Ferrell v. McCrae, Jr. ( 1997 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    WESTERN SECTION AT NASHVILLE
    ______________________________________________
    SHIRLEY R. FERRELL,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    Davidson Circuit No. 94C-2199
    Vs.                                                  C.A. No. 01A01-9703-CV-00100
    JESSE L. MCRAE, JR.,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    FILED
    ____________________________________________________________________________
    December 12, 1997
    FROM THE DAVIDSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    THE HONORABLE WALTER KURTZ, JUDGE Cecil W. Crowson
    Appellate Court Clerk
    Gus A. Wood; James R. Omer & Associates of Nashville
    For Appellant
    David S. Zinn of Nashville
    For Appellee
    AFFIRMED AND REMANDED
    Opinion filed:
    W. FRANK CRAWFORD,
    PRESIDING JUDGE, W.S.
    CONCUR:
    ALAN E. HIGHERS, JUDGE
    DAVID R. FARMER, JUDGE
    This is a personal injury case. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiffs and found the
    personal injury damages to be $10,528.40. The jury also found plaintiff forty percent negligent,
    and the court entered judgment for plaintiff on the jury verdict in the amount of $6,155.04.
    Plaintiffs filed a motion for a new trial and/or additur, and, after a hearing, the trial court granted
    an additur of $3,500.00 which the defendant accepted. Plaintiff has appealed and presents five
    issues for review.
    PLEADINGS
    Plaintiffs’ complaint alleges that on October 18, 1993, plaintiff, Shirley L. Ferrell, was
    operating her automobile in a northerly direction on Gallatin Road in Davidson County and that
    the defendant was operating his Chevrolet pickup truck also in a northerly direction on Gallatin
    Road. Plaintiff avers that defendant’s truck struck the rear of her vehicle, and that defendant was
    guilty of common law negligence in that he failed to keep his vehicle under due and reasonable
    control; he was operating his vehicle in a reckless manner; he failed to observe that which he
    should have observed; he operated his vehicle at a speed which was excessive under the
    conditions then existing; and that he failed to bring his vehicle under control. Plaintiff also avers
    that defendant violated T.C.A. § 55-8-124 (following too closely) and that the acts of common
    law negligence and the violation of the statute were the proximate cause of the accident and
    plaintiff’s resulting injuries. Plaintiff avers that she sustained injuries to her back, neck,
    shoulders, with cuts, abrasions, contusions and lacerations, and she incurred expenses for
    medical care and treatment for her injuries. Plaintiff avers that as a proximate result of
    defendant’s negligence she will continue to incur pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment of the
    pleasures of life, and loss of wages and earning capacity.
    Defendant’s answer denies the material allegations of the complaint and joins issue
    thereon. The answer further avers that plaintiff was not injured in the manner and to the extent
    alleged in the complaint, and asserts comparative negligence on the part of the plaintiff.
    FACTS
    Plaintiff, defendant, and police officer, Danny Duncan, testified concerning the facts of
    the accident. Officer Duncan testified that he is with the Metro Police Department and received
    a call to investigate the accident involving these parties. When he arrived at the scene, he
    described damage to the back rear light and fender of plaintiff’s vehicle and to the whole front
    end of the defendant’s vehicle. He testified that he talked with both parties, and that plaintiff
    stated to him that “she was driving north on Gallatin Road, she stopped for the vehicle in front
    of her, when she stopped she was hit in the rear end by vehicle number two [the McRae vehicle].
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    He testified that defendant told him that “he was heading north on Gallatin Road, that the vehicle
    in front of him stopped, the road was wet and he couldn’t stop and hit her in the back end.”
    Plaintiff testified that on the date of the accident, she left Briley Parkway and got on
    Gallatin Road and was proceeding in a northerly direction. She testified that she stopped at the
    traffic light at Walton Lane and was in the left of two north bound lanes. When the light
    changed to green, she continued north on Gallatin Road in the left-hand lane. She had proceeded
    ninety feet or so when she saw a car in the left-hand lane in front of her stop with the turn signal
    on to turn left. She describes the event as follows:
    Q. Now, when you say this car, what car are you talking about?
    A. A car that was in front, was way in front of me.
    Q. How far in front of you was it?
    A. Well, I’d say two city blocks, is the way I saw it.
    Q. And what was that car doing?
    A. It had stopped with a turn signal on to turn left.
    Q. And what did you do, if anything?
    A. I just left off of my gas instead of, you know, hitting the
    brakes, I just -- because it was a little distance too. I just let off
    the gas.
    Q. Then what happened?
    A. Then I got jolted. I mean I was hit. I didn’t know what had
    happened. I grabbed the steering wheel, braced myself. I hit the
    brakes.
    Q. Did you ever see the car that hit you prior to the point in time
    that you hit?
    A. No, I didn’t.
    Q. Did you ever put your brakes on prior to the point in time that
    you hit?
    A. No, I didn’t.
    Q. Do you know what your speed was at the time you were hit?
    A. I really don’t know, but I -- probably somewhere around 30,
    35.
