Virgil Atlee Naff v. Sara Lou Fackina

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMay 28, 2024
Docket0590233
StatusUnpublished

This text of Virgil Atlee Naff v. Sara Lou Fackina (Virgil Atlee Naff v. Sara Lou Fackina) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Virgil Atlee Naff v. Sara Lou Fackina, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Ortiz, Lorish and Senior Judge Petty Argued at Lexington, Virginia

VIRGIL NAFF, JR.

v. Record No. 0589-23-3

SARA LOU FACKINA MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY JUDGE DANIEL E. ORTIZ VIRGIL ATLEE NAFF MAY 28, 2024

v. Record No. 0590-23-3

SARA LOU FACKINA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BEDFORD COUNTY James W. Updike Jr., Judge

Sidney H. Kirstein for appellants.

Kathleen T. Allen (Glenn Robinson Cathey Memmer & Skaff, on brief), for appellee.

This case stems from Sara Lou Fackina’s vehicle colliding with Virgil Naff, Jr.’s

(“father”) Chevrolet Suburban vehicle with Virgil Atlee Naff (“son”) as a passenger. Following

a trial, the jury returned a zero-dollar verdict. The Naffs argue the trial court erred by not setting

aside the verdict because Fackina both admitted liability and judicially admitted she caused the

Naffs’ injuries. They further claim the trial court instructed the jury to only consider the amount

of damages and that zero does not qualify as an amount. As Fackina did not make a judicial

admission, the jury instructions allowed a zero-dollar verdict, and the verdict is based on

sufficient evidence, we affirm the trial court.

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). BACKGROUND1

On November 17, 2014, in Bedford County, Fackina’s vehicle struck the side of father’s

Chevrolet Suburban vehicle. Son was in the passenger seat, and two Sea-Doos, personal

watercraft equipment, were connected to the Naffs’ vehicle. As a result of the contact with

Fackina’s car, the Naffs were propelled off the road about 50 feet into “a row of little elm trees

and just came to an abrupt stop.” Both Naffs climbed over the back seat to exit the Suburban.

Three unchallenged exhibits demonstrated the damage to the Suburban’s left side and the Sea-

Doos laying on the ground.

Father testified that “we were shaken up a bit” and that he had “some bruising and few

cuts and stuff like that” that caused soreness. This soreness went away after a few days or week.

He further testified that his head hit the glass and the door jam. After a week, “ten days, or at

some point in time,” father noticed that it hurt to turn his neck. He stated that he had present and

daily neck pain that woke him up on a nightly basis. Father claimed that he was limited in

turning his neck to the left and the right making it difficult to drive and perform his job. He

testified that prior to this accident he had no neck pain. Debbie Naff (“mother”) and Randy

DeJarnette, an employee of father, both corroborated that he had no neck pain prior to the

accident. Based on a conversation with a therapist at the YMCA shortly after the accident, father

began to use a traction device at home for his neck pain.

On cross-examination, father testified that he did not see a doctor after the accident and

that he had previously described the “cuts” from the accident as “scratches.” He stated that he

did not remember if his neck pain began a week, ten days, or two weeks after the accident.

Father claimed it hurt to turn his head in both directions. But he admitted that he had previously

1 Because Fackina prevailed on the issue of damages, we view the facts in the light most favorable to her. See Gilliam v. Immel, 293 Va. 18, 20 (2017). -2- stated at a deposition “my neck is fine when I am looking to the right, but if I turn to the left I got

very limited movement and it hurts when I try to move it.” In July 2016, father told a doctor at

Lynchburg Physicians Treatment Center that his neck pain was mainly on his left side. In 2017,

father had a doctor’s appointment at the University of Virginia (“UVA”) and the doctor

determined that his neck was supple. In June 2018, father spoke with Dr. Vollmer at UVA and

told him he had left-side neck pain. When confronted about the lack of mention in his medical

records of neck pain until July 21, 2016, father responded that it was “not totally true that I

haven’t discussed it with a doctor.” Counsel implied father had an improper motive by

highlighting that the lawsuit was filed on November 10, 2016, which was close in time to when

he first discussed his neck pain with a doctor.

At the time of the accident, son was 14 and in middle school. Son testified that he was

“shocked” by the accident and “jostled around in the car,” that he hit his head on the window,

and that hot coffee spilled on him. On the scene, son told a fireman he was okay, and he

attended school that same day. He did not visit a doctor on the day of the accident. In the few

days after the accident, he remembered being bruised, “having a knot” on his head, and being

sore. Son stated that prior to the accident he had back pain caused by a congenital back issue:

pars defect. Several days after the accident, he notified an increase in his back pain. He testified

that following the accident he had to stop playing basketball, couldn’t participate in physical

education classes, and had problems sitting in class. He stated that his pain was on a “pretty

daily basis” causing him to avoid lifting things.

Son testified that he had present pain radiating down his leg and that he didn’t recall

having this pain prior to the accident. He also stated, however, that prior to the accident, he went

to a doctor’s appointment at UVA for back pain and pain in his leg. Son conceded that a doctor

advised him, prior to the accident, to not run or jump and referred him to physical therapy. But

-3- son also testified that a doctor never told him prior to the accident not to play basketball. He did

not recall if he discussed with a physical therapist injuring his back in the car accident. When

asked if the first time he mentioned back pain from the accident was to his doctor in 2017, son

stated that he was “not sure.” After being asked if at UVA in February 2017 he had informed his

doctor that he had fallen in 2013, been in the car accident in 2014, and recently fell in the

bathtub, son stated that he did “remember something like that.” On cross-examination, son

agreed that he had imaging of his back taken in 2017 that showed no changes from his imaging

from before the accident.

Father testified that son’s back problems worsened after the accident. He also agreed that

on October 10, 2014, prior to the accident, the doctors informed him and his wife that son should

avoid high-impact exercises. Father stated that he did not recall if his son stopped basketball

before or after the accident. Mother also testified that her son’s back problems worsened after

the accident. She stated that he had to stop basketball and had issues with gym class. Mother

also conceded that on October 10, 2014, the doctor advised that her son should avoid impact

activities as he could be paralyzed by a bad fall. Mother also affirmed that son had injured

himself before the accident after falling from a swing.

In her opening statement, Fackina “accepted responsibility for causing the accident . . .

[and] believe[d] the injuries were pretty minor that these folks received from the accident.” Her

counsel maintained “that this is a case that does not justify any sort of permanent injury or award

of that type, just reasonable compensation as you see fit.” In her closing statement, counsel

again emphasized that she was “not going to try to minimize this accident, it wasn’t minimal, it

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Virgil Atlee Naff v. Sara Lou Fackina, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/virgil-atlee-naff-v-sara-lou-fackina-vactapp-2024.