South Covington & Cinti. St. Ry. Co. v. Cahill

152 S.W. 792, 151 Ky. 679, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 558
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 23, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 792 (South Covington & Cinti. St. Ry. Co. v. Cahill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Covington & Cinti. St. Ry. Co. v. Cahill, 152 S.W. 792, 151 Ky. 679, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 558 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

On February 8, 1911, one of the Ft. Mitchel cars of the South Covington & •Cincinnati Street Railway Company was derailed and ran into a telephone pole with such force as to break the pole. Kate Cahill, .a woman fifty-two years of age, was, at the time, a passenger on the car. Charging that, by reason of the impact of the car with the telephone pole, she was seriously and permanently injured, she sued the company for damages. The company denied liability, but, upon the trial, was unable to offer any satisfactory explanation for. the derailment; and the only real question was the extent of plaintiff’s injury. .She recovered a verdict for $2,500, judgment was entered thereon; the company appeals and seeks .a reversal upon .the ground that the sum awarded is excessive.

The evidence shows, without question, that, prior to the accident, appellee was enjoying good health; was strong, active, and able-bodied; that since that time she has been exceedingly nervous, and has had only partial use of one arm and hand. There is an enlargement upon her n§ck or top of the .shoulder, the presence of which is: neither satisfactorily explained nor understood by any of the physicians who testified in the case. Immediately following the accident, she was attended by Dr. Senour, who testified relative to her injuries as follows:

“Q. Tell the jury what you found, and when it was you were called?

[680]*680A. It was in the evening of the 8 th day of February, last year. I found Mrs. Cahill with a partly dislocated wrist, two of her fingers were strained, and swollen considerably, she had a slight scalp wound, she ¡had a bruised place on one of her limbs; but I forgot whether the right or left; I am not sure, but it was in the anterior portion of the tibia, a place possibly as large as a dollar. iShe was suffering considerably from a nervous shock, seemingly. That’s the condition I found her in at that time.

Q. What treatment did you prescribe for her?

A. I reduced the dislocation, I put on ordinary dressings for dislocation and strain; I prescribed nerve sedative, that she might get some rest.

Q. How long did you continue to wait on her from time to time on account of that injury or nervousness?

A. I was there that evening, I prescribed for her. They called me up next day, I sent her over some medicine to quiet her nerves, that she could get some rest. About two days after that I called on her again, and I. think I called the next day., I made about four visits to her at that time.”

This was the extent of his treatment of her immediately following the .accident. He did not see her again until in the fall. From Ms observation of her at times when he had seen her, between the date of the accident and the trial, he testifies as follows:

“Well, since I have seen her during that time, each time I have seen her she has appeared to he rather nervous.”

He further testified that upon an examination, made shortly before the trial, he found that the fingers on one hand were stiff, and she had little use of them; that ■she had a freer use of her arm, and that she was in a nervous condition, which was probably caused by shock, although he admitted on cross-examination, that this condition might be brought about by other causes, to-wit: change of life.

Dr. Wm. Corey testified that he had known the appellee for many years; that he did not examine or treat her at the time of her injury, but that, .about four months before the trial, which was some eight or nine months after the injury, he did examine her. Relative to this examination, he said:

“I found on top of the shoulder, on the left side; an [681]*681enlargement. She complained a great deal of the left arm, and she had had use of the hand and arm, and kind of stiffness, and some inflammatory condition in the fingers, seemed to be a little fullness there and little stiffness in the fingers of the left arm. ’ ’

When asked to locate the enlargement on the shoulder he testifies:

“It was just on top of the clavicle — 'clavicle bone, fullness there possibly I presume, it is about the size of an egg, almost, when I saw her, something like that.”

When asked what would likely have produced this enlargement, he says:

“¡She may have had a cyst, I don’t know what that enlargement was, she may have had a cyst there, she may have had a tumor, she may have had an injury there, an inflammatory condition would develop into enlargement, from irritation.”

He testifies that he did not know the cause of the enlargement ; though, if produced by the injury which happened some seven or eight months before his examination, the time elapsing between the date of the injury and his examination would have been .ample for the enlargement to form. This same witness examined appellee a week or ten days before the trial, and as to this second examination he testifies:

“At that time I found this same enlargement there at the top of the shoulder. ¡She complained of the acute trouble in the arm on the left side1 — .left .arm, with, I think, inability, or didn’t have good use of the hand. Her fingers, I think, little finger and second finger. She complained of pain in them, .and I think there was some little fullness about the joints, that is, in the fingers, on the left side.”

From his examination and observation of her upon each occasion, he says she was in a nervous condition; and this nervous condition produced a bad physical condition.

Dr. B. F. Eckman testified that he first saw appellee in the summer following the accident. At that time, he says:

“I found she was extremely nervous, I found that she had some lowered temperature of the left hand, three fingers of the left hand; she complained of numbness in that side. I found a bulging just above the collar bone, on the left side of the neck.”

[682]*682“If I remember right, she had some trouble with the right knee, I am not sure, I don’t remember. I think perhaps that was trivial.”

He was present at the time the patient was examined, •shortly before the trial, by Dr. Courtney, and as to that examination, says:

“I found she still had that neuresthenia, still had that enlargement in the neck, still had that injury to the ulnar nerve that she had before, which produced that numbness and lowered temperature in these three fingers.”

The witness explains that neuresthenia means nerve shock, a condition in which the nervous system has not proper control over the person, due to impairment; and that this condition may result from shock. From a history .of the patient’s case, the witness expresses the opinion that her nervous condition was the result of shock. "When asked as to the condition of her nervous system, he says, “Her nervous system is wrecked.” Upon the extent of her injury, he testifies that, in all human probability, it was permanent; that .her injury consisted “of a bruise at the elbow, an inflammatory exudate thrown out around this nerve, having by pressure rendered the nerve numb. It is the left hand, instead of the right; rendered the nerve numb.

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Related

City of Paintsville v. Spears
47 S.W.2d 727 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 792, 151 Ky. 679, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-covington-cinti-st-ry-co-v-cahill-kyctapp-1913.