Zukosky v. Grounds

406 N.E.2d 848, 85 Ill. App. 3d 355, 40 Ill. Dec. 645, 1980 Ill. App. LEXIS 3064
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 4, 1980
Docket79-409
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 406 N.E.2d 848 (Zukosky v. Grounds) 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
Zukosky v. Grounds, 406 N.E.2d 848, 85 Ill. App. 3d 355, 40 Ill. Dec. 645, 1980 Ill. App. LEXIS 3064 (Ill. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Mr. PRESIDING JUSTICE JONES

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in this personal injury action had sought damages of $35,000. A jury awarded her $896.53. From denial of her post-trial motion for resubmission of the cause to a jury on the issue of damages or, in the alternative, a new trial, plaintiff appeals. She contends: (1) an alleged communication between defendant and a juror prejudiced her right to a fair trial as shown by the verdict for inadequate damages; (2) the verdict was so grossly inadequate that it was contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence; (3) a letter written by one of plaintiff’s treating physicians was improperly excluded from evidence; (4) the verdict of the jury was the result of bias and prejudice.

While outdoors at her home in the middle of June 1975, plaintiff turned her ankle and fell backward. As she fell she extended her right arm behind her and landed with her full weight on the arm, severely fracturing her right wrist. Once sufficient healing of the fracture had taken place to permit physical therapy treatments, they were begun. On November 5, 1975, about 2 months after the treatments were instituted and about 6 months after the fracture was sustained, plaintiff was returning from a therapy session. Her automobile, equipped with a knob on the steering wheel to enable her to drive with one hand, was struck from the rear by that of defendant, 17 years old at the time. Plaintiff’s automobile, in turn, struck another stopped ahead of her at a street intersection. Plaintiff sustained several injuries, among them a fractured sternum, the result of striking the knob attached to the steering wheel. In addition to apparently minor injuries to a knee and shoulder, she suffered injury to her right wrist, the extent of which would become the crux of the instant lawsuit.

Plaintiff was immediately hospitalized, complaining of pain in her chest, shoulder and right wrist. Two days later she was discharged from the hospital. After January 5, 1976, she required no further treatment for and apparently had no further complaints with regard to the fracture of the sternum or the minor injuries. Her right wrist, however, still required treatment. She continued to receive physical therapy treatments for it until June 1976, where her family physician referred her to an orthopedic surgeon. The surgeon first examined her in September 1976, and directed the resumption of physical therapy treatments. In January 1977, plaintiff was hospitalized for one week for surgery undertaken to increase wrist motion and decrease pain. After surgery physical therapy was resumed and was continued until April 6, 1977. Plaintiff received a release to full activity and work on June 7, 1977, and on July 5,1977, returned to work for the first time since her fall 2 years earlier. The nature of her work prior to injury had required her to lift as much as approximately 80 pounds at a time. Upon her return to work she was reassigned to a secretarial position.

On February 9,1976, plaintiff filed her complaint seeking damages of $35,000. A 3-day trial was had from October 30 to November 1, 1978. Defendant did not seriously dispute liability for plaintiff’s fractured sternum or for any other injury claimed to have resulted from the automobile accident except the aggravation of the prior wrist injury. Three physicians who had treated plaintiff for her wrist condition testified as to whether the automobile accident aggravated the prior injury.

Plaintiff called the orthopedic surgeon who had performed the surgery of January 1977. He testified on direct examination that X rays of plaintiff’s wrist showed “a healed fracture of the wrist and some shortening of the radius, which is the larger of the two bones at the wrist, as though it had been impacted, and some post-tramatic [sic] or degenerative changes in the region of the wrist joint that we might expect to follow trauma.” As to aggravation of the prior injury, he stated, “My opinion would be then, based upon the history, that there was a contribution to the necessity of the surgery deriving from the second accident.” But of the extent of the contribution he was uncertain:

“I feel that the initial injury of 15 of June in which she fell backwards and injured her wrist was responsible for most, if not all of the things that we found at the time of my inital [sic] examination. I feel that the contribution made by the second accident could have been an exacerbation of her discomfort and possible [sic] a contribution to limitation of motion in the region of the wrist, but I was unable to determine the degree of contribution to [sic] the second accident to the picture that I saw at the time of the first examination.”

On cross-examination he admitted that a patient’s history, unaccompanied by confirmatory objective findings, does not constitute a reasonable degree of medical certainty upon which an opinion may be based and that his own opinion as to aggravation of plaintiff’s prior injury, relying as it did only upon the history furnished by plaintiff, could not, therefore, have been based upon a reasonable degree of medical certainty. On cross-examination the surgeon also indicated that any aggravation of plaintiff’s prior injury would have occurred in the form of soft tissue injury not revealed by X ray. He further indicated that, given the nature of soft tissue injury, the physician treating the patient immediately after it occurred was in a better position to assess it as an aggravation of a prior injury than he himself was who saw her almost a year afterward.

Defendant called the physician who had treated plaintiff in the emergency room and during her hospitalization immediately after the automobile accident occurred. He seemed not to have treated plaintiff before this time. He testified that “upon examining her I could not detect that the patient received enough injury to her wrist to warrant further X-rays.” His initial impression upon plaintiff’s admission to the hospital appears to have been an aggravation of a right wrist fracture. But he said, “[0]n examining the patient I could not determine that she had reinjured her wrist to any extent.” He further stated, “After having seen her for a couple of days, I didn’t feel that she had reinjured her wrist.” His impression after observing her for 2 days was that she had not suffered an aggravation of her wrist condition. His discharge diagnosis. was as follows:

“The final diagnosis upon her discharge from the hospital was that she had a fracture to the sternum with partial dislocation of the xiphoid from an automobile accident. Second, she had a contusion to her left knee, again from an automobile accident. She had stiffness and swelling of her right wrist, and pain in her right shoulder from fracture not connected with automobile accident.”

Defendant also called plaintiff’s family physician of about 10 years who had treated her after both the fall in June and the automobile accident in November. He testified, “I believe that the deformity and the lack of motion from the original injury of June of 1975 was the primary cause of her continuing disability.” He stated, “The original injury in June of 1975 was sufficient to cause the trauma.” He appeared to refer there to post-traumatic permanent changes in plaintiff’s wrist.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
406 N.E.2d 848, 85 Ill. App. 3d 355, 40 Ill. Dec. 645, 1980 Ill. App. LEXIS 3064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zukosky-v-grounds-illappct-1980.