Silvino Gonzales, Invidually and as Next Friend of Rubcel Gonzales, a Minor v. Judith Long

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 23, 2009
DocketW2008-02605-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Silvino Gonzales, Invidually and as Next Friend of Rubcel Gonzales, a Minor v. Judith Long (Silvino Gonzales, Invidually and as Next Friend of Rubcel Gonzales, a Minor v. Judith Long) 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
Silvino Gonzales, Invidually and as Next Friend of Rubcel Gonzales, a Minor v. Judith Long, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON JULY 23, 2009 Session

SILVINO GONZALES, Individually And As Next Friend of RUBICEL GONZALES, A Minor v. JUDITH LONG

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County No. 004208-04 Jerry Stokes, Judge

No. W2008-02605-COA-R3-CV - Filed October 15, 2009

This appeal arises out of a minor automobile accident. The plaintiff filed suit individually and on behalf of his son, claiming that his son suffered whiplash in the accident. The defendant admitted fault for the accident but denied that she caused any damages to the plaintiff. The plaintiff presented testimony from a physician who opined that the son was injured in the car accident. Nevertheless, the jury returned a verdict for the defendant. The plaintiff appeals. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

ALAN E. HIGHERS, P.J.,W.S., delivered the opinion of the court, in which DAVID R. FARMER , J., and J. STEVEN STAFFORD , J., joined.

David G. Mills, Cordova, TN, for Appellant

Andrew H. Owens, Memphis, TN, for Appellee

OPINION I. FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On January 2, 2004, Judith Long (“Defendant”) caused a minor automobile accident. She was stopped at a red light behind another vehicle, on a multi-lane highway. To her immediate left was a left-turn lane, and when the left turn arrow appeared, the vehicles in that lane proceeded forward. Although the light for Defendant’s lane remained red, she also proceeded forward approximately two feet and bumped into the vehicle in front of her. That vehicle was a pickup truck driven by Silvino Gonzales (“Mr. Gonzales”). Mr. Gonzales’ ten-year old son, Rucibel Gonzales (“Rucibel”), was a passenger in the back seat of the pickup truck. After the accident, Defendant called the police, exited her vehicle, and asked if anyone in the Gonzales vehicle was injured. No one reported any injuries to Defendant or to the investigating police officer. Mr. Gonzales’ truck was not damaged in the accident, and Defendant’s vehicle only had a fist-sized dent in the bumper where it impacted the trailer hitch on Mr. Gonzales’ truck, which a repair shop later “popped out” free of charge.

Mr. Gonzales subsequently filed suit against Defendant in general sessions court, claiming that Rucibel was injured in the accident. He presented the testimony of Dr. Michael Douglas Hellman, who stated that he had treated Rucibel for a type of whiplash injury and that the injury was caused by the accident. Mr. Gonzales obtained a judgment in his favor, and Defendant appealed to circuit court. Mr. Gonzales’ circuit court complaint alleged that Rucibel sustained injuries to his “head, neck, back, extremities and entire central nervous and emotional system.” He attached a medical bill to his complaint with $2,683 in charges from Dr. Hellman. Defendant admitted fault in causing the accident but denied that she caused Rucibel or Mr. Gonzales to suffer any damages.

Defendant filed a motion in limine to exclude Dr. Hellman’s previous general sessions testimony, which Mr. Gonzales intended to read in circuit court due to Dr. Hellman’s unavailability at trial. Defendant alleged that Dr. Hellman and Mr. Gonzales’ attorney, Mr. Mills, had an improper business relationship involving referrals of clients and patients, and that the general sessions court judge interfered with Defendant’s attorney’s ability to cross-examine Dr. Hellman regarding such relationship and other business practices. The trial court denied the motion, ruling that Dr. Hellman’s testimony could be read to the jury.

The case was tried before a jury on September 15 and 16, 2008. At trial, the investigating police officer testified that he was on the scene for approximately forty-five minutes to an hour, and that no one reported being injured or requested medical attention. Rucibel, who was fourteen years old at the time of trial, testified that when Defendant rear-ended his father’s truck, he “bumped [his] head” on the back window. He did not have any physical sign of an injury, such as a bruise, scratch, or swelling, and there was no damage to the truck window. Rucibel admitted that he told Defendant at the scene of the accident that he was not hurt. He explained that he did not feel injured immediately after the accident and that it was not until he got home that he began to experience pain in his head and back. Counsel for Defendant then questioned Rucibel about his previous deposition testimony, in which he stated that immediately when the impact occurred, “[his] head was hurting a lot.” Rucibel said that his deposition testimony was truthful, but he again conceded that he did not

-2- tell Defendant or the police officer that he was injured. Mr. Gonzales similarly testified that he told the police officer that no one was hurt because Rucibel did not tell him that he was hurt until they arrived back at home.

Rucibel testified at his deposition that just hours after the accident, he “play boxed”with his friends at his birthday party. He also said that he continued to play basketball and tackle football with his friends every day, and he played soccer a few times a week. He said he did not like to play touch football because it was too easy. Rucibel did not miss any days of school because of the accident, and it did not affect his grades. Rucibel testified that his back still hurts occasionally, but that he did not know if it was because of the accident.

Rucibel identified a picture of his father’s pickup truck, which showed that there was no damage to the back of the vehicle after the accident. However, he acknowledged that during his deposition he was asked whether the truck sustained any damage, and he said that the truck’s back bumper “was dented in. . . . Yeah, it was bad.”

Rucibel testified that prior to the accident, his parents took him to the Memphis Children’s Clinic for his health care needs, whenever he was sick or had a problem. However, he was taken to Dr. Hellman for the first time six days after the accident. Mr. Gonzales explained that his current attorney, Mr. Mills, was representing him in a workers’ compensation case, and when the subject of his car accident came up during one of their conversations, Mr. Mills recommended that he take Rucibel to see Dr. Hellman. Mr. Gonzales said that one of the reasons he took Rucibel to Dr. Hellman, rather than to Memphis Children’s Clinic, was because Dr. Hellman speaks Spanish. However, Rucibel testified at his deposition that he and Dr. Hellman spoke English during his appointments. Rucibel also testified that he had not seen Dr. Hellman for any of his medical needs since the accident treatment. Mr. Gonzales testified that Dr. Hellman never sent him a bill for Rucibel’s medical treatment, but upon further questioning by his attorney, he stated that his wife pays the bills.

Both parties’ attorneys read portions of Dr. Hellman’s testimony from general sessions court to the jury. Dr. Hellman testified that he had been licensed and practicing medicine in Tennessee for twenty-five to thirty years. He attended college in Memphis and medical school in Guadalajara, Mexico. He held no board certifications. Dr. Hellman practiced as an anesthesiologist for approximately twenty years, but for the past eight years, he practiced “injury rehabilitation, impairment evaluation, [and] physical medicine.”

Dr. Hellman testified that Rucibel had suffered a type of whiplash injury, and he opined that the injury was caused by the car accident. Dr. Hellman testified that he did not perform any x-rays, CAT scans, or MRI’s on Rucibel because he determined they were not necessary. He said he reached his conclusion regarding the cause of the injury “[b]ased on the history given me by the patient and the physical examination that I performed.” Dr.

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Silvino Gonzales, Invidually and as Next Friend of Rubcel Gonzales, a Minor v. Judith Long, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silvino-gonzales-invidually-and-as-next-friend-of--tennctapp-2009.