Smith v. Wright

151 S.E.2d 359, 207 Va. 482, 1966 Va. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 28, 1966
DocketRecord 6302
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 151 S.E.2d 359 (Smith v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Wright, 151 S.E.2d 359, 207 Va. 482, 1966 Va. LEXIS 247 (Va. 1966).

Opinion

Eggleston, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mrs. Olivene Wright filed a motion for judgment against O. W. Smith to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received by her when a car negligently driven by Smith ran into the rear of the car driven by her husband, Gilbert Wright, in which she was riding as a passenger. The defendant Smith denied the plaintiff’s *483 allegation that the injuries of which she complained were proximately caused by his negligence. There was a trial by a jury which resulted in a verdict in favor of the defendant. Being of opinion that the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, the trial court set it aside and awarded the plaintiff a new trial. A second trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $7,500, and the defendant has appealed. The sole assignment of error is that the trial court erred in setting aside the verdict rendered at the first trial.

Originally the defendant contended that the verdict at the first trial absolved him of negligence. But in the argument before us he abandoned that contention and now relies upon the position that the verdict at the first trial was a finding by the jury that the condition of which the plaintiff complains was not proximately caused by the collision and by his negligence.

Since the verdict at the first trial was in favor of the defendant, the evidence will be stated and considered in the light most favorable to him. On December 21, 1963, about 4:00 P. M., the Wright car stopped momentarily at a street intersection in the town of Saltville for the traffic ahead to clear. While the Wright car was thus stopped a car driven by the defendant Smith pulled in behind it and came to a stop. As it did so the front bumper of the Smith car lightly “tapped” the rear bumper of the Wright car. Smith said that just before the impact he was going “very slowly,” not more than “two or three miles an hour;” that the impact was so slight that the Wright car “never moved;” and that neither he nor Wright got out at the scene to see whether either car had been damaged. Later, Smith said, he saw Wright at a near-by market and asked him whether his (Wright’s) car had been damaged, to which Wright replied that the only damage done to his car was “a little dent in his license plate,” but that the impact had “ ‘kind of wrenched’ ” Mrs. Wright’s neck. Smith further said that his own car did not have “a scratch on it” as the result of the impact.

Smith also testified that as he was slowing down behind the Wright car he took his eyes from that car, looked around to see whether he could “catch an opening” in the traffic, and that as he did so the impact occurred. He now concedes that he was negligent in this instance.

Wright testified that his car was not damaged by the impact and that he had so told Smith. But, he said, the blow “jerked” his car up. *484 Mrs. Wright testified that as the result of the impact she “felt like something pulled in the back of my neck and my shoulders.” She further testified that the pain and muscle spasms which she suffered as the result of the accident have continued unabated since then, that the back of her neck down to the waist “aches all the time,” and that the pain has been so severe that she has been unable to perform her household duties and carry on her business as a “beauty operator.”

Although Mrs. Wright testified that she complained to her husband at the scene that “my neck is killing me,” she did not go to see a physician at Saltville. Instead, she and her husband drove that night a distance of twenty-one miles from Saltville to Marion to see Dr. J. Stuart Staley, who Mrs. Wright said had been her physician “for several years” and knew her condition.

Dr. Staley, a physician and surgeon practicing at Marion, testified that he examined Mrs. Wright on the night of the accident, but that she was not a regular patient of his; that he had in fact seen her only once before, in either October or November, 1963. He said she gave as the history of the accident, that while her husband’s car had stopped at a street intersection in Saltville it was “suddenly struck from the rear” by the Smith car which then drove away, 1 and that the force of the impact was such that the Wright car was “knocked into the intersection.” She further told him that immediately after the impact she felt a “sharp, aching pain in the region of her lower dorsal and lumbar spine” which still persisted.

Based on this history and complaint of Mrs. Wright, Dr. Staley was of opinion that she had suffered “a whiplash injury of the cervical and lumbar spine with muscle spasms and associated pain.” He treated her for this from December 21, 1963, when she first came to see him, until February 23, 1965, about ten days before the trial. In the meantime she had been hospitalized under his direction on three occasions in February, May and October, 1964.

Dr. Staley further expressed the opinion that a whiplash injury usually results when “an inert body seated in a vehicle that moves suddenly, sharply or violently and of course the head tends to remain where it is and thereupon the body tends to go forward and then the head follows;” that unless the vehicle were “pushed forward to some extent” a whiplash injury would not result from the impact.

On August 31, 1964, Mrs. Wright was given a complete examina *485 tion by Dr. James G. McFadden, an orthopedic surgeon practicing at Bristol, Tennessee. Called as a witness for the defendant, Dr. McFadden testified that he found no evidence of muscle spasm, nor did he find any “fascitis” which would have been evident had Mrs. Wright suffered a long and continuous muscle spasm, as she claimed. He expressed the opinion that her anxiety or nervousness may have caused her muscle spasm.

Dr. McFadden agreed with Dr. Staley that the severity of a “sprain injury,” such as that of which Mrs. Wright complained, would vary with the force of the impact involved in the particular collision. Except for the history of the accident which Mrs. Wright gave Dr. Staley, there is no evidence of a severe impact on this occasion. Neither Mrs. Wright nor her husband contradicted the testimony of Smith that the impact was slight and that neither vehicle was damaged thereby. It is thus clear that the history which Mrs. Wright gave Dr. Staley as to how the accident occurred, and upon which he partly based his diagnosis, was not true.

As we pointed out in a similar situation in Diggs v. Lail, 201 Va. 871, 876, 114 S. E. 2d 743, 747, “The burden here was on the plaintiff to prove with reasonable certainty or by a preponderance of the evidence that the injuries for which she claims damages were properly attributable to the accident.” See also, 25A C. J. S., Damages, § 162(5), pp. 86, 87; Id., § 162(6), p. 92 ff.; 22 Am. Jur. 2d, Damages, § 296, pp. 394, 395.

In accord with this principle the trial court, at the request of the defendant, granted Instruction “C” which read:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Virgil Naff, Jr. v. Sara Lou Fackina
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2024
Virgil Atlee Naff v. Sara Lou Fackina
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2024
Adam Christopher Armstrong v. Kristy Marie Roadcap
Court of Appeals of Virginia, 2023
Colas v. Tyree
Supreme Court of Virginia, 2023
Gilliam v. Immel
795 S.E.2d 458 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2017)
Moore v. Flint
91 Va. Cir. 193 (Chesapeake County Circuit Court, 2015)
Daughtry v. Gray's Body Shop, Inc.
82 Va. Cir. 366 (Norfolk County Circuit Court, 2011)
Sandoval v. Hughes
45 Va. Cir. 277 (Virginia Beach County Circuit Court, 1998)
Hall v. Lyons
37 Va. Cir. 12 (Smyth County Circuit Court, 1995)
Vilseck v. Campbell
405 S.E.2d 614 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1991)
Mastin v. Theirjung
384 S.E.2d 86 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1989)
Elliott ex rel. Elliott v. United States
329 F. Supp. 621 (D. Maine, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 S.E.2d 359, 207 Va. 482, 1966 Va. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-wright-va-1966.