United Laundries Co. v. Bradford

105 A. 303, 133 Md. 363, 1918 Md. LEXIS 135
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 105 A. 303 (United Laundries Co. v. Bradford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Laundries Co. v. Bradford, 105 A. 303, 133 Md. 363, 1918 Md. LEXIS 135 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

*364 Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question of main importance in this ease is whether the evidence was legally sufficient to support the inference that the personal injuries sued for were permanent in their effects. The plaintiff was struck by a bale of hay, weighing’ about 240 pounds, which was thrown down from the third floor of a stable and storage building of the defendants, abutting upon the sidewalk along which the plaintiff was passing. It is not disputed that there was legally sufficient evidence of negligence on the part of the defendants-’ employees in the handling of the hay which caused the plaintiff’s injury. While they testified that they gave ample warning that the hay was about to be dropped upon the sidewalk, the plaintiff’si testimony was that he had no notice whatever of such an impending danger. A witness who saw the accident testified that the bale of hay fell directly on the plaintiff and knocked him into the street. After a brief period of unconsciousness the plaintiff was helped to a sitting position on the bale of hay and as soon as a patrol wagon could be summoned he was- taken to the University Hospital. He was- there examined and attended by I^r. Joseph W. Holland, who testified that his apparent physical injuries were a slight laceration of the forehead, a bruised eye and two broken teeth. An X-ray examination, he said, disclosed a linear fracture of the skull extending several inches, upward from the margin of the orbit of the right eye. There was “some muscular spasm in the lumbar region indicating that he had some sprain to his back.” “He had an injury to his spine.” The principal symptoms were of an injury to the brain, to which Dr. Holland, in his- testimony, thus refers-: “The brain injury in this case was the result of the fracture and the violence which produced the fracture, and the condition which demanded our attention was not the fracture itself, but the injury to- the brain.” As a consequence of such injury he “has presented the characteristic picture or symptoms of what we call traumatic neures-the *365 nia, that is a condition which follows and is the result of a shock to the nervous system.” Upon the subject of the probable duration of the condition described, we quote from the testimony of Dr. Holland as follows: “Q. I aslc you from your treatment of him and your examination also this morning, your treatment of Air. Bradford at the hospital during the time he was there and at home, and upon your examination this morning, can you give the Court and jury your opinion in regard to how long he may suffer, as the effects of that injury ? A. I cannot express an opinion about that definitely at all, because invariably the condition which follows a head injury, the period of time, I mean, which is necessary for this, to clear up is extremely variable. Q‘. Well, some of the symptoms, would continue on forever in eases' of that character, would they not, doctor ? A. Sometimes.” In the course of his cross-examination Dr. Holland testified that the plaintiff’s nervous condition would improve as and when he “realizes that he can do' things without any suffering” and thus acquires self-confidence. But he stated that the plaintiff has no control over the nervous trouble brought on by the accident. The trial at which this testimony was> given occurred about eleven months after the accident, which happened in April, 1917. The plaintiff himself, testifying as to his injuries and their subsequent effects, said that during the1 two weeks he spent at the hospital he was flat on his back, with ice caps, on his head for about ten days, and suffering severe pains in his head and back. Since leaving the hospital and up to the time of the trial, he said, “I have frequent headaches, sometimes are more violent than others. The least little excitement and I am pretty certain to have a violent headache. As a rule-, it. abates very much when I retire at night. Some mornings it is gone, but I am just as likely to have one the next day as. not, although there are sometimes possibly for a week that I won’t have more .than one; again I will have two or three in a week.” The pains in the lower part of his back, he said, “have almost disap *366 peared, although I notice them occasionally, but the pains up rather just a little below my shoulders are quite pronounced when I am on my feet very long at a time.” Before the accident he was not subject to pains in his. back or headaches. Prior to that time also he had slept very well, but since then he.is often restless- and unable to- sleep-. After leaving the hospital he went to his mother-in-law’s, where he was confined to bed for four weeks> and afterwards allowed to sit up a short time each day until, in; the course of a -furthei' period of two weeks, he could sit up- for the entire day. Then he returned to his own home. From that time until about the first of the following November he “hobbled about on a cane,” but he has since been able to- get along without that support. In answer to the question as; to when he was able to go back to work or business- again, he said: “Well, I can hardly say that I believe- I am fit now to engage in business, although through lack of finances I felt forced tdo so. I have difficulty in collecting my thoughts. I have -difficulty in concentrating my mind on matters of importance. I practically have no- memory, it seems, because many things that are of importance I forget unless I make a note of them in a little memorandum book I always- carry; but I began work, I think, the second week—I am not quite sure of that—the second week o-f January.” Prior to his injury, he said, his memory was very good and he- had no difficulty in concentrating his mind. He had previously been engaged in the real estate business for several years-, and since January last he has had employment in an enterprise of that nature. Since returning to work his health has. not improved, but he has been affected more by headaches, than he was during the two or three months preceding; “because,” to quote his language, “there were matters- of business that came up that really should have had careful thought and I do not feeable to- do that. I notice particularly in dictating a letter it is very difficult for me to concentrate my mind, and quite a good many o-f my letters have first been written *367 by myself in longhand, and then read to the stenographer from that notation.”

The references we have thus made to the testimony in the record are sufficient to show that the trial Court was' justified in its refusal to rule, in effect, that no rational inference as to the permanency of the plaintiff’s injuries- was possible to be drawn from the evidence. Such a ruling would have been involved in the granting of the defendants’ ninth prayer, which sought to instruct the jury that there was no legally sufficient evidence that the plaintiff was permanently injured, and in the sustaining of the defendants’ exception to the plaintiff’s prayer which authorized the jury, in estimating the damages, if they found for the plaintiff, to consider whether the injury “is in the nature permanent, and how far, if at all, it is calculated to disable him from engaging in employments for which, in, the absence of such injury, he would have been qualified.” In view of the testimony we have recited, the Court properly rejected the prayer and overruled the exception. The nature and cause of the

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 303, 133 Md. 363, 1918 Md. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-laundries-co-v-bradford-md-1918.