Spica v. McDonald

334 S.W.2d 365, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 777
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1960
Docket47409
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 334 S.W.2d 365 (Spica v. McDonald) 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
Spica v. McDonald, 334 S.W.2d 365, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 777 (Mo. 1960).

Opinion

DALTON, Judge.

Plaintiff instituted this action to recover $1,000 damages resulting to his 195S Buick automobile when it collided with a 1956 Chevrolet coupe automobile operated by defendant. Defendant counterclaimed for $15,000 damages for personal injuries sustained in the same collision. Verdict and judgment were for defendant on plaintiff’s petition and for defendant and against plaintiff for $2,250 on defendant’s counterclaim. Defendant’s motion for a new trial on her counterclaim on the issue of damages only was overruled and she has appealed from the judgment as entered.

Only a partial transcript, sufficient for the purposes of this appeal, is presented. Appellant complains that the verdict on her counterclaim is grossly and manifestly inadequate; that Instruction No. 11, excluding certain alleged evidence of medical expense, is erroneous; and that improper and prejudicial argument was permitted.

On Saturday morning, March 23, 1957, about 3:30 a. m., the appellant, age 25, was operating her Chevrolet coupe westward on Newhouse Avenue at 15 to 20 m. p. h. and, when crossing 25th Street in the City of St. Louis, the left rear side of her automobile was struck by the front end of a Buick automobile operated by respondent northwardly on 25th Street. Appellant’s automobile spun around in a counterclockwise direction and its right rear corner struck and came to rest against a lamppost. Appellant remained in the car, but found herself in a slumped position at the right side of the front seat against the right door when the automobile came to a stop. She could not say what parts of her body hit what parts of the automobile. She knew an inlay was knocked out, a filling loosened and her tongue was bleeding, but she did not become alarmed about it. When respondent asked her if she was injured, she replied: “I am all right; I am all right.” She made the same answer when the police arrived and asked if she was injured. She didn’t mention the injuries to her tongue or teeth. From the scene of the collision, appellant went to the police station and then to her home. She didn’t phone her mother from the police station, because it was late and her mother was a heart patient. She didn’t want to be taken to the hospital in an ambulance for fear it would shock her mother. She didn’t sleep well that night and was up early the following morning, at which time she noticed black and blue marks about her face and she felt dizzy and nauseated. There were bruises on her legs, thighs, sides, arms and face. Her lips and both cheeks were swollen and there was a cut in her mouth. Her teeth felt as though she had forced one or two of them out of position. On the following Monday, she phoned her doctor and a dentist. When she saw Dr. Saus-ville, he examined her and made X-rays. The doctor taped an injured toe to the next one and gave electric treatments for her bruises. She saw the doctor a total of eight times, the last time in April or May 1957. The amount of this bill was around $70-$80.

On the Monday after she was injured, she also saw her dentist, Dr. Eugene Bre-zany, who had been her dentist since she was a little girl. The cause was tried September 29, 1958, and she said she had seen Dr. Brezany “on the average of once or twice a week since the accident, and was *367 still under his care.” Five teeth were extracted after the accident, but only three were charged to it. He did crowning and false work, but she kept complaining of pain in her mouth; and that her front teeth didn’t feel right when she would bite into food or try to chew. Dr. Brezany referred her to Dr. Gruchalla, whom she saw about eight times. The first time she was in a dental chair for 3½ hours. About one year after he first saw her, Dr. Gruchalla drilled holes in four of her teeth and removed the nerves — this took four trips to his office. He sent a bill for $500.

Her teeth are not all right now. They are sensitive to both hot and cold. She has false teeth and a bridge. She still has pain in her mouth in these teeth, and “they don’t seem to fit or something.” She still has back and neck discomfort, which causes severe headaches. She did not have any of these troubles before she was injured. She also said that her only present complaints were of the fit of her teeth and her headaches.

She had two molars pulled before she was injured, and she had her two lower wisdom teeth and three other teeth pulled after she was injured. She didn’t have a job when she was injured, but she started to work nine days later for the Blue Cross Insurance, Registration Department. She hasn’t lost any time since she began work. She kept her foot bandaged for around three or four weeks, but has had no trouble since. Her right shoulder was bruised in the accident, but she has no limitation of motion in her right shoulder or in any joint of her body. She has headaches two or three times a week. She never suffered headaches like this, or as frequently, before she was hurt. She saw Dr. Martin Kay, an eye doctor, and he prescribed glasses which she uses for reading, and she loves to read. She has headaches when she wakes up in the morning and often they last the whole day or sometimes two days. She has complained to her doctors about these headaches.

Since the accident, and because of it, Dr. Wilhelme sent her to the Jewish Hospital for two days for examination and treatment for severe backache, but no operation was performed. Subsequently, she was examined by Dr. Lund at respondent’s request.

The testimony of Dr. Albert J. Saus-ville tended to show that he first saw appellant on March 25, 1957. He found contusions about her face, a swollen right cheek, stiffness and tension in her left bicep, left leg, left thigh, and an ecchymosis about the small toe on the left foot. For the bruises he “instituted therapy with á dia-thermic machine.” He found a complete fracture of the distal phalanx of the small toe. There was no displacement, and it was in good alignment. Any disability from such an injury would ordinarily not exceed three weeks. He saw appellant only four times in connection with these injuries. He did not examine her teeth and made no notation in his records of any complaint by appellant concerning any injury to her tongue or teeth. The injuries he observed could have resulted from a collision of automobiles by being thrown against a door. He discharged appellant on April 8, 1957, and assumed she had fully recovered. His charge for services, including three X-rays, was $75. This was a reasonable charge.

The testimony of Dr. Eugene E. Bre-zany, a dentist, tended to show that, when he first saw appellant on March 25, 1957, she was in a violently shocked condition. He observed that her tongue was cut and she had swollen lips and a cut on the inner side of her lips. Her lower right first molar was cracked on the lingual side and the upper right lateral, the upper right central and the upper left central teeth were cracked transversely and certain of her teeth were out of alignment, the two centrals were pushed inward and a lateral outward. She could not close her mouth as she wanted to, or eat, and she was on liquids. Appellant had also sustained a fractured maxilla, without displacement. *368 There was also a fracture on two areas of the upper anterior teeth but the teeth were in good alignment so she could close on those front teeth. He saw defendant on thirty-three occasions following the accident, including the other dental work done for her that was not accountable to this accident.

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Bluebook (online)
334 S.W.2d 365, 1960 Mo. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spica-v-mcdonald-mo-1960.