Brian G. Jenson and American Family Mutual Insurance Company appeal a judgment awarding LaVern F. Brantner, Jr., and Diane Brantner damages resulting from an automobile collision involving Jenson and LaVern Brantner. The issues on appeal are whether the trial court properly admitted Brantner’s testimony about out-of-court statements made by his father and doctor, and whether it properly admitted Brantner’s doctor’s testimony about back surgery Brantner might need in the future. Because the evidence was properly received to establish a reasonable basis for Brantner’s mental distress resulting from the collision, we affirm the judgment.
Brantner suffered a back injury from the collision. At the trial, the deposition testimony of Brantner’s doctor was read into the record. The doctor testified about what he told Brantner regarding spinal fusion surgery. Although he considered the surgery an option if other treatment was unsuccessful, the doctor was unable to state to a reasonable degree of medical probability that Brantner would need surgery in the future. Brantner testified about what both the doctor and Brantner’s father, who had experienced back surgery, told him about such surgery. Jenson objected to the doctor’s testimony because it was not given to a reasonable degree of medical probability, and to Brantner’s testimony as hearsay. The trial court overruled these objections.
All the challenged evidence concerns the possibility of Brantner undergoing back surgery at some future date. Brantner argues that this testimony was admissible to prove an element of his mental distress arising from the accident. We agree.
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Mental distress damages caused by an accident in which the plaintiff suffers physical injury are compensable.
Rennick v. Fruehauf Corp.,
[A] s a matter of law based upon public policy considerations, a present fear as to a future harm is not a com-pensable element of damages if there is no reasonable basis established for the fear being entertained and no increased possibility of the consequence feared developing as a result of the injuries sustained.
Id.
at 523a,
Brantner could recover for mental distress concerning possible future surgery if he had a reasonable basis for such distress. Such damages are not so remote or out of proportion to the tortfeasor’s culpability that they are barred as a matter of public policy.
All of the challenged testimony is relevant to whether there was a reasonable basis for any mental distress Brantner may have suffered in the past or will suffer in the future. The doctor’s comments to Brantner about the circumstances that could lead to surgery and the recovery time and disability associated with it, as well as the information Brantner received from his father about the senior Branter’s back surgery, could convince the jury that Brantner’s anxiety about future surgery was reasonable.
Jenson inaccurately argues that our decision will change the requirement for proving future damages from “reasonable certainty” to whether a future event is possible. The challenged testimony was admitted to prove that Brantner suffered and will suffer “worry and anxiety.” It proved damages resulting from the back injury, not from the possible future surgery. The jury could properly determine that this constituted worry and mental distress that Brantner had endured in the past and was reasonably certain to endure in the future, see Wis JI — Civil 1750 (1983), based on Brantner’s testimony and the doctor’s testimony to a reasonable degree of medical probability that Brantner’s back injury was permanent and caused by the collision.
Brantner’s testimony about what his father and the doctor told him about back surgery was properly ad
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mitted. The testimony was not admitted to prove anything- about back surgery, but was admitted to explain why Brantner was distressed. The relevant fact was that two people Brantner could reasonably believe had told him things that gave him a basis for his anxiety about the back surgery he might some day need. Since the testimony was material to prove something other than the truth of the out-of-court statements, it was not hearsay.
See Auseth v. Farmers Mutual Automobile Insurance Co.,
Since the doctor did not testify that future surgery for Brantner was medically probable, the jury should have been instructed that they were to consider the doctor’s testimony about the possible surgery only on the question of Brantner’s mental distress from the back injury, and that no damages could be awarded for future pain and suffering that might result from the uncertain future surgery.
See Ianni v. Grain Dealers Mutual Insurance Co.,
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Justice Hansen’s concurring opinion in
Howard,
including the reference to the question of whether a reasonable basis for the fear exists, was cited for support in
Wilson v. Continental Insurance Cos.,
