Rogers v. Sullivan

410 S.W.2d 624
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 10, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 410 S.W.2d 624 (Rogers v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. Sullivan, 410 S.W.2d 624 (Ky. 1967).

Opinion

PALMORE, Chief Justice.

The appellee, Sullivan, sustained a dislocated right hip and right shoulder in a collision between an automobile driven by Rogers, the appellant, in which Sullivan was riding as a passenger, and a vehicle driven by one Perkins. His suit against Rogers and Perkins resulted in a $30,000 verdict and judgment against both defendants. Rogers appeals, asserting the following grounds:

1. Error in refusal to declare a mistrial.

2. Error in overruling objection to question asking medical witness to comment on the “possibilities or probabilities” of Sullivan’s complete recovery.

3. Erroneous instructions authorizing recovery for permanent impairment of earning power.

4. Excessiveness of the verdict.

During cross-examination by counsel for his co-defendant, Rogers was asked whether the investigating police officers had given him a citation, to which question the court sustained an objection but declined to declare a mistrial and admonished the jury “to disregard the question asked about whether there had been a citation issued because there is no proof in this case that there was any citation issued.”

It may be conceded that the question was improper. However, it was not answered, and we are not of the opinion that the mere asking of it was so prejudicial that it could not be or was not cured by the admonition.

Sullivan was treated immediately after the accident by Dr. Steele Robbins, a general practitioner of medicine at May-field, and was hospitalized for nine days following which he was discharged to go home and bed rest. One month later, when he returned to Dr. Robbins for a rechecking, it was discovered that the muscles of his shoulder had begun to atrophy. Suspecting a nerve injury, Dr. Robbins referred the patient to Dr. French, an orthopedic specialist in Paducah. Sullivan made 22 trips to Dr. French’s office for therapy treatments and, until the time of the trial, was taking prescribed exercises with the aid of his son. Five and one half months after the accident he was sent by Dr. French to Dr. William F. Meacham, an outstanding neurosurgeon at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, who observed “a paralysis of the deltoid and the scapular muscle groups on the right side * * * The examination revealed the rather typical sensory loss and the atrophy of the muscles supplied by the axillary circumflex nerve and its branches. This prevents the arm from being swung away from the trunk, and produces a shrinkage of the muscles around the shoulder joint and the shoulder blade, and prevents the arm from being raised or projected into positions where the hand can be utilized to the best advantage.”

Fifteen months after the accident (three weeks before the trial) Dr. Meacham again examined Sullivan and found his condition to be essentially the same except for “some evidence of regeneration of the function of the nerve in the deltoid and scapular muscle group.” He explained as follows:

“He is able to show some evidence of beginning muscle contraction. There is still the area of sensory loss over the apex of the shoulder. There is less atrophy than was present previously. And I think that these are encouraging findings in that these *626 undoubtedly can only be explained by the fact that nerve function is gradually regenerating or recurring. It has not done so completely yet.”
Q “Doctor, at this time, would you be able to say with any degree of medical certainty as to when he would, if ever, get complete regeneration of that nervous system?”
A “Well, such nerve regenerations take place slowly and gradually — ordinarily into the period in some people approximating eighteen months, some others, much longer — some two to three years.”
Q “Based upon the fact that the progress has been what it has been at this time, would you be able to estimate with any degree of medical certainty when, and if, he might be considered to reach his maximum regeneration ?”
A “No. Not with accuracy. We can only say it is now taking place, and I don’t know how rapidly it will occur.”
Q “Doctor, taking into consideration his age, being fifty-two, isn’t it true that regeneration and readaptability is less than it would be in a younger person?”
A “Not as far as the nerve regeneration is concerned. It might be according to his motivation. But the nerve doesn’t know how old he is, and if it starts back, it will do it about as well as it will in a young person. If it don’t start back at all, young and old both remain permanent.”
Q “Well, taking into consideration the possibility of his completely recovering, what do you think his chances are for that at this time ?”
A “I couldn’t say — for this reason, Mr. Mangrum: When nerves start recovering, they have the potential to go on and completely recover. Some don’t, though. Some will recover fifty per cent and stop — I am talking about peripheral nerve injuries like Mr. Sullivan had — and some will go all the way, a hundred per cent.
“Now, it is to Mr. Sullivan’s advantage to continue the physical therapy exercises that his physicians have advised him to do because if recovery takes place and the muscles are not kept supple and in tone— and even though the nerve recovers, he has still got the disability of the shoulder. But now I find that he has been doing that. And I would feel that now his chances of a substantial recovery are good — although I can’t say when it will be completed or how far it will go.”
Q “And at this time, you wouldn’t want to say that the prospect of his complete recovery would be promising, is that correct ?”
A “No. I would want to say it, but I can’t and be accurate about it.”

At the trial, which took place nearly 16 months after the date of the injury, Sullivan testified that he was unable to raise his arm very far out and up from his body and that he was still suffering pain in his right hip, which aches when the weather is about to change. Dr. Robbins had re-examined him one week before the trial and, with respect to the right hip and leg, testified as follows:

Q “Did you measure his right leg?”
A “I did.”
Q “Is there still any presence of atrophy ?”
A “He had about three quarters inch smaller right thigh than he does left thigh and about half inch smaller calf of his leg. There’s no difference in the length of his leg.”
Q “Does this still indicate that he has weakened muscles in that leg?”
A “Yes.”
Q “Shriveling away.”
A “Yes.”
Q “Based on the fact that it has now been some sixteen months subsequent to the time he sustained this injury, and the *627

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Bluebook (online)
410 S.W.2d 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-sullivan-kyctapphigh-1967.