Steinhauser v. Hertz Corp.

421 F.2d 1169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 26, 1970
DocketNo. 381, Docket 33946
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 421 F.2d 1169 (Steinhauser v. Hertz Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinhauser v. Hertz Corp., 421 F.2d 1169 (2d Cir. 1970).

Opinion

FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge:

On September 4, 1964, plaintiff Cynthia Steinhauser, a New Jersey citizen then 14 years old, her mother and father were driving south through Essex County, N. Y. A northbound car, owned by defendant Hertz Corporation, a Delaware corporation authorized to do business in New York, and operated by defendant Ponzini, a citizen of New York, crossed over a double yellow line in the highway into the southbound lane and struck the Steinhauser car heavily on the left side. The occupants did not suffer any bodily injuries.

The plaintiffs’ evidence was that within a few minutes after the accident Cynthia began to behave in an unusual way. Her parents observed her to be “glassy-eyed,” “upset,” “highly agitated,” “nervous” and “disturbed.” When Ponzini came toward the Steinhauser car, she jumped up and down and made menacing gestures until restrained by her father. On the way home she complained of a headache and became uncommunicative. In the following days things went steadily worse. Cynthia thought that she was being attacked and that knives, guns and bullets were coming through the windows. She was hostile toward her parents and assaulted them; becoming depressed, she attempted suicide.

The family physician recommended hospitalization. After observation and treatment in three hospitals, with a final diagnosis of “schizophrenic reaction —acute—undifferentiated,” she was released in December 1964 under the care of a psychiatrist, Dr. Royce, which continued until September 1966. His diagnosis, both at the beginning and at the end, was of a chronic schizophrenic reaction; he explained that by “chronic” he meant that Cynthia was not brought to him because of a sudden onset of symptoms. She then entered the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and, one month later, transferred to the Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital for long-term therapy. Discharged in January 1968, she has required the care of a psychiatrist. The evidence was that the need for this will continue, that reinstitution-alization is likely, and that her prognosis is bad.

As the recital makes evident, the important issue was the existence of a causal relationship between the rather slight accident and Cynthia’s undoubtedly serious ailment.1 The testimony was [1171]*1171uneontradicted that prior to the accident she had never displayed such exaggerated symptoms as thereafter. However, she had fallen from a horse about two years earlier and suffered what was diagnosed as a minor concussion; she was not hospitalized but missed a month of school. The other evidence relied on by the defendants to show prior psychiatric abnormality was derived largely from the history furnished, apparently in large part by Cynthia, at her admission to the first of the three hospitals on September 20, 1964, which we set out in the margin.2

Dr. Royce testified that a person may have a predisposition to schizophrenia which, however, requires a “precipitating factor” to produce an outbreak. As a result of long observation he believed this to have been Cynthia’s case — that “she was a rather sensitive child and frequently exaggerated things and distorted things that happened within the family” but that the accident was “the precipitating cause” of her serious mental illness. Under cross-examination he stated that prior to the accident Cynthia had a “prepsychotic” personality but might have been able to lead a normal life. Dr. Stevens, attending psychiatrist at the Institute of Pennsylvania Hospital, who had treated Cynthia, in answer to a hypothetical question which included the incidents relied on by the defendants to show prior abnormality, was of the opinion that the accident “was the precipitating cause of the overt psychotic reaction,” “the last straw that breaks the camel’s back.” 3 In contrast defendants’ expert, Dr. Brock, while agreeing that “with a background of fertile soil” schizophrenia can be induced by emotional strain, was of the opinion, based largely on the matters recited in footnote 2, that Cynthia was already schizophrenic at the time of the accident.

At the conclusion of the evidence the judge remarked to counsel, outside the presence of the jury, that, as he saw it, the sole question in the case was whether plaintiff had established that defendants caused Cynthia’s condition or aggravated a pre-existing one. Even though plaintiffs’ experts had testified in terms of precipitating rather than aggravating, it may be that if matters had been left right there, the jury would have understood. However, defendants’ counsel, after correctly noting that “the question is not aggravate but precipitate,” went on to say that, while that had been his understanding of plaintiffs’ theory as outlined in counsel’s opening statement, he now understood plaintiffs to be taking the position that the accident “caused schizophrenia.” Taking this up, the judge asked plaintiffs’ counsel, “Isn’t it your position that this child was perfectly normal before this accident and that this accident caused schizophrenia?” When counsel responded that “this child was a fairly normal child, your Honor, and — ” the judge demanded a direct answer whether it was [1172]*1172plaintiffs’ position that Cynthia “did not have schizophrenia before this accident.” After counsel, not unnaturally, had responded in the affirmative, the judge said he would put the ease to the jury on the basis of proximate cause. Further efforts by counsel to explain that his theory was one of “precipitating cause of a quiescent disease” proved unavailing; the judge insisted that he choose between saying “that this plaintiff was perfectly normal and that she got this schizophrenia as a result of the accident” or admitting “that she had schizophrenia before this accident, and that this accident only aggravated a pre-existing condition. There is no in-between position.” Counsel remarked that there were “a host of other positions” between Cynthia’s being “the most perfect child” or being schizophrenic before the accident, but the judge was not persuaded. When trial counsel again referred to “precipitating cause,” the judge asked for supporting authority. Counsel cited, of all cases, Palsgraf v. Long Island R. R., 248 N.Y. 339, 162 N.E. 99, 59 A.L.R. 1253 (1928)!

The charge followed the black-and-white pattern prefigured in the colloquy. The judge said the plaintiffs claimed the accident caused the schizophrenia whereas defendants contended “that this plaintiff has had this disease all along.” Defendant was not liable unless it “proximately caused” the disease. “Proximately * * * is just a big word for. what people use for cause.” If there was a “logical relationship” between the accident and plaintiffs’ “psychotic injuries,” defendants were responsible. But “if the child had this condition or disease all along and this defendant did not cause it,” the defendants were not liable. Damages could be awarded only if the accident caused the schizophrenic condition but not if Cynthia “already had the disease.”

After several hours of deliberation the jury propounded the following question:

If we find the auto accident was the precipitating factor, but not the cause of the illness (schizophrenia) must we find for the plaintiff?

The judge responded by rereading what he had already said on proximate cause. Ten minutes later the jury brought in a defendants’ verdict.

It is plain enough that plaintiffs were deprived of a fair opportunity to have the jury consider the case on the basis of the medical evidence they had adduced.

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Bluebook (online)
421 F.2d 1169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinhauser-v-hertz-corp-ca2-1970.