511 P.2d 831 | Or. | 1973
This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff in a fall at defendant’s motel. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $46,975 in general damages and $28,770.85 in special damages. Defendant then filed a motion for entry of a judgment n.o.v., or, in the alternative, for a new trial, based upon various alleged errors. The trial court entered an order setting aside the jury verdict and granting a new trial. Plaintiff appeals from that order.
■ In granting a new trial the trial judge rejected all of defendant’s claims of error except for the contention that the court erred in not granting defendant’s motion to withdraw from the complaint the allegation
“Traumatic aggravation of preexisting latent conditions of Muscular Dystrophy causing it to become symptomatic.”
The basis for this holding by the trial court, as stated in the order as entered by it, is as follows:
“* * * The only evidence in support of this allegation was the testimony of Dr. Luce. The Court has reexamined the testimony of Dr. Luce and feels that his opinion in support of that allegation was based upon incomplete history. It is pointed out by the cross examination by defendant’s counsel, had he known of the history given Dr. Boe that the plaintiff had in fact not had polio, which was testified to by his mother, and had he known of the other falls which the evidence disclosed, that his opinion would have been different. * * *”
1. Summary of testimony re Muscular Dystrophy
A lengthy review of the testimony in this six-day trial would serve no useful purpose, except for testimony relating to this single issue. In reviewing the record for this purpose it must be remembered that plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of all favorable evidence and to all favorable inferences from that evidence. Accordingly, we do not undertake to mention all of the unfavorable testimony in this record.
a. Testimony of plaintiff and his wife.
On the night of December 30, 1964, plaintiff, a truck driver on a trip to California, stopped his truck at defendant’s motel, where he slipped and fell, striking his lower back, elbows and hands and knocking himself unconscious, according to his testimony. Plaintiff testified that prior to the accident he had been in
“ [t] o my knowledge I had no problems with my muscles.”
He also testified that he had not noticed that any of his muscles had been growing smaller year by year and that:
“* * * my left bicep has always been slightly smaller than my right bicep. As far as that portion of my anatomy, I’m right-handed. I never failed to do any type of work with my arms. And it didn’t bother me at all. And I didn’t, by reason of being right-handed, it being slightly smaller I thought was just something natural.”
but that since the accident:
“® * * My entire muscle system has diminished along with my weight entirely.”
Plaintiff also testified that in July 1963, prior to the accident, he consulted Dr. Boe because of a kidney infection, but that “other than this urinary problem” he had no problems “of a physical nature” between July 1963, and December 30, 1964.
Plaintiff further testified that shortly after his fall on that date he went to a hospital in Ashland, but that no doctor was on duty there at that time; that after a nurse gave him some pain pills he completed his trip to California and his return trip to Oregon with his truck. He then consulted Dr. Hansen, Ms family physician, who referred him to Dr. Cohen, an orthopedic surgeon, who first examined plaintiff on March 6,1965.
Plaintiff was able to continue Ms work of truck driving until sometime in 1967, although testifying that because he had a wife and child to support he “was
b. Testimony of Dr. Boe.
Dr. Boe testified that when he was consulted by plaintiff in July 1963, plaintiff “wanted a complete physical” and complained of “morning discharge, and a feeling'-of weakness and lifelessness for the past six months.” Among “other complaints” by plaintiff, according to Dr. Boe, was that “his legs were numb if he crossed them and left them crossed too long; his fingers became numb.” He also complained of sharp pains in the small of Ms back and pelvis. Upon giving plaintiff such an examination he found, among other things, that “the left upper arm was atrophied, there was very little muscle left in that area of the left upper arm,” but that he noticed no atrophy of any of the other muscles of the arms or legs.
After completing Ms examination Dr. Boe found plaintiff was in “good health except for some irritation of the bladder outlet.” Dr. Boe was of the opinion that numbness in the legs after crossing them for some time is “a normal, condition” for persons of plaintiff’s size and weight; .that the pains in plaintiff’s back and pelvis were associated with his urinary complaints and that
Dr. Boe did not see plaintiff again until Ms deposition was taken at wMch time Dr. Boe was “quite shocked by Ms appearance. He was using arm crutches, he has lost weight, there appeared to be a generalized muscular weakness” and that, among other things, “[h]is legs are extremely thin, especially on the left. The muscles are about maybe 20 per cent present, 80 per cent wasted away.” Dr. Boe did not venture to express an opinion whether plaintiff’s injury on December 30,1964, was the cause of that condition.
e. Testimony of Dr. Cohen.