    On cross examination, plaintiff was questioned concerning her statements at the scene
    of the accident to the investigating officer Duncan:
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    Q. Now, you heard Officer Duncan testify that you told him that
    you were stopped at the time the accident occurred, correct?
    A. Yes, I heard him say that.
    Q. And it’s your testimony you didn’t tell Officer Duncan that
    then?
    A. I don’t remember telling that, but at the time, I was so shook
    up --
    Q. Well -- I’m sorry.
    A. I don’t remember telling him I stopped. I know I was telling
    him that the car ahead of me had stopped and I had let up. I don’t
    remember saying I stopped to him.
    Q. Well, there would be a big difference between whether a car
    was stopped and whether a car was going 35, wouldn’t there?
    A. Yes, it would.
    Q. Are you confused today about whether or not you stopped that
    day in the left lane?
    A. I, I wasn’t stopped. I may have told him I was, but I wasn’t
    stopped.
    Defendant testified that at the time of the accident he was proceeding in the left-hand lane
    at a speed of approximately thirty miles per hour. He describes the accident as follows:
    Q. Tell us, if you would, what happened.
    A. Well, I didn’t realize she had, like, she had stopped or slowed
    down, so I started slowing down.
    Q. Now, you say you started slowing down. What was your
    speed before you started slowing down?
    A. Approximately 30.
    Q. And can you remember how far -- Can you estimate for us
    how far behind her vehicle your vehicle was?
    A. I don’t remember.
    Q. Were you tailgating her?
    A. No.
    MR. WOOD: Object to leading, Your Honor.
    THE COURT: Sustained.
    MR. WOOD: I don’t think that’s appropriate.
    Q. When you saw her vehicle stopped or -- did it stop?
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    A. Well, if I -- I think she was,
    Q. She was stopped?
    A. I think. I ain’t sure.
    Q. Was she going 35 miles an hour?
    A. No.
    Q. What did you do when you realized her vehicle was stopped
    or stopping?
    A. I applied my brakes.
    Q. What happened?
    A. Well, I didn’t stop, and I cut, took a right to miss her.
    Q. How hard did you apply them?
    A. Well, hard.
    Q. Did you apply them hard at first?
    A. Well, I really don’t remember.
    ISSUES
    1. Whether there is material evidence to support the jury’s
    verdict that plaintiff was guilty of negligence amounting to forty
    percent of the proximate cause of the accident.
    Findings of fact by a jury in civil actions shall be set aside only if there is no material
    evidence to support the verdict. T.R.A.P. 13 (d). The appellate court’s role in reviewing jury
    verdicts, was succinctly stated by our Supreme Court in Electric Power Board of Chattanooga
    v. St. Joseph Valley Structural Steel Corp., 
    691 S.W.2d 522
     (Tenn. 1985):
    It is the long established rule in this state that in reviewing a
    judgment based upon a jury verdict the appellate courts are not at
    liberty to weigh the evidence to decide where the preponderance
    lies, but are limited to determining whether there is material
    evidence to support the verdict; the appellate court is required to
    take the strongest legitimate view of all of the evidence in favor
    of the verdict, to assume the truth of all that tends to support it,
    allowing all reasonable inferences to sustain the verdict, and to
    discard all to the contrary. Having thus examined the record, if
    there be any material evidence to support the verdict, it must be
    affirmed; if it were otherwise, the parties would be deprived of
    their constitutional right to trial by jury. Crabtree Masonry Co.
    v. C & R Const., Inc., Tenn., 
    575 S.W.2d 4
    , 5 (1978); City of
    Chattanooga v. Rogers, 
    201 Tenn. 403
    , 
    299 S.W.2d 660
     (1956);
    D.M. Rose & Co. v. Snyder, 
    185 Tenn. 499
    , 
    206 S.W.2d 897
    (1947).
    Electric Power Bd., 691 S.W.2d at 526.
    5
    The collision in this case occurred in the left hand lane of two northbound traffic lanes
    on a busy thoroughfare. Plaintiff apparently told the investigating officer that she had stopped
    her vehicle when she was hit. At the trial, plaintiff testified that she merely slowed her vehicle
    because of a left turning vehicle approximately two city blocks ahead of her. Defendant also told
    the investigative officer that the plaintiff had stopped, but at trial testified that he really did not
    know if she actually stopped or slowed down. Although there appears to be some dispute as to
    whether plaintiff stopped or slowed down, it appears undisputed that there was no necessity for
    plaintiff to materially change the speed of her vehicle in this through traffic lane. From this
    proof, the jury could have concluded that plaintiff’s act of materially changing the speed of her
    vehicle without any necessity to do so at this particular place where one would not reasonably
    contemplate traffic stopping in a through-traffic lane constituted negligence on plaintiff’s part
    that contributed forty percent to the cause of the accident. Although very slight, there appears
    to be material evidence to support the jury’s verdict.
    We will next consider plaintiff’s Issue No. 3:
    3. The Court erred in overruling item number 14 of plaintiff’s
    Motion in Limine and admitting the hypothetical question and
    answer posed to Dr. Ronald T. Zellum, M.D.
