Wargo v. Buck

703 N.E.2d 811, 123 Ohio App. 3d 110
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 25, 1997
DocketNo. 95 C.A. 96.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 703 N.E.2d 811 (Wargo v. Buck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wargo v. Buck, 703 N.E.2d 811, 123 Ohio App. 3d 110 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Gene Donofrio, Presiding Judge.

Plaintiffs-appellants, Eugene G. Wargo and Jean Wargo, appeal from a final order of the Mahoning County Common Pleas Court upon a jury verdict in this personal injury action. Defendant-appellee, Richard L. Buck, has filed a cross-appeal in this matter.

On June 22, 1991, appellant Eugene Wargo’s vehicle was struck in the rear by a vehicle driven by appellee. On June 24, 1991, appellant Eugene Wargo suffered the rupture of a cerebral aneurysm, causing subsequent severe disability

On June 16, 1993, appellants filed a civil complaint against appellee, alleging negligence on the part of appellee and seeking damages for the injuries incurred. Appellee subsequently admitted negligence, and the case was presented to a jury on the issue of damages proximately caused by the accident.

At trial, it was disclosed that on the day of the accident, appellants’ vehicle was stopped on South Avenue in Boardman, Ohio, waiting to make a turn into the parking lot of Sam’s Club. Appellee’s vehicle struck appellants’ vehicle from behind. From the evidence, it appears that only minimal damage was caused to appellants’ vehicle.

At the time of the accident, appellant Eugene Wargo was driving, with his two children in the car with him. Both of his children testified at trial that their father claimed to have hit his head on the steering wheel, and that he had a noticeable mark on his forehead after the accident. On cross-examination, defense counsel attempted to discredit this testimony by pointing to earlier deposition testimony during which the children had stated that there were no marks on their father’s head after the accident.

Appellant Jean Wargo, wife of Eugene Wargo, testified that she was not in the vehicle on the day of the accident, but that after the accident, her husband complained about his head, and that when she looked at his head, he had a “knot” and a red spot. She further testified that she put an ice bag on her husband’s head and asked him how he felt, and that he complained of a headache and asked for Tylenol.

*114 Jean Wargo also testified that on the evening after the accident, appellants went to a friend’s house to visit. She testified that she asked her friend, who was a nurse, to look at her husband’s head because he was complaining of a headache and had started to complain about a stiff neck. She testified that they did not visit as long as they normally would have because her husband was not feeling well.

Jean Wargo further testified that on the next morning, the family got up and went to church and then went to visit Eugene Wargo’s mother. She testified that her husband fell asleep while they were visiting and that they had trouble waking him up. She further testified that he complained consistently of headaches and a stiff neck that day.

Finally, Jean Wargo also testified that on the evening of the next day, she and her husband were at a Little League baseball game where her husband continued to complain about being tired and not feeling well. She testified that immediately after, he seemed to lose his balance and that she and a friend placed her husband into a car and started to drive him to the hospital, but that it appeared to them both that he was losing his ability to communicate, at which point they stopped and called an ambulance. Other evidence at trial established that appellant Eugene Wargo had suffered from a rupture of a subarachnoid aneurysm and that he had suffered severe neurological damage as a result of it.

At trial, appellee presented the expert testimony of Dr. Donald Tamulonis. It appeared from Dr. Tamulonis’s testimony that he was contacted sometime in March 1992 by counsel for appellee and asked to render an opinion, based upon a review of documents, whether appellant Eugene Wargo’s injuries had been proximately caused by the accident. Dr. Tamulonis testified that it was his opinion at that time that there was no causal relationship between the accident and the ruptured aneurysm.

Despite having rendered an opinion favorable to appellee at the request of appellee’s counsel, Dr. Tamulonis on March 10, 1993, accepted appellant Eugene Wargo as a patient. Dr. Tamulonis testified that he made full disclosure to appellants when they first came to see him that he had previously rendered an opinion to appellee’s counsel that there was no causal relationship between appellant Eugene Wargo’s injuries and the accident. Dr. Tamulonis also testified that even after examining appellant, his opinion did not change in this respect.

At trial, appellant Eugene Wargo objected to appellee’s presentation of Dr. Tamulonis’s testimony, alleging a conflict of interest on the part of Dr. Tamulonis acting as an adverse witness and a treating physician at the same time, and asserted the patient-physician privilege in order to preclude Dr. Tamulonis’s testimony. The trial court overruled appellant’s objection in this regard.

*115 Appellee also objected to the trial court’s instructing the jury, at appellants’ request, on remote cause vis-a-vis proximate cause, which objection was similarly overruled.

At the close of trial, the trial court submitted a plaintiffs verdict form to the jury. The jury found in favor of appellants, but awarded damages in the amount of zero dollars. Appellants then filed the instant appeal, and appellee filed a cross-appeal.

Appellants have listed three assignments of error. In the first, appellants argue that:

“The failure of the jury to award damages to the plaintiff is against the manifest weight of the evidence mandating re-trial of this matter.”

Appellants argue that there was a great deal of testimony presented by both appellants and appellee on the issue of whether the rupture of appellant Eugene Wargo’s aneurysm was proximately related to the automobile accident. Appellants note that although defense experts testified that the rupture of the aneurysm was not proximately related to the auto accident, these experts did admit that appellant was injured in the accident. Appellants point to Dr. Tamulonis’s testimony, during which he stated as follows:

“Q Now, you said that he gave you a history that he experienced a headache and neck pain. Is that significant to you?
“A Yes. Certainly anyone who is in an automobile accident and is rear-ended will develop the typical whiplash injury where they will have pains where they are suddenly lunged forward and backwards being struck from behind, so they will develop strain and spasm of these posterior neck muscles which can radiate up into the occipital region of the head or the back of the head and sometimes into the forehead itself. So whiplash injuries are very, very common injuries, and certainly that — and when I saw him I felt that that day following the accident those headaches were related to the accident itself and from a whiplash injury.” (Emphasis added.)

Appellants argue that this testimony, along with the testimony of another physician, established that appellant did incur pain and suffering as a result of the automobile accident, and that the jury’s verdict in the amount of zero dollars was thus error.

Appellants cite Slivka v. C.W. Transport, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
703 N.E.2d 811, 123 Ohio App. 3d 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wargo-v-buck-ohioctapp-1997.