein, 113 Cal.App. 665 [298 P.

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Bluebook (online)
216 Cal. App. 2d 569, 30 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1963 Cal. App. LEXIS 2055, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reznick-v-hillman-sidney-auto-sales-calctapp-1963.