Sedillo v. City of Portland

380 P.2d 115, 234 Or. 28, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 401
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 380 P.2d 115 (Sedillo v. City of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sedillo v. City of Portland, 380 P.2d 115, 234 Or. 28, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 401 (Or. 1963).

Opinions

DENECKE, J.

The plaintiff was injured in a rear-end collision with a car operated by the defendant Selfridge. The jury awarded him $500 for his injuries.

The court withdrew from the consideration of the jury an allegation of damages that a pre-existing ulcer was aggravated by the collision. This withdrawal is assigned as error.

[30]*30Appellant’s position is:

“Even though the doctors [testifying on plaintiff’s behalf] testified that in their opinion with reasonable medical certainty the ulcer was formed after the accident, they could not say this definitely, and the jury could have chosen to disbelieve the doctors, and find that the ulcer had actually formed at some time prior to and was merely aggravated by the accident.”

To establish the presence or absence of an ulcer requires medical testimony. The jury cannot speculate on this question in the absence of such testimony. This assignment has no merit.

The second assignment of error is directed to the court’s instruction regarding an ulcer. At the beginning of its instructions, when it was discussing the pleadings, the court instructed the jury that it could not award the plaintiff any damages by reason of aggravation of a pre-existing ulcer. Near the close of the instructions, when it was instructing on the subject of damages, the court instructed the jury as follows :

“* * * Plaintiff admittedly had an ulcer prior to November 20,1959, and he alleges aggravation of this condition by reason of the creation of a new ulcer in the same area, caused by the defendant’s negligence in this case. If you find that plaintiff is entitled to recover damages for bodily injury as a result of the accident, and you find an ulcer was created as a direct and proximate result of defendant Selfridge’s negligence, if any, then the plaintiff would be entitled to recover for such condition as an aggravation of a pre-existing condition. However, if you find that plaintiff’s pre-existing condition was not aggravated by this accident, or that such alleged injury was not proximately caused by the negligence of the defendant Selfridge, if any, [31]*31then you are not to award plaintiff any damages for disability, pain, or expense, if any, caused by the alleged aggravation.”

Plaintiff’s complaint about this instruction, as stated in his brief, is as follows:

“Reducing these instructions to their bare essentials, the Court instructed the jury, first, that they could not award the plaintiff any damages for aggravation of a previously existing ulcer. In the instruction last quoted, the Court stated that if they found a new ulcer was created as a result of the defendant’s negligence, then the plaintiff could recover damages for such condition only as an aggravation of a pre-existing condition. In other words, even if the jury did find that there was a new ulcer created, they would still be unable to award any damages because they were told that plaintiff could only recover damages if the new ulcer aggravated a previously existing condition. This, in effect, left nothing for the jury to consider regarding the ulcer.”

The instruction was not a simple, easy to understand, statement; but neither was the testimony. The physicians testifying in plaintiff’s case made the same distinction the instruction makes — plaintiff did not have an aggravated pre-existing ulcer; he had a new ulcer caused by an aggravation of a pre-existing condition. The giving of the instruction was not error.

The last assignment of error was directed toward the form of verdict. The jury was given a plaintiff’s verdict form which did not segregate special and general damages. (This, of course, is unobjectionable.) The jury returned a plaintiff’s verdict in which there was inserted in the blank for the amount of damages, “$537.85.” This was the amount of • special damages alleged in the complaint. There was evidence to sup[32]*32port this amount. The plaintiff objected to the verdict and the jury was “reinstructed in the law concerning verdicts” and again sent out to deliberate. (Order Correcting Transcript) The jury returned with the same verdict form with the “$537.85” crossed out and “$500.00” inserted. Under this amount was inserted the word, “General.” There is a notation on the verdict, “No Specials.” The record does not show who made the last notation. However, it appears that it probably was made by the trial court clerk.

A verdict for special damages without an award of general damages is an improper verdict.

We conclude that the first verdict was not an improper verdict and should have been received. Mullins v. Rowe et ux, 222 Or 519, 353 P2d 861 (1960), presented a stronger ease than that which would have been presented if only the first verdict here were to be considered. There, the verdict recited that the amount was for general damages. Here, the amount had no designation. However, in Mullins v. Rowe et ux, supra, as here, the amount of the verdict was the exact amount of the special damages claimed by the plaintiff and for which amount there was supporting proof. This court held that the trial court erred in setting aside the verdict.

In Snyder v. Amermann, Jr., 194 Or 675, 243 P2d 1082 (1952), the amount of the verdict was exactly the amount claimed for special damages and was supported by some evidence. The verdict did not designate whether the amount was for special or general damages. The court said that the amount of the verdict was exactly the “uneontradicted” amount of the proved special damages. The court interpreted the defendant’s position to be an acknowledgment that the verdict was one for special damages. The court then [33]*33found the verdict to he a verdict for special damages only and, therefore, improper. It went on to fix plaintiff’s general damages in the amount of $2,500. We have subsequently overruled that part of Snyder v. Amermann, Jr., supra, in which the court took upon itself the duty of determining the general damages. Stein v. Handy, 212 Or 225, 319 P2d 935 (1957).

Snyder v. Amermann, Jr., supra, is further limited to those cases in which the court finds that the amount of the verdict was that amount which the jury would necessarily have had to award as special damages. If the jury could find that items claimed as special damages were not attributable to defendant’s fault, were expenses incurred which were not reasonably necessary, or were expenses for which unreasonable charges were incurred, then the Snyder case is not applicable.

Here, there was an important question of whether or not much of plaintiff’s medical expense was occasioned by the collision. Defendant urged that no ulcer was caused by the collision. The jury might not have awarded plaintiff the amount claimed, $537.85, as special damages. Because the amount of the verdict was the amount of the claimed specials, we could speculate that the verdict was one only for special damages. We could also speculate with as much certainty that the jury did not find that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the entire amount of his claimed special damages but that it was unable to determine just how much of the specials he was entitled to recover. Therefore, the jury awarded plaintiff the verdict of $537.85, intending an undetermined part to be special damages and the remainder to be general damages.

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Sedillo v. City of Portland
380 P.2d 115 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
380 P.2d 115, 234 Or. 28, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sedillo-v-city-of-portland-or-1963.