Watson v. Miller

267 N.W. 230, 131 Neb. 74, 1936 Neb. LEXIS 173
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1936
DocketNo. 29555
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 267 N.W. 230 (Watson v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Miller, 267 N.W. 230, 131 Neb. 74, 1936 Neb. LEXIS 173 (Neb. 1936).

Opinion

Paine, J.

In an action for personal injuries following a collision between a load of logs and an automobile, the jury returned a verdict for $15,000. As a condition for overruling the motion for a new trial, a remittitur was filed for $9,000 and judgment entered for plaintiff for $6,000. Defendant appeals.

The bill of exceptions discloses that the plaintiff was about 58 years of age, and-had lived for years some seven miles south of Kearney, but about the 1st of March, 1933, he had left his farm and had moved to Kearney. During the time that he had lived there, he had painted a couple of small houses, had put up a little hay, worked on the road with a team, and done other odd jobs.

On the day of the accident, the plaintiff with a neighbor was returning to Kearney with five large cottonwood logs, which they had cut that day and loaded on the trucks of the wagon. A paved state highway runs directly south from the city of Kearney to the Platte river bridge, which is located a mile and a half south of Kearney. Formerly this bridge was a mile long, but when the new bridge was constructed it was made much shorter by filling- in high embankments at each end of the bridge. South of the bridge there is a road going west, at which point the paving stops. There is also a filling station at this point. About a mile farther south is what is known as Meyer’s corner, from which point a road runs east to Lowell and then south to Minden. The plaintiff and his neighbor had cut these logs a short distance east of Meyer’s corner and were hauling them to Kearney on a low-wheeled truck pulled [76]*76by a team. At Meyer’s corner certain road implements are kept, and the plaintiff stopped to visit with the maintainer men and started on slowly to the city of Kearney, the plaintiff riding- on the front end of the logs. It was nearly 6:00 p. m. on December 8, 1933, and dark, and all of the automobiles were running with their lights on. When they had reached a point about half way between the filling station and the south end of the bridge, the defendant overtook them, driving a Chevrolet coupé. He testified he did not see this load of logs until he was 30 or 40 feet from it on account of the bright lights of the string of cars coming towards him from the north. When the defendant saw the logs, he first swerved his car to the west side of the road, but as the paving was only 18 feet wide and there was a very sharp decline of about 15 feet down the high embankment to the sand of the river-bed, and as a car was approaching rapidly from the north and would strike him, he turned back towards the east side of the road and struck the rear wheel under the load of logs. The collision shoved the wagon over a little and broke one spoke in this wheel and bent in the right front fender of the automobile. However, the force of the collision caused the plaintiff to fall from the front end of the wagon to the pavement. The defendant took the plaintiff to his home in Kearney, and called Dr. Stearns and asked him to go over and examine the plaintiff and find out his condition. After a very careful examination, Dr. Stearns found no evidence of fractured bones, but found that plaintiff’s teeth were in a very bad condition; that he had lost all of his lower teeth, had only 13 upper teeth, and that the processes had been absorbed and pus was oozing freely from his gums. He made an examination of his heart and found the plaintiff was suffering from a disease of the heart which prevented the valves from meeting and closing, and that his arteries were in a very ■advanced stage of arteriosclerosis. Three days later this Dr. Stearns went back, although he had not been called by the plaintiff, and found that the muscles over his back [77]*77were tense, and found a sore condition such as might result from an injury. He told plaintiff that he was employed and paid by the defendant to take care of him, and that it would not cost him a cent to call him back again, but he was never called by the plaintiff. He testifies that the condition in the muscles of plaintiff’s back was such as you would expect soon to disappear. After a few days the plaintiff got up and went to see Dr. Bennett, who prescribed for his nervousness and to relieve his pain, and no further medical attention is disclosed by the evidence until after the plaintiff brought suit against the defendant for $35,000.

In the petition it was alleged that plaintiff was driving at a speed of 50 miles an hour, failed to keep a lookout, neglected to slacken his speed after he discovered the loaded wagon; that his automobile was out of control, and that, as a direct result of these acts of negligence, the plaintiff was thrown to the paved highway, where his head was cut and bruised and he sustained concussion of the brain; that the bones, muscles, and nerves of his back were crushed; that the injuries are of a permanent nature, and have caused him great pain and suffering; that as a result of the injury his spine has become permanently stiffened; that at the time of the injuries he was a strong, able-bodied man, capable of earning $3,500 a year, and that as a result of the negligence of the plaintiff he has been totally disabled and rendered physically and mentally unfit to engage in any occupation, and his earning capacity is entirely destroyed. Nine large X-ray pictures accompanied the bill of exceptions. The X-ray pictures introduced by the plaintiff were taken by Dr. Johnson, while those introduced by the defendant were taken under the direction of Dr. Stearns at the Good Samaritan Hospital in Kearney.

The defendant called Dr. A. F. Tyler, of Omaha, the attending radiologist of St. Joseph’s Hospital, Omaha, since 1909, and who has specialized in X-ray work. From an examination of the X-ray pictures introduced in evidence, [78]*78he testified that the bony deposits on the edge of the spine had been going on from 15 to 20 years; that there was no indication of any fracture of a ligament which had become ossified, but that there was a lipping of some of the vertebrae, caused by the laying down of a bony deposit; that there was nothing shown in any of the pictures that indicated any fracture of the spine. In answer to a hypothetical question, he testified that in his opinion the result of the fall from the wagon to the paving was a muscular injury, and that the condition of the spine as shown by the X-rays was not the result of the injury in the fall to the pavement. There is no doubt that some of the tissues of the backbone had been replaced with calcium deposit. Dr. Stearns testified that it was utterly impossible for plaintiff’s condition to have developed in the short time between the date of the injury and the date when the pictures were taken, and that the condition of his back was the result of a bacterial infection that got into his bloodstream from the bad conditions in his mouth, and that caused the arthritis in his backbone. When Dr. Stearns was asked whether plaintiff’s condition at the time of the trial was the result of any injury he might have sustained December 8, 1933, he testified positively: “No; no. Absolutely not.”

Dr. Tyler was asked the question, “Then because of the fact that this condition exists could you say whether or not that was the result of some injury?” and his answer was: “No; this condition is not in my opinion the result of injury.”

The plaintiff testified that when the collision occurred he was thrown from the top of the load of logs down to the paved highway and was picked up unconscious. He says he was in a daze, and claims that blood came from his ear, and that he was not conscious of his surroundings until about the second time that Dr. Stearns called.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 N.W. 230, 131 Neb. 74, 1936 Neb. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-miller-neb-1936.