Wilson v. GRANITE CITY STEEL DIV. OF NAT. STEEL. CORP.

589 N.E.2d 660, 226 Ill. App. 3d 96, 168 Ill. Dec. 260, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 250
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 14, 1992
Docket5-90-0388
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 589 N.E.2d 660 (Wilson v. GRANITE CITY STEEL DIV. OF NAT. STEEL. CORP.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. GRANITE CITY STEEL DIV. OF NAT. STEEL. CORP., 589 N.E.2d 660, 226 Ill. App. 3d 96, 168 Ill. Dec. 260, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 250 (Ill. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinions

JUSTICE LEWIS

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff, Jeffrey K. Wilson, brought suit against the defendant, Granite City Steel Division of National Steel Corporation, for damages occasioned when he slipped and fell at the defendant’s manufacturing plant while picking up an order of steel coils. A jury found that the total amount of damages suffered by the plaintiff was $475,356, itemized as follows: disability and disfigurement, $50,000; pain and suffering, $20,000; medical expenses, $12,720; and loss of earnings, $392,636. The jury found further that the percentage of negligence attributable solely to the plaintiff is 5%. Reducing the total damages by that amount, the jury assessed plaintiff’s recoverable damages in the sum of $451,588.20. The trial court denied the defendant’s post-trial motion. The defendant appeals, presenting four issues for review: (1) whether the trial court improperly restricted defendant’s cross-examination of the plaintiff with respect to three matters, namely, a prior injury, a suit filed in connection with that injury, and testimony given by plaintiff and his treating physician in that suit; (2) whether the trial court improperly refused to allow the defendant to present evidence depositions of physicians who had treated or evaluated plaintiff in connection with the earlier injury; (3) whether plaintiff’s counsel improperly circumvented the trial court’s ruling in limine concerning plaintiff’s prior felony conviction; and (4) whether the closing argument of plaintiff’s counsel was prejudicial.

In the instant case, prior to the commencement of jury selection in the trial had in February of 1990, the defendant sought to present by evidence deposition, scheduled to be taken later that same day, the testimony of Dr. Richard Wan of Morgantown, Kentucky, who had treated the plaintiff for back and left-knee injuries he had sustained in an automobile accident in July of 1983. The suit arising out of this accident, Jeff Wilson v. Mark Eversole, Civil Action No. 84 — Cl—105, was tried in September of 1985 in the Muhlenberg Circuit Court of the Commonwealth of Kentucky. The defendant in the instant suit sought as well “to present certain of the testimony of the Plaintiff, himself, given in the early case in which he described the condition of his knee, the pain that it was giving him, the disability that he had, [and] the inability that he had to engage in any meaningful activity, including work.” The defendant sought, in the alternative, to introduce Dr. Wan’s testimony given at the previous trial, thereby obviating the need to take Dr. Wan’s deposition that same day. Thus, the defendant asked the court to rule that it be allowed to introduce the testimony of Dr. Wan in the previous trial as a part of the defense of the instant case “on the theory of an admission on the part of the Plaintiff concerning his physical condition.”

The plaintiff argued that as a result of the slip and fall on the defendant’s premises on August 31, 1987, he had sustained a tear of the posterior cruciate ligament of the left knee, which ligament had been unaffected by the automobile accident on July 22, 1983. The plaintiff took the position that because the posterior cruciate ligament of the left knee was not injured in the automobile accident of 1983, evidence concerning the injury to another part of the plaintiff’s left knee sustained in that accident was inadmissible. The plaintiff expressly stated that “[w]e are not talking about an aggravation of an earlier injury” but about “a separate, distinct injury.” The trial court denied the motion with respect to the use of Dr. Wan’s testimony in the prior case.

Concerning the use of Dr. Wan’s deposition, if it were taken later that same day, the defendant stated, “Your Honor, in view of the Court’s ruling, then, I take it that any attempt to take the evidence deposition of Dr. Wan would be futile, since the Court’s ruling is based upon the absence of any apparent indication that the injury alleged in this case was considered by Dr. Wan and his testimony in the previous case.” After some discussion the trial court expressed the view that whether the defendant wished to take Dr. Wan’s evidentiary deposition that day was an “administrative decision” to be made by the defendant. Later, defense counsel advised the court, “We will forego the taking of the evidence deposition of Dr. Wan, in view of the Court’s earlier ruling.”

During consideration of further pretrial motions, the plaintiff moved orally that there be no reference to any previous left-knee injury because of a lack of any evidence of a torn posterior cruciate ligament associated with the prior injury. Earlier, the plaintiff had moved in limine in writing that the trial court prohibit all references by the defendant to the prior litigation of his injury of July of 1983 “until such time as the Defendant shows to this court proper foundation for the use of said prior litigation for the purposes of impeachment with regard to a specific statement of Plaintiff or his witnesses.” Thereafter the plaintiff sought to know “the Court’s feeling about the prior incidents involving Mr. Wilson’s knee, specifically the 1983 incident where he banged his knee into a dash when his cousin had an automobile accident.” The court concluded that “the key determining factor in this case is whether or not the testimony relates to the specific injury; namely, the injury at hand, which is the torn posterior cruciate ligament in the left knee.” The trial court expressed the further view that the test

“is simply whether there has been an opinion expressed that the injuries in 1983 may have affected the injury before us now, the torn posterior cruciate ligament, and if there is such an opinion that those injuries in 1983 may have affected the condition that we have now, the same body part condition, the posterior cruciate ligament, then that’s all very fair game and is testimony which could and should come in for the jury to make a factual determination of whether, in fact, it did affect the torn posterior cruciate ligament.”

The trial court expressed its preliminary ruling on the matter as follows:

“Unless there is an opinion from one of these treaters, 1983 treaters, or some other treater, for that matter, that there was a causal connection between what happened in 1983 and the torn posterior cruciate ligament, it is not fair game.”

On direct examination the plaintiff testified in his own behalf that on August 31, 1987, he had injured his left knee when he slipped on grease and fell on the defendant’s premises. The plaintiff, who was 32 years old at the time of trial and 6 feet 8 inches tall, indicated that he had gained 60 to 65 pounds after the incident in 1987, having weighed about 235 to 240 pounds for the 10 years preceding the event. He had gained this weight, he said, because “I ain’t as active as I was. My leg keeps me from being active like I used to be. I could run and stuff. I can’t now.” He stated that after completing the eleventh grade in high school he had gone to work for his father, who ran a “backhoe business.” He had operated a backhoe for his father and had helped his father on the latter’s farm “[o]n and off until I got this job trucking,” the job he held at the time of his injury on August 31, 1987. He had gone to California, he “believe[d],” in 1984, and had obtained a job at Thrifty Warehouse, where he had worked as a stock-person for three weeks until, he said, he had been laid off.

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Wilson v. GRANITE CITY STEEL DIV. OF NAT. STEEL. CORP.
589 N.E.2d 660 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
589 N.E.2d 660, 226 Ill. App. 3d 96, 168 Ill. Dec. 260, 1992 Ill. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-granite-city-steel-div-of-nat-steel-corp-illappct-1992.