Wargo v. Pittsburgh Railways Co.

101 A.2d 638, 376 Pa. 168, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 426
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 4, 1954
DocketAppeal, 178
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 101 A.2d 638 (Wargo v. Pittsburgh Railways Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wargo v. Pittsburgh Railways Co., 101 A.2d 638, 376 Pa. 168, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 426 (Pa. 1954).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Bell,

Plaintiff was a passenger in a street car, operated by the Pittsburgh Railways Company, which collided with a truck driven by the additional defendant, Martin. His head banged against the side of the car, his back, hip and head were injured and he had bruises *170 or cuts on Ms face, arm and leg which were of minor character. As a result of this collision, plaintiff claims that he had and still has severe pain in his back; that he is nervous; that he had dizziness and headaches which persisted until the trial; that he had running ears; and that he was permanently injured and unable to work. He was confined to bed for about three months. He Avas 51 years of age at the time of the accident, with a life expectancy at the time of the trial of 16.72 years.

The jury brought in a verdict “in favor of plaintiff of $15,000., to be paid as follows: $10,000. by Pittsburgh Railways Company and $5,000. to be paid by Martin.” The Court apparently molded the verdict at some undisclosed time to read: “Verdict in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants in the sum of $15,000.” Since no objection has been made to the changed or molded verdict, we will not pass upon the power of the Court to make the aforesaid change.

The Railways Company appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict contending “(1) that the verdict was against the Aveight of the evidence and not supported by medical and other testimony; and (2) that the verdict was excessive.”

The facts in this case are rather unusual. Wargo at the time of the accident had been doing whatever odd little jobs he could pick up. He had had a regular job assisting a priest at Mass and for these services he got one dollar for each Mass. However “he had to leave that job in 1947 on account of religion”, so that his only job at the time of the accident was as a janitor for the Holy Ghost Church, for which he was paid $85. a month. He testified that he averaged from the janitor and odd jobs about $50. a week. In his youth plaintiff had worked as a machinist; then *171 he got a job in Childs’ Restaurant, from 1928 until 1931; then he went on W.P.A. While on W.P.A. in 1934 something caved in on top of him in a 20 foot ditch and his back got hurt. He received Workmen’s Compensation for approximately ten years — from 1934 until 1944 — during which time he admitted he was unable to work except as he put it “a little occasional part-time job for the Shadyside Mission which his family took care of.” From 1934 until 1940 or 1944, the record isn’t clear which, he wore a brace for his back. Since 1944 he had a number of odd jobs including one for a short time helping dig graves. He is now unable to bend over without pain and claims he cannot do any work without pain. Defendant’s doctor admitted plaintiff could not do anything since the accident except light work.

Dr. Zubritzky saw and treated plaintiff immediately after the accident on February 18, 1948. He visited him 10 times at his home and thereafter saw him once a week at the doctor’s office until September, 1948. His bill was $206. Plaintiff’s main complaint, according to Dr. Zubritzky, was an extreme backache in the sacroiliac area. The doctor prescribed heat and a liniment, together with codeine or novocaine when the pain was severe. He testified that plaintiff’s dizziness and headaches came from the accident but gave no testimony as to how long they continued, although plaintiff testified they continued until the time of the trial. The doctor testified that as far as work requiring plaintiff to bend over was concerned, he was permanently disabled.

Dr. Zubritzky’s testimony appears to be both fair and illuminating. When asked whether there was any relationship between plaintiff’s back injury which he received in 1934 and the back injury plaintiff claims to have gotten in the present accident, Dr.. Zubritzky *172 testified that lie did not know exactly what injury plaintiff got in the first accident but that bis present injury was in exactly tbe same anatomical region and that he could not say whether the accident aggravated the first injury or not. He further testified that plaintiff now has a chronic myositis (a chronic muscular disease of the large muscles of the back) and with his age, some generalized arthritic condition of the back, and that he did not know whether that was what the plaintiff had in the period between 1934 and 1944.

Defendant’s doctor, Dr. Epstein, who was a specialist in industrial surgery since 1928, diagnosed the condition of plaintiff’s back as one of hypertrophic arthritis and said that plaintiff had had this for 10 or 15 years, and that the x-rays confirmed this, and showed that the back condition was due not to an injury but to an arthritic change, which is both insidious and progressive.

Under the testimony of the defendant’s doctor, plaintiff could not recover anything for his back condition since it was neither caused nor aggravated by the recent accident. Under the testimony of plaintiff’s family physician, Dr. Zubritzky, it is extremely doubtful whether plaintiff is entitled to recover anything for his back condition, because the doctor frankly admitted that he could not say whether the accident aggravated the first injury or not. In Nestor v. George et al., 354 Pa. 19, 46 A. 2d 469, the Court said, page 24: “The sixth assignment is based on the admission of the testimony of Dr. Kuntz to the effect that the ‘condition from which plaintiff suffers today could have originated in the accident of 1928’. The admission of this testimony was error and the assignment is sustained. In Vorbnoff v. Mesta Machine Co., 286 Pa. 199, 206, 133 A. 256, this court said:!. . . The Witness' would.-have to. testify, not that the .condition - of *173 claimant might have, or even probably did, come from the accident, but that “in his professional opinion the result in question came from the cause alleged"; * for, according to our latest pronouncement on this subject, a less direct expression of opinion would fall below the required standard of proof, and therefore would not constitute legally competent evidence.’ ”

Dr. Sherman, who examined the plaintiff in order to testify at the trial, testified in behalf of the plaintiff that the accident in question “reinduced the old back problem which was quiescent”, and that plaintiff was completely disabled as to any occupational situation. On cross-examination, Dr. Sherman admitted that there was no way of telling from the x-ray report how long plaintiff’s back condition had existed. He admitted there were arthritic changes of a marked degree in plaintiff’s back and said: “. . . I think that there was back injury that could have easily caused this in 193 J/. . . . Q. Yes; but if he was laid up with it for ten years, that is what he said, that would indicate that any improvement icould probably be out of the picture; wouldn’t it? A. Yes; at the site of injury; yes, sir. Q. Yes.

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Bluebook (online)
101 A.2d 638, 376 Pa. 168, 1954 Pa. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wargo-v-pittsburgh-railways-co-pa-1954.