Tammy D. & Von Karthauser, V Mackenzie Adams

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 23, 2014
Docket71733-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of Tammy D. & Von Karthauser, V Mackenzie Adams (Tammy D. & Von Karthauser, V Mackenzie Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tammy D. & Von Karthauser, V Mackenzie Adams, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

TAMMY D. KARTHAUSER and VON KARTHAUSER, wife and husband, No. 71733-2-1 ro £/5 ^"": c=> „,-J •—

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^iric MACKENZIE ADAMS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant. FILED: June 23, 2014 o

Becker, J. —The amount of damages is a question of fact to be decided

by the jury. So long as the jury's award is within the range of substantial

evidence in the record, it will not be disturbed. Because there was substantial

evidence to support the award of $165,000 in this case, we affirm.

Tammy Karthauser sued Mackenzie Adams for personal injuries sustained

in a car accident on March 29, 2011. Karthauser claimed injuries to her neck,

right shoulder, and lower back and hip from the accident. By the time the case

went to trial, two issues remained: (1) whether Adams was negligent when she

hit Karthauser, and if so (2) the amount of damages. The Honorable Michael

Sullivan of Wahkiakum County presided over trial as a visiting judge. No. 71733-2-1/2

At trial, Karthauser's witnesses were her treating physical therapist, five

family members, and the responding state trooper. The trooper testified that

when he asked Adams what happened, she reported having no memory of the

accident. He said she had no obvious signs of head injury and did not report

dizziness or loss of consciousness.

The physical therapist testified that Karthauser came in for 28 physical

therapy appointments with him and did 10 massage therapy sessions with

another member of his office. He testified that, assuming Karthauser continued

to have the same pain she had when therapy ended, he did not expect that she

would ever return to her preaccident status. But he did say that, should she win

a judgment in court, she would have the money to return to therapy and would

experience some temporary pain relief.

According to her family, Karthauser's life before the accident revolved

around hunting, camping, dressing big game, and cooking for large family

gatherings. They said she is now unable to participate in these activities to the

extent she used to because of pain from the accident. Both her sister and her

stepfather estimated that she is 25 percent of her preaccident self.

Karthauser testified last. She described the accident and said she had no

preexisting injuries. On direct examination, she testified that after the accident,

she had trouble providing care to the man the State paid her to take care of:

Q. . . . You know, at the time of the crash you were an in-house care giver for the same guy; is that correct? A. Yes. Q. And the State was paying you, is that right? A. Yes. Q. Does the State continue to pay you now? No. 71733-2-1/3

A. No. Q. Well, why doesn't the State pay you if you're still sitting there taking care of this guy? A. I can't do everything I did before.

Q. Well, as an in-home care giver, aren't you expected to get this 300-pounder in and out of a bathtub? A. I have to assist him. Q. Okay. Before could you do that? A. Yes. Q. Can you do it now? A. No. Q. Your son, Vaughn, Jr., lives with you, he's 18, is that right? A. Yes, he is.

Q. ... Is he a strapping strong young kid? A. He's a big boy. Q. Big boy? Without Vaughn, would you be able to assist this guy in and out of the tub and clean up after him and do all the stuff you have to do for a 70-something-year-old 300-pounder? A. He's 71; no, I would not.

The court admitted a number of exhibits that Karthauser offered in support

of her claims. These included the 9-1-1 response reports from the fire

department, her medical and physical therapy bills, her physical therapy records

showing continuing pain in the low back and hip that was unresponsive to

treatment, a Kelley Blue Book printout for her totaled car, and the towing bills

from the night of the accident.

Adams was the only witness for the defense. She testified that at the time

of the accident she was four months pregnant and had been at her ex-boyfriend's

home to show him pictures of her ultrasound. She said she had gotten dizzy a

few times during her pregnancy. She said that all she remembered of the

accident was a large rock that sits to the side of the road approximately three car

lengths from the intersection. According to Adams, she blacked out suddenly No. 71733-2-1/4

and does not remember anything until she was sitting in the back of "some guy's

car" calling her parents.

At the close of evidence, Adams orally moved for judgment as a matter of

law that Karthauser had no evidence supporting an instruction for future

economic damages:

MR. MITCHELL: And there's maybe a claim for future medical bills, at least I'm not sure if there is. But I would move for those claims being stricken or a directed verdict against them for the reason there's no evidence of either that was raised. There was some discussion by the physical therapist that Plaintiff might benefit from some future treatment with him. He didn't talk about how much, he didn't talk about what restrictions she has, if any, and none of the medical records talk about her having restrictions or work issues that relate to this accident. For those reasons and because there was no claim for diminished earning capacity in any of the interrogatories or statement of damage before trial, that category should not be allowed either. Neither one—there was no claim for any future damages pertaining to impaired earning capacity or medical bills in the future, so I would move that those— THE COURT: So future medical bills, not future earnings? MR. MITCHELL: Future earning capacity or diminished earning capacity. MR. CRANDALL: Yeah, diminution— THE COURT: Well, I have that as the— MR. MITCHELL: And also future medical bills. Same argument on both, essentially.

Karthauser responded that there was sufficient evidence of future economic

damages to defeat Adams' motion:

MR. CRANDALL: Okay. My client took the stand and said that she can no longer perform the duties that she was doing before the crash. She said that was the reason in fact she no longer gets a check from the State and she has been hired privately by this elderly gentleman for whom she cares. She testified that currently the heavy lifting is done by her 18-year-old son. She also testified that he is not going to live with her forever and she will be unable to take care of him, even at this reduced income that she's getting now. No. 71733-2-1/5

The physical therapist said that, more likely than not, she's not going to improve. However, she might be able to improve slightly with additional treatment, and he doesn't know for how long she will improve. The diminution of earning capacity is not a lost wage claim. It is a claim that she can no longer earn the amount of money she earned before, based on her physical disability stretching into the future. Many people with a diminution of earning capacity continue on with their regular job and still are entitled to a judgment in the amount proven. In this particular case she does continue on with her job, she just does it at a reduced level. She has waived her lost wage claim. That would be the difference between what the gentleman is paying out of pocket as opposed to what the State is paying. There was no rebutting evidence. There was no objection. That evidence is before the jury and I'm entitled to the instruction.

The court denied the motion.

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