Dr. Cohen testified that when plaintiff first came to Mm in March 1965, he said that he had no prior trouble and had been in good health. Dr. Cohen said that he had no reason to disbelieve those statements. Dr. Cohen also testified that plaintiff complained of pain in Ms shoulders and back at the time of tMs examination and of numbness in Ms right arm and hand. Upon examining plaintiff he found some atrophy of the muscles and some numbness, when, tested. At that time, however, Dr. Cohen “didn’t really consider * * * that his injuries were particularly serious.”
During 1965 and 1966 Dr. Cohen saw plaintiff on 13 or 14 separate occasions. He testified that “as the examination progressed my opinion also was that tMs problem [“a pre-existing atrophy of. the arms”] was not polio, but was a form of muscular dystrophy.”
Dr.' Cohen also testified as follows:
.“Q Doctor, what effect did these injuries have that you’ve just indicated with relation tó this acci*604 dent—what effects did they have on this conation of muscular dystrophy which you diagnosed?
“A Well, I first want to say that the injury didn’t cause the muscular dystrophy. I think this condition existed long before. I think that the muscular dystrophy was slowly producing weakness, but it was occurring so slowly over the years that he probably didn’t feel this. Things that happen very slowly we often don’t feel, but nevertheless, it is present. I think that with an injury of any preexisting condition that there is weakness involved in it, you aggravate this weakness and disturb the balance, and once you disturb the balance of muscular pull you disturb the overall gait and numbers of other things involved, so this doesn’t have to have anything to do with a disease, producing a disease or developing a disease.
“It has something to do with the physiology and the anatomy and the effects of forces.
“Q Dr. Cohen, do you have an opinion as to whether or not what you’ve just testified to occurred in Mr. Birkes based upon reasonable medical probability?
“A Yes, I think that’s what has happened.
“Q Dr. Cohen, could it change your opinion in these areas you’ve just testified to in the event that you knew that Mr. Birkes had seen a Dr. Boe in July of 1963, which is approximately a year and a half prior to this accident, and complained to Dr. Boe of haying fatigue and having sharp pains in the pelvic region and low back when he urinated?
“A No, I don’t think that would—no,, that could be the result of other things. It could be a urinary disturbance.” (Emphasis.added)
Dr. Cohen’s . testimony was not limited to the aggravation of muscular dystrophy by this fall on his back. He also expressed the opinion that the fall also
Defendant does not now contend that on cross-examination Dr. Cohen was asked any questions going directly to his opinion relating to the effect of plaintiff’s fall at defendant’s motel upon his pre-existing muscular dystrophy. Dr. Cohen was, however, asked the following questions relating to the fact that beginning about eight months after that accident (according to plaintiff’s wife) plaintiff began to fall to his knees and that in August 1966, he fell from a truck and landed on his side, according to plaintiff’s testimony:
“Q Isn’t it a fact, Doctor, that as the condition of muscular dystrophy progresses that the trauma of falling to the knees becomes more serious to the areas of the spine because of the lack of protection of muscles?
“A I think so.
“Q So that the falling to the knees—for example, he fell from the load, whatever he had, and that was of more significance as time went on because the muscles weren’t there to protect him, is that correct?
“A We’re talking about which fall, now, sir?
“Q The fall incident from the load. Well, according to the report here, he fell ten feet.
“A Is that when he struck his cheek and his arm hit his chest?
*606 “Q He said it hit the rib case and he fell on his left hip.
“A I would have to know more about the direction of fall to be able to answer that accurately.
“Q Now, supposing he fell backward and landed on his hip.
“A I would say that it’s more likely that he would hurt his back in that circumstance.”
