Woodruff v. Gilliam

179 S.E. 873, 116 W. Va. 101, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 25
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1935
Docket8054
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 179 S.E. 873 (Woodruff v. Gilliam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodruff v. Gilliam, 179 S.E. 873, 116 W. Va. 101, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 25 (W. Va. 1935).

Opinion

*103 Kenna, Judge:

C. E. Woodruff, the plaintiff, was injured December 23, 1932, while walking along the Midland Trail on Coal Mountain in Putnam County. He was struck by an automobile being driven by Father Joseph A. Gilliam, and, with minor injuries, sustained a fractured skull and a severe injury to his brain. He was at once taken to St. Francis Hospital in Charleston by the defendant. The house surgeon of the St. Francis Hospital, Doctor Haley, promptly had Doctor A. A. Wilson, a specialist in the surgery of the brain and nervous system, called in and placed the patient in his charge. Dr. Wilson testified that he found the patient, when he visited him on the day of the injury, in a state of coma from which it was difficult to arouse him; that his principal injury was a stellate fracture in the front part of his skull (meaning a fracture having several arms running from a point of convergence), and that one arm of the fracture descended downward through a frontal sinus, making a surgical operation inadvisable on account of the danger of infection. Plaintiff continued in the condition of stupor for three or four days and it was two and a half weeks before he was able to correctly answer such simple questions “State your name”; “state your age”; “state where you are”, etc. His course in the hospital, the doctor stated, was “characterized by extreme restlessness”, so that he had to be restrained by force and given sedatives and sometimes opiates. He was discharged from the hospital on January 19th, and Dr. Wilson continued to see him until the 20th of June. Improvement was rapid during the last few days of his hospital stay and he continued to improve until about six weeks after the accident, when he began to grow worse. Dr. Wilson stated plaintiff had suffered a very definite memory defect which was still present when he last saw him, and that at that time, he was unable to answer such questions as “Where do you live?” without relying upon his wife for information. Dr. Wilson stated that he gave the plaintiff a complete examination the last time he saw him on June 20th, not with reference to his general physical condition, but particularly with reference *104 to Ms brain injury, and found that as a result of Ms injury, he had as “residuals”, faulty memory and personality change. Dr. Wilson stated that as a result of the injury, plaintiff had bony abnormalities of the skull that he would carry the rest of his life. He further stated that no sound judgment as to the permanence of the result of head injuries he thought could be arrived at in less than five or six months after the injury, and sometimes not then. His last examination was six months after the injury.

Suit was instituted on the 17th day of February, 1933, returnable to March Rules, and at April Rules, the declaration was filed, and the case matured and set for hearing July 13, 1933. On July 13th, a postponement was consented to by both parties and on August 25, 1933, the court re-set its docket for the term. At this time, the plaintiff’s counsel moved for a continuance on the ground that the plaintiff himself had disappeared, and that Ms counsel did not know his whereabouts. This motion was opposed by defendant’s counsel who pressed for trial in order to force plaintiff to take a voluntary non-suit. The court overruled the plaintiff’s motion for continuance and re-set the case for September 5, 1933. On August 25th, Cyrus H. Gadd, counsel for defendant, wrote to plaintiff’s counsel that he understood that counsel were to appear in the case again on September 5th, at which time counsel for plaintiff intended to renew their motion to continue the case, and that in the event of their client’s return, he would be very glad to renew negotiations looking toward a settlement. On August 29th, counsel for plaintiff replied to this letter, confirming a telephone conversation, and stating that it was their purpose to renew their motion for continuance on September 5th, but that in the event of that motion being overruled by the court, they would expect to go to trial.

It appears that on or about July 10th, the plaintiff and his wife disappeared from fheir place of residence, and, in spite of the efforts made by plaintiff’s counsel, have not since been heard from nor located. On September 5, 1933, counsel on both sides appeared and counsel for the defendant moved for a continuance. Counsel for plaintiff did not renew their mo *105 tion for continuance, but asked to be permitted to go to trial and resisted the defendant’s motion.

After taking considerable proof, in which the pros and eons of the situation were thoroughly gone into, the trial court set the ease for September 12th, and announced that it would be the first case called for trial on that day.

September 12th, the parties appeared again and the defendant, by counsel, again moved that the ease be continued, making the motion in writing, and supporting it by the affidavit of Cyrus H. Gadd. The motion in writing sets forth, first, that the defendant has not been able to procure the attendance of a witness without whom it cannot safely proceed to trial, and, second, that he cannot safely proceed to trial without the presence of the plaintiff (a) because he has had no opportunity to call medical experts of the defendant to examine the plaintiff with a view to testifying at the trial, and (b) because the plaintiff’s absence deprives defendant of the right of examining plaintiff in the presence of the jury with a view to testing the nature and extent of his injuries. The supporting affidavit states that after the hearing on September 5th, defendant’s counsel got in touch with defendant and ascertained that there had been a passenger in the ear with the defendant at the time of the accident, and that from the defendant, they procured certain information upon the basis of which they made exhaustive efforts to locate this witness without success, and that the belief of counsel is that if further time were given by a continuance of the ease, the witness could be located. The court took a great deal of proof and again went thoroughly into the motion for a continuance, during the course of which it was admitted by the defendant that he, himself, could testify to the same state of facts that the absent witness could testify to. The court thereupon ordered the case to trial, and there was a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of $10,000.00. This verdict, the court, on motion of the defendant, set aside, and in doing so, handed down a written memorandum of opinion in which it is stated that the court is not impressed by the many assignments of error made on the motion to set aside the verdict; that the proof of negligence on the part of the defendant is believed *106 to be sufficient to sustain tbe verdict; that the verdict is not excessive in amount, but that the case was ordered to trial in the absence of the plaintiff, because of the court’s belief that the insurance company representing the defendant was implicated in the plaintiff’s disappearance. The opinion states that the court, being disabused of that impression, deems it proper to set aside the verdict on account of the absence of the plaintiff. The verdict was thereupon set aside.

The defendant in error assigned several grounds for its motion to set aside the verdict. The order of the trial court itself does not show on what ground the trial court acted in setting the verdict aside.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.E. 873, 116 W. Va. 101, 1935 W. Va. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodruff-v-gilliam-wva-1935.