Sappington v. Kilavos

356 S.W.2d 602, 49 Tenn. App. 535, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 17, 1961
StatusPublished

This text of 356 S.W.2d 602 (Sappington v. Kilavos) 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
Sappington v. Kilavos, 356 S.W.2d 602, 49 Tenn. App. 535, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

The jury below returned a verdict for $5,000 for personal injuries in favor of the cross-plaintiff, Tony Sappington, against the cross-defendant, Mrs. Leslie B. Kilavos. Upon motion for a new trial His Honor the Trial Judge reduced the amount of the verdict from $5,000 to $1,000 by way of remittitur which cross-plaintiff, Tony Sappington, accepted under protest and brought his appeal in error to this court as authorized by T. C. A. Section 27-118.

Plaintiff-in-error, Tony Sappington, was a truck driver employed by the Kroger Company and was proceeding from the warehouse in Memphis, Tennessee, with a load of groceries and other merchandise to various points in Mississippi when the big tractor-trailer which he was driving collided with an automobile driven by the defendant-in-error, Mrs. Leslie B. Kilavos. The accident occurred about 4:00 A.M. December 14, 1957, on a concrete bridge some distance outside the Memphis city limits but within Shelby County, Tennessee.

Mrs. Kilavos sued the Kroger Company and Mr. Sap-pington for $35,000 damages for personal injuries, medical expenses and property damage. Mr. Sappington filed a cross-action against Mrs. Kilavos for $25,000 damages for personal injuries, medical expenses and lost wages.

In the original suit by Mrs. Kilavos against the Kroger Company and Mr. Sappington the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendants and no appeal has been taken by Mrs. Kilavos from the judgment against her. The Trial Judge approved the verdict in favor of Mr. Sappington against Mrs. Kilavos on the cross-action [537]*537in so far as the liability of Mrs. Kilavos is concerned and he expressed his disapproval of the $5,000 verdict by suggesting a remittitur of $4,000. The only question on this appeal is the action of the Trial Judge in suggesting the remittitur.

Mr. Sappington testified that at the time of the collision the truck seat came loose and he sustained a bruise on his head, an injury to his finger and a blow to his abdomen from the steering wheel when he was thrown about in the cab of his big truck by the impact. Mr. Sappington did not think that he was seriously hurt, drove on to Starkville, Mississippi, where he called the Memphis office to send a replacement tractor because the wheels on his tractor were somewhat out of alignment.

■ After receiving the replacement tractor Mr. Sapping-ton proceeded on his route to a truck stop and cafe near Tupelo, Mississippi, some 100 miles from Memphis. As he was drinking some coffee in this truck stop blood began gushing out of his mouth and he was carried to a hospital in New Albany, Mississippi. After a stay of a few hours in New Albany, Mississippi, Mr. Sapping-ton was transferred by ambulance to the Methodist Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, where he stayed one nig'ht and was treated by Dr. Murray Davis and Dr. Nicholas Gotten. X-rays were taken of Mr. Sapping-ton’s lumbar spine, chest, pelvis and abdominal region. The next day, December 15, Mr. Sappington was transferred to the Baptist Hospital for examination and treatment by Dr. Brock who regularly attended Kroger employees.

The records of the Baptist Hospital show that at the time Mr. Sappington-was admitted he was-spitting up [538]*538blood and also was discharging blood in his urine. He was complaining a great deal of pain and suffering, also he experienced difficulty in voiding his urine and the hospital records showed that he received considerable sedation during his stay. On the night of December 21, 1957, while under sedation he fell off the bed in the hospital and a report of this fall was made on the hospital records. The next day he was discharged from the hospital.

During this stay in the Baptist Hospital from December 15 through December 22, 1957, numerous tests were run including a pneumo-encephalogram, sometimes called a spinal tap.

At the time the plaintiff-in-error, Mr. Sappington, was discharged he was still complaining of supra-pubic pain, backache, nausea, headache, difficulty in voiding of his urine and difficulty with his bowel movement. Upon Dr. Brock’s instruction he went back to work on January 14, 1958, worked one day and went back to Dr. Brock with substantially the same complaints enumerated above. At Dr. Brock’s suggestion the plaintiff re-entered Baptist Hospital on January 16, 1958, where he had additional tests including a pyelogram and a gastro-intestinal series of studies.

Mr. Sappington was released on January 18 and January 21 he consulted Dr. Raskind, another neuro-surgeon. While in Dr. Raskind’s office the plaintiff began vomiting again and upon Dr. Raskind’s insistence he was readmitted to the Baptist Hospital. Dr. Raskind also ran a series of tests including an electro-encephalogram which is a brain wave study as well as tests for trouble in the gall bladder and intestinal tract. After checking [539]*539the records of the Baptist Hospital, Drs. Brock and Raskind came to the conclusion that plaintiff-in-error was suffering from a duodenal ulcer which had been diagnosed as far back as 1952.

Mr. Sappington testified at the time of the trial he was still having excruciating headaches and that in substance the condition of his ulcerated stomach had been aggravated by the accident. He enumerated the following doctors’ and hospital bills, etc. which he incurred as a result of the injuries he sustained in the wreck with Mrs. Kilavos:

“Baptist Hospital, $235.47, Jack Ruby Ambulance, $15.10, Doctor Nicholas Gotten, $25.00, Doctor Murray Davis, $45.00, Doctor Willis, $7.50, Doctor Kelly, and Doctor Brock, $170.00, Doctor Gotten, $50.00', Methodist Hospital, $32.00, Baptist Hospital, $323.25, Doctor Raskind, $160.00, Baptist Memorial Hospital, $81.38, a total of $1,144.70 * *

These bills were paid by the Kroger Company or its workmen’s compensation insurance carrier.

Also he contended that he lost 12% weeks work from December 14, 1957, to March 16, 1958, at the rate of $95.00 per week or the total of $1,187.50 making a total of $2,332.20 special damages.

Mr. Sappington did not introduce any medical testimony concerning his injuries and the cross-defendant, Mrs. Kilavos, introduced the deposition of Dr. Brock. The substance of Dr. Brock’s testimony is that the cross-plaintiff did not tell him about having had a duodenal ulcer and that all the many tests including the very painful spinal tap which cross-plaintiff had to undergo would [540]*540have been unnecessary had he done so. Dr. Brock admitted that the spinal tap was very painful and often resulted in recurring headaches to the patient.

Mr. Sappington introduced the records of the Baptist Hospital which were all collected in one unit under his name. This testimony showed that plaintiff-in-error was first admitted to the Baptist Hospital on June 15, 1952, and discharged June 18, 1952; his attending physician was Dr. Ira Parks who is now dead and that Dr. Parks diagnosed plaintiff-in-error’s ailment as an active duodenal ulcer with symptoms of nausea and pain located in the right upper gastrum. His next admission was February 25, 1953; his physician was Dr. Poole and the diagnosis was duodenal ulcer with vomiting and passing of blood in the fecal matter.

Again on September 13, 1953, he was admitted and discharged September 18, 1953, and on May 26, 1954, and discharged May 28, 1954, both times attended by Dr. Poole with a diagnosis of gastritis, with symptoms of nausea and spitting up of blood, however the patient continued to work.

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Related

Murphy Truck Lines v. Brown
313 S.W.2d 440 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
356 S.W.2d 602, 49 Tenn. App. 535, 1961 Tenn. App. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sappington-v-kilavos-tennctapp-1961.