Dr. Cohen conceded that such falls were “important” and could “cause aggravation to the same area.” He also agreed with defendant that “basically your diagnosis in this particular case depends upon the accuracy of what Mr. Birkes has told you”; that plaintiff had not told him about some of his falls subsequent to this accident, and that these, and other facts could be “important” and result in a “different” evaluation. He was not asked, however, in what respect, if at all, any of these things would cause him to change his opinion relating to the effect of this fall upon plaintiff’s pre-existing muscular dystrophy (as distinguished from his opinion relating to other injuries resulting from the accident), much less whether any of these things would cause him to change or withdraw his opinion on that subject.
Dr. Cohen also testified that the pre-existed numbness of plaintiff’s fingers (of which he apparently had also not been told by plaintiff) was probably related to a pre-existing degenerative disc disease, the aggravation of which was the basis of a separate allegation in plaintiffs complaint. He was also asked about the accident on April 20, 1972, when he was knocked down by plaintiff’s wife’s car and testified that it “didn’t have, anything to do with this matter # # #
Plaintiff’s other expert witness on the subject was Dr. James Luce, a neurological surgeon. He examined plaintiff to provide information for plaintiff’s attorney on September 17, 1971, and on May 23, 1972, and also participated in plaintiff’s treatment. Based upon those examinations and upon the “history” of the case as given to him by plaintiff, he testified that, in his opinion this accident caused “a traumatic aggravation of a pre-existing latent condition of muscular dystrophy, causing it to become symptomatic.” He also expressed the opinion that the accident was the cause of other injuries alleged in plaintiff’s complaint.
The principal thrust of defendant’s cross-examination of Dr. Luce was to ask whether if it were true that plaintiff had “numerous falls to his knees # * continuously from the week following the accident as many as ten times a week” he would not be able to “even speculate” as to the effect of the fall in December 1964, and whether “if there had been numerous falls since the time of the alleged incident here [“in the week following, and from then up to the present time”] there would be no way you could determine what caused what.” Dr. Luce agreed, based on that hypothesis. However, plaintiff gave no such testimony and his wife testified that these falls did not begin until seven or eight months after the accident.
Dr. Luce also testified on cross-examination that upon examining plaintiff “there was some discussion that he had polio as a child,” but he was not asked whether his opinion would have been “different” depending upon that fact.
Dr.- .Luce “was also' asked on cross-examination about .plaintiff’s various symptoms at the time of. his
Dr. Luce conceded that these symptoms were “compatible” with the conclusion that plaintiff’s muscular dystrophy was “symptomatic” at that time, prior to the accident, with the result that if these symptoms then existed the accident did not cause plaintiff’s muscular dystrophy to become “symptomatic” and that his testimony on direct examination would have been “different” if these various symptoms had existed previously.
In explaining his answer, however, Dr. Luce said that “you have emphasized repeatedly that you are pinpointing the cause. I said aggravation * * *” and that “I felt that the condition was pre-existent and that the fall aggravated it * *
Dr. Luce also testified that he asked plaintiff “about those things” and that plaintiff answered “in the negative, he had no problems.” As previously noted, both plaintiff and his wife testified that he had “no problems” prior to the accident, other than the urinary problem treated in July 1963, by Dr. Boe. Dr. Luce also testified on redirect examination that the symptoms reported by Dr. Boe were not inconsistent with his earlier testimony on direct examination and were consistent with Dr. Boe’s original diagnosis.
In addition, Dr. Luce testified that it was probable, “considering all of those things to be true that
e. Testimony of defendant’s doctors.
Doctors called as witnesses by defendant testified to the effect that muscular dystrophy is a disease characterized by a progressive “wasting away” of the muscles and that trauma does not change the course of the disease or make it “symptomatic.”
2. There was substantial evidence to support the jury verdict.
The question to be decided by this court is not whether trauma can, and, in this case, did “aggravate” a pre-existing condition of muscular dystrophy so as to cause it to become “symptomatic.” Instead, the sole question is whether there was substantial evidence to that effect, if believed by the jury.
