Scanlon v. Kansas City

81 S.W.2d 939, 336 Mo. 1058, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 340
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 25, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 81 S.W.2d 939 (Scanlon v. Kansas City) 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
Scanlon v. Kansas City, 81 S.W.2d 939, 336 Mo. 1058, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 340 (Mo. 1935).

Opinion

*1063 FRANK C. J.

This ease was reassigned to the writer on April 17, 1935. It is an action by Edward Scanlon against Kansas City to recover damages for the loss of services of his infant son, Cornelius Scanlon, and for care, nursing and medical and surgical treatment occasioned by an injury caused by a fall on a defective sidewalk on August 8, 1900, when the son was two years and five months old. The history of the litigation following the son’s injury is stated in respondent’s brief substantially as follows:

“On December 20, 1900, two suits were filed, one on behalf of the boy for his injuries by respondent as his guardian and curator, and one on behalf of respondent for loss of services, nursing, care and medical and surgical attention. The boy’s case was tried in November, 1902, and a verdict was returned in favor of the defendant upon which judgment was rendered. The suit which the father brought on December 20, 1900, was dismissed January 25, 1904, and refiled on February 4, 1904. That suit remained pend-irig until December 3, 1915, when it was dismissed; on December 2, 1916, it was refiled, within the year provided by the statute, and summons was issued and served on the defendant on that day. That is the present suit.
“The cause was first tried in February, 1923, and a verdict was returned in favor of respondent in that trial for $30,000. Appellant took an appeal, dismissed it and subsequently sued out a writ of error. In prosecuting that writ of error appellant took the position that the present action was res adjudicate, on account of the result in the son’s case which respondent had prosecuted as guardian and *1064 curator. The judgment was reversed and the cause remanded because of the instruction on the value of expert testimony. [Scanlon v. Kansas City, 325 Mo. 125, 28 S. W. (2d) 84.] All other assignments of error were disallowed.
“The cause, remanded in accordance with the opinion, was retried in conformity therewith. Appellant again pleaded res adjudicata within the limits permitted by the opinion. A trial was had which resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of respondent for $20,000, from which defendant appealed.”

Respondent offered substantial evidence to the effect that prior to the son’s injury on August 8, 1900, he was in perfect health, never had any sickness of any kind except' a light case of whooping cough from which he fully recovered, and had no impediment or disabilities in body or limb. The evidence further shows that at the time in question respondent, his wife and son, were walking along and over the board sidewalk in question, when the son, running a short distance ahead of his parents, stepped into a hole in the sidewalk and was thrown forward with a twisting of his body,, to the surface of the sidewalk. Respondent ran to the relief of his son, lifted him from the hole and attempted to stand him on the sidewalk, but he could not stand. From the time of the son’s fall to the present time his limbs have been paralyzed. Evidence tending to show that the son was a robust, rugged and healthy child prior to his fall on the sidewalk, and that since that time his limbs have been paralyzed is not disputed, therefore, no useful purpose would, be served in stating in detail or discussing the evidence tending to show such facts. The sole contention made by appellant as to the sufficiency of the evidence is that there was no substantial evidence tending to show that the paralysis was caused by the fall on the sidewalk, but that it was a disease known as infantile paralysis.

We do not so construe the evidence. Plaintiff proved by a number of doctors that the boy’s condition could have been caused by the fall on the sidewalk. While such medical evidence, standing-alone, does not show, prima facie, that the boy’s condition was caused by the fall, yet such evidence was admissible though alone it did not make a prima facie case. [Wack v. Schoenberg Mfg. Co., 331 Mo. 197, 53 S. W. (2d) 28, 31.] However, plaintiff’s case does not rest alone on this testimony. The expert witnesses offered by plaintiff, some of them testifying from hypothetical questions propounded to them, others from knowledge acquired from personal examination and treatment of the boy, all testified, in substance, that in their opinion the boy’s condition was caused by the fall upon the sidewalk. As corroborative of the opinion of the medical witnesses as to the cause of the paralysis, they testified to the diagnostic symptoms which followed the boy’s fall on the sidewalk, explaining that such symptoms clearly indicated that the boy’s trouble was traumatic myelitis *1065 or injury to tbe spinal cord, and negatived tbe idea that it was the result of a disease known as infantile paralysis.

Tbe evidence presents a picture of an active, healthy child, with no symptoms of disease or impairments of any kind, running on and along the sidewalk in advance of Ms parents. He steps into a hole in the sidewalk and is thrown in a twisting fall. His father immediately picks him up and attempts to induce him to stand, but the child’s limbs are limp and lifeless and he is unable to stand. He was never thereafter able to use his lower limbs. They are permanently paralyzed. Kespondent contends that this sequence of events, without the aid of medical testimony, amounts to substantial evidence that the boy’s condition was caused by the fall and would authorize a jury to so find. Regardless of our views of this contention we need not .determine it, because in addition to the sequence of events, we have the positive, substantial evidence of medical witnesses that, in their judgment, the paralysis was caused by the fall and was not induced by disease known as infantile paralysis. The evidence, taken as a whole, made a case for the jury and warranted a finding that the boy’s condition was caused by the fall.

It is contended that the court erred in the admission of evidence in the following particulars:

I. In permitting the plaintiff to read to the jury the testimony of medical and lay witnesses on behalf of the plaintiff at the trial of the son’s case in 1902.

II. In permitting the plaintiff to offer in evidence and read to the jury from the shorthand reporter’s transcript of the testimony at the trial of the son’s case in 1902, the hypothetical questions submitted to medical witnesses and their answers based thereon.

III. In admitting in evidence the medical opinion of Dr. Reigel given at the trial of the son’s case in 1902.

IV. In admitting certain parts of the testimony of Dr. Ludwick from the former trial in 1923.

The record shows that in the trial of the instant case the plaintiff offered and introduced in evidence, without objection, a complete transcript of all the evidence that was admitted in the trial of the son’s case in 1902, which contained-all the evidence to which appellant is now objecting except that of Dr. Ludwick. On this showing, the evidence admitted in the trial of the son’s case in 1902, is in this case without objection.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W.2d 939, 336 Mo. 1058, 1935 Mo. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scanlon-v-kansas-city-mo-1935.