This is аn appeal from a $9,000 judgment after a nonjury trial in an action for damages for personal injury by a passenger, who had fallen inside a D. C. Transit bus. The negligence and liability of the bus company were not disputed in the trial court and the only error assigned on appeal concerns the amount of damages, *108 based upon a finding that the injury incurred was permanent in nature.
The plaintiff, a woman of 60, was thrown to thе floor of the bus when the vehicle swerved violently in traffic to avoid colliding with another bus, operated by the same company, appellant here. The passenger was taken by ambulance to Providence Hospital, where she was treated for pain and bruisеs on the back, neck, and legs, and then released. The next day she visited the offices of Dr. Granville Moore, a general practitiоner, who gave her some injections to relieve the pain. She continued to visit him on a monthly basis for about two years. He prescribed a back brace, which she wore almost continually for a year and occasionally thereafter. She testified at the trial thаt she still suffered recurrent pain, which diminished her ability to work at domestic jobs.
The plaintiff’s testimony with respect to her physical condition was corroborated by three other witnesses, relatives and friends, who had seen her frequently both before and after the accident. By stipulation of the parties, the court admitted into evidence a report of her physician, Dr. Moore, describing his diagnosis, treatments, and her current symptoms. It stated that he regarded her “as forty percent disabled on a permanent basis because of her back injury”. The doctor was not called to the stand.
The only witness called by appellant was Dr. Charles H. Epps, an orthopedic surgeon, whom thе parties stipulated, qualified as an expert. He had examined her shortly before trial. He testified that while the accident had probably caused some soft tissue injuries, these had healed without leaving residual effects, and that he found no trace of any permanent disability.
In weighing the conflicting testimony, and taking into account the substantial out-of-pocket expenses — some $1,200 — and the likelihood of sоme physical deterioration incident to old age, the court found that plaintiff did have “a permanent injury . causally connected with the accident” and that the sum of $9,000 was awarded her as “fair compensation”.
Appellant’s position is that the finding of an injury of a permanent nature cannot stand because the only evidence upon which it was based consisted of testimony of laymen “buttressed by a sеcond-hand typewritten medical report”. It points out that such evidence was flatly contradicted by the opinion of an acknоwledged medical expert who took the stand and was subjected to cross-examination. According to appellant, as Dr. Epрs was the only truly qualified medical expert who testified at the trial, his opinion on the crucial issue of permanent partial disability should have been deemed controlling by the trial court, as it was not “rebutted by equally creditable and qualified expert medical opinion”.
In support of this thesis, appellant cites a number of judicial decisions which have held that the opinions of experts, in contradistinctiоn to those of laymen, may be accepted as substantive evidence of fact,
e. g., Simmons v. Farley,
Opposing counsel’s retort to these contentions is that the appeal before us is frivolous and was filed only for purposes
*109
of delay,
1
arguing that because there was some evidence to support the judgment, it may not be set aside under D.C.Code 1973, § 17-305. It is well established, of cоurse, that where there is conflicting testimony which the trier of fact has resolved by a finding, such finding will not be disturbed unless unsupported by substantial evidencе,
e. g., Lee Washington, Inc. v. Washington Motor Truck Transportation Employees Health and Welfare Trust,
D.C.App.,
The validity of this exception gained strong recognition in this court in
Parks v. United States,
D.C.App.,
Accordingly, if the finding of the trial court in the case before us rested only on the testimony of plaintiff and the friends and relatives she сalled to testify with respect to her asserted disability, it might well be argued that such finding in the face of Dr. Epps’ testimony lacked the requisite evidentiary support. But, in our opinion, such support was provided by the report of Dr. Moore, which was received in evidence by stipulatiоn. It is true that appellant’s counsel did not expressly concede that Dr. Moore, a general practitioner, could qualify as аn expert, but as the exhibit shows on its face that its crucial conclusion of partial disability rested entirely on opinion, its proffer and admission without specific objection to the qualifications of its author was clearly for the purpose of supporting plaintiff’s claim by expert testimony. Moreover, by stipulating to its admission, counsel cannot be heard to say that he was deprived of his right to cross-exаmine.
Accordingly, the court sitting as a trier of fact was not precluded from attaching some credence to it despite the contrary testimony of the orthopedic surgeon.
See Sher v. De Haven,
Affirmed.
GALLAGHER, J., concurs in the result.
Notes
. Citing D.C.App.R. 38, he filed a motion for damages and costs. As our opinion indicates, the issue raised by appellant is far from frivolous. Hence this motion is denied.
. These opinions were handed down before the so-called
Roth-Memoirs
test of national community standards was discarded by later Supreme Court decisions.
See Miller v. California,
