Walker v. Nguyen CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 21, 2022
DocketH047851
StatusUnpublished

This text of Walker v. Nguyen CA6 (Walker v. Nguyen CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Nguyen CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed 7/21/22 Walker v. Nguyen CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

BERT WALKER, H047851 (Santa Clara County Plaintiff and Appellant, Super. Ct. No. CV323420)

v.

VINH NGUYEN,

Defendant and Respondent.

Plaintiff Bert Walker was rear-ended by defendant Vinh Nguyen in a low-speed collision. After Nguyen conceded liability, the parties proceeded to a jury trial on the questions of causation and damages. The jury found in Nguyen’s favor, awarding $0.00 in damages to Walker. The trial court subsequently denied Walker’s motion for a new trial. On appeal, Walker argues the trial court erred in denying her motion for a new trial on the grounds of attorney misconduct and juror misconduct. For the reasons explained below, we disagree and will affirm the judgment. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND1 A. Trial evidence 1. Walker’s testimony On Friday, March 4, 2016, Walker was in her vehicle, wearing her seat belt, and stopped in the left lane at a traffic light on Brokaw Road in San Jose. It had been

Our summary of the facts is taken from the reporter’s transcript and the portions 1

of the written record contained in the clerk’s transcript. “raining hard” that day. Walker suddenly felt a “hard jolt” to the back of her car and she was “jolted forward.” The man who collided with her, Nguyen, came up to her window and asked if she was all right. Walker replied “ ‘Well, I don’t know. . . . I’m really shook up.’ ” Walker and Nguyen pulled their cars over to the side of the road, and Walker inspected her vehicle noticing that there was “damage to [her] bumper and [her] side panel where the gas cap is.” She was able to drive away from the scene of the accident. Walker, who was on her lunch break at the time of the accident, returned to work for the rest of the day. She did not feel any pain until “Saturday evening” or Sunday. Walker contacted her primary care physician and made the first available appointment for the following “Tuesday or Wednesday.” At the appointment, she said she “had a lot of shoulder and neck pain.” Her doctor prescribed pain medications and advised her to seek “other treatment” if that did not work. Walker’s doctor did not take any X-rays or have Walker undergo an MRI. On cross-examination, Walker admitted she did not have any bruising on her body from the seat belt, nor did any part of her body impact anything in the car’s interior, such as the steering wheel or windshield. The collision did not break any glass on her vehicle. Walker also denied telling Nguyen at the scene of the accident that she had been in an automobile accident a few weeks prior. Walker began to see a chiropractor in May 2016 when the pain had not gone away. She underwent chiropractic treatment for about six months and “felt good” after each treatment, but the pain “kept coming back.” The pain was in her neck and shoulder, but eventually it was her “shoulder that would bother” her. After that, Walker sought treatment with a pain management specialist who initially gave her an MRI. The specialist reviewed the MRI with Walker and told her she had “disc bulges” in her neck and advised her to treat her pain with acupuncture.

2 When the acupuncture was not effective, the specialist recommended a series of steroid injections. Walker had to be anesthetized for these injections into her neck. The injections provided complete relief for about six weeks, during which Walker was able to resume going to the gym regularly and performing other day-to-day activities. After that, the pain returned and Walker received another steroid injection. The effect of the second shot lasted a week or two longer than the first. Walker then returned to her primary care doctor, who prescribed physical therapy, and she also met with another physician at the pain management clinic. The pain clinic physician referred Walker for a surgical consultation but the surgeon determined she was not a good candidate. At trial, Walker testified she had consistent pain in her neck and shoulder and denied having any such pain before the accident. The pain was interfering with her sleep and was causing her to not be as physically active. However, Walker was still able to work since the accident and was not making a claim for lost wages. Walker admitted she had previously received treatment for neck pain from a car accident in 2010, but said her injuries from that accident had completely resolved before the 2016 accident. On cross-examination, Walker testified her primary care physician ordered cervical radiographs in 2012 due to neck pain. With respect to the damage to her vehicle, Walker testified that her car had been vandalized before the accident, but she denied that she had ever previously been in an accident. Her car was in the repair shop for “about six week[s]” and the repairs cost more than $3,500. 2. Nguyen’s testimony Nguyen testified that he was driving on Brokaw Road in San Jose on March 4, 2016, and stopped at a traffic light, approximately two to three feet behind Walker’s vehicle. The sky was overcast and the roads were slightly wet. Nguyen saw the light

3 change “up ahead,” and noticed other cars moving, so he “eased up on the brake.”2 Nguyen hit Walker’s rear bumper and immediately “hit the brakes” again. Nguyen got out of his car and went over to Walker’s vehicle to ask if she was “okay.” Walker told him she was “okay”3 but could not restart her vehicle to move it to the shoulder. Nguyen pointed out that she had not put the car in “park” before turning off the ignition and once Walker did so, her car started. Nguyen testified that Walker was “really frustrated” and told him “two weeks prior she had been involved in an accident and she had just gotten her car out of the shop.” Nguyen testified that the only damage to his vehicle was a bent license plate and the only damages he saw on Walker’s vehicle were some “minor scuffs and scratches from where [his] license plate” contacted her rear center bumper. 3. Walker’s treatment providers Dr. Larry Payne testified that he began seeing Walker following her automobile accident and he treated her, on a lien basis, from May 2016 to September 2016.4 Walker complained of “consistent pain to the neck and shoulder” and Dr. Payne testified her complaints were “[c]onsistent and typical of an automobile accident.” While his treatment helped Walker, her symptoms would flare up when she increased her exercise activity. Dr. Payne stopped treating Walker in September 2016 because she had reached a “plateau” in her recovery, at which point he recommended she continue with stretching and normal activities in the expectation her symptoms would “heal and resolve on their own.” Dr. Payne’s bills reflecting Walker’s treatment were entered into evidence.

2 It was not clear from Nguyen’s testimony whether it was the light at the intersection where he and Walker were waiting which had turned green or whether it was a light further along which Nguyen mistook for the nearer traffic signal. 3 Nguyen could not recall the exact words Walker used in response to his question. 4 Dr. Payne previously treated Walker in 2014 for lower back pain.

4 Salina Dhiman, the personal injury case manager for the pain management clinic, verified the billing for Walker’s treatment. Walker’s bills totaled $10,089 and none had yet been paid. Dhiman confirmed that Walker was treated on a lien basis. Walker also presented the testimony of Dr.

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Walker v. Nguyen CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-nguyen-ca6-calctapp-2022.