Defendant cites cases in support of the proposition that the causal connection between an accident and an injury must be established with reasonable probability or certainty, rather than “mere possibility,” and must not be “left to surmise or conjecture,” quoting from Sims v. Dixon, 224 Or 45, 48-49, 355 P2d 478 (1960), among other cases. Defendant also cites cases in support of the proposition that while as a general rule, when the testimony of a witness on cross-examination conflicts with his testimony on direct examination the probative value of his testimony is for the jury, that rule does not apply where the witness’s former testimony is “corrected or explained” on cross-examination, quoting from O’Lander v. Int. Harvester Co., 260 Or 383, 388, 490 P2d 1002 (1971).
Upon application of these tests to the testimony of Dr. Cohen and Dr. Luce we conclude that the trial court erred in holding that the testimony of Dr. Luce was the “only evidence” in support of plaintiff’s allegation of “[t]raumatie aggravation of pre-existing latent conditions of Muscular Dystrophy, causing it to become symptomatic.” On the contrary, we believe that the jury could properly find that the testimony by Dr. Cohen, as previously quoted, was not limited to an admission that this accident did not “cause” the muscular dystrophy, as defendant seems to contend, but that his testimony included the opinion, as a matter of medical probability, that this accident aggravated what had previously been a latent condition and caused it to become symptomatic by “disturb [ing] the balance of muscular pull.”
We also conclude, upon the application of these same tests, that the trial court erred in holding, in effect, that the jury was required, as a matter of law, to completely disregard the testimony of Dr. Luce because the trial court “has reexamined the testimony of Dr. Luce and feels that his opinion in support of that allegation was based upon incomplete history.”
Aside from whether, by reason of Article VII, § 3, of the Oregon Constitution, the trial court could
Upon reading the testimony of Dr. Luce on cross-examination we find no statement that his opinion on this subject would have been “different” had he known that plaintiff had not had polio. It is true that he said that his opinion would have been “different” if plaintiff sustained the previous falls which defendant’s counsel assumed to have existed for the purpose of his questions. Those questions, however, assumed that these falls commenced the week after the accident. Plaintiff’s wife, however, testified that it was not until seven or eight months after the accident that plaintiff began to have these falls. Dr. Cohen testified that these falls were caused by a weakening of the muscles of plaintiff’s legs as his muscular dystrophy progressed. In addition, Dr. Luce also subsequently re-affirmed, in effect, his previous opinion that although plaintiff’s muscular dystrophy was not “caused” by the accident, it was “aggravated” by it.
Accordingly, we hold that the trial court erred in concluding that the absence of polio and the existence of “other falls.” destroyed all substantial probative value of the testimony of Dr. Luce on this issue. More speeifieálly, we hold that by reference to these facts on cross-examination he did not “correct or explain” the opinion as expressed in his direct testimony so as to destroy the probative value of that testimony.
Significantly, the opinion of the trial judge makes no reference to plaintiff’s various symptoms prior to the accident, as reported by Dr. Boe at the time of his examination of plaintiff for a urinary infection in 1963, perhaps because plaintiff and his wife denied any previous “problems” and perhaps because the jury could also have properly found from the testimony of Dr. Boe, Dr. Cohen and Dr. Luce that these symptoms were otherwise explainable. Cf. Chance v. Alexander, 255 Or 136, 138-40, 465 P2d 226 (1970).
It is obvious, of course, that for a medical expert witness to admit on cross-examination that the opinion expressed by him on direct examination would have been “different” had he known of the existence of some alleged fact does not destroy the probative value of his previous opinion when there is any substantial conflict in the testimony as to the existence of that alleged fact. Cf. Wallender v. Michas, 256 Or 587, 594, 475 P2d 72 (1970).
For all of these reasons, we hold that the trial judge erred in the entry of an order granting a new trial upon the ground that there was no evidence to support plaintiff’s allegation that the accident caused a “[tjraumatic aggravation of preexisting latent conditions of Muscular Dystrophy, causing it to become symptomatic.”
We have also examined the remaining grounds
We therefore reverse the order granting defendant’s motion for a new trial and remand this case to the trial court to reinstate the verdict of the jury and to enter a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant in accordance with that verdict by the jury.
Reversed and remanded.