    The record reflects that plaintiff was treated initially after the accident in the hospital
    emergency room and then apparently was seen by Dr. Card, who subsequently retired due to
    illness. Dr. Richard Smith, an internist, took over Dr. Card’s practice, and he first saw the
    plaintiff on August 15, 1994, with complaints of neck pain. Dr. Smith testified that he was given
    a history of the motor vehicle accident in 1993 and that since that time plaintiff had neck
    discomfort and headaches but apparently without weakness, parathesia, or other neurologic
    symptom. Dr. Smith’s diagnosis was muscular ligamentous injury, and he prescribed typical
    conservative treatment, such as muscle relaxants and pain medication. Dr. Smith opined that
    there was a causal relationship between the accident and the conditions for which he treated
    plaintiff on three occasions between August 15, 1994 and January of 1995 when he referred
    plaintiff to Dr. Zellum, a neurosurgeon. Dr. Smith also testified that on February 28, 1995,
    during an office visit for another medical condition, plaintiff told him that she had reinjured her
    neck, but Dr. Smith’s records did not indicate when this additional injury occurred. Dr. Zellum
    testified that he first saw plaintiff on February 8, 1995. He testified that he ordered various
    6
    diagnostic tests from which he reached the conclusion of spondylitic changes in her cervical
    spine, and he opined that based upon her history, this pre-existing condition was aggravated by
    the automobile accident. Plaintiff has objected to the following hypothetical question elicited
    on cross examination and the answers thereto.
    Let me ask you to assume that Dr. Smith has testified he first
    saw Mrs. Ferrell on August 15, 1994. And that, although, she
    complained of neck pain and associated headaches that she
    related to episodes of stress, that he has testified, in his opinion,
    that there were no neurological findings that he made in regard to
    her neck, despite seeing her a number of times between August of
    1994 and late December, December 30, 1994.
    In other words, he saw her several times. But the very first
    time he made any neurological findings in regard to her neck was
    December 30, 1994. Would it be significant to you that she saw
    him for numerous things in a period between August and
    December and made no complaints of neck pain?
    A. How many times do you think he saw her?
    Q. I’ll tell you.
    MR. WOOD: I’m going to object to the form of the question.
    You’re indicating significant, and I think maybe we -- you may
    well want to go beyond that. You may not.
    BY MR. ZINN:
    Q. Let’s assume that he saw her four times between August and
    not counting December 30th. And there were no complaints of
    neck pain on any of those occasions, and no neurological findings
    in regard to the neck until December 30th. Of what significance
    would those facts be to you in regard to this lady’s history and
    condition?
    A. It might imply that the patient at that time had no pain or
    symptoms to complaint of.
    Q. If, again, assuming that he made no neurological findings, she
    made no complaint to him of neurological signs or symptoms
    until December 30, 1994, would it cause you to question whether
    there was, in your opinion, a causal relationship between the
    motor vehicle accident of October 1993 and the problems for
    which you treated this lady surgically in February, March, 1995?
    A. Yes, it might.
    Q. And why is that?
    A. The continuity of her complaints for me is a very important
    indicator of a cause and effect relationship.
    Plaintiff asserts that the hypothetical question should have been excluded because it did
    not contain the necessary facts, was unfairly posed, and further because the response thereto by
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    the witness was speculative.
    A hypothetical question must be supported by the evidence presented at trial. Banks v.
    St. Francis Hospital, 
    697 S.W.2d 340
    , 343 (Tenn. 1985). In Cortrim Mfg. Co. v. Smith, 
    570 S.W.2d 854
     (Tenn. 1978), the Court said:
    Counsel must be given some leeway in his choice of words in
    framing such questions and the matter is primarily one for the
    exercise of discretion by the trial judge. Moreover, the defendant
    had the opportunity to restate the hypothetical question on cross
    examination or frame other questions of his own to point out any
    deficiencies in the question posed by the plaintiff.
    Id. at 856.
    From our review of the record, it appears that the essential facts were included in the
    hypothetical question and plaintiff’s counsel could have utilized re-direct examination to correct
    any deficiencies that he might have perceived. Plaintiff also contends that Dr. Zellum’s answer
    to the hypothetical question was speculative and should have been stricken. We must bear in
    mind that this hypothetical question was asked on cross examination where Dr. Zellum had
    stated that he relied upon the history given to him by plaintiff as a premise for his opinion that
    her injuries were causally related to the accident. Under those circumstances, it was proper for
    the question to be asked. While Dr. Zellum’s answer is inconclusive, it could be considered as
    casting some doubt on his previously given opinion. While doubt was cast upon the opinion, no
    effort was made for rehabilitation nor to elicit a less speculative answer. We do not find that the
    trial court abused its discretion in admitting the question and answer.
    2. The verdict rendered by the jury was inadequate, outside the
    range of reasonableness and against the weight of the evidence.
    As we noted in dealing with the first issue, this Court is not at liberty to weigh the
    evidence to decide where the preponderance lies but is limited to determining whether there is
    any material evidence to support the verdict. Electric Power Bd. of Chattanooga v. St. Joseph
    Valley Structural Steel Corp., 
    691 S.W.2d 522
     (Tenn. 1985).
    The medical information in this case indicates that plaintiff had other physical maladies
    not connected with the accident and that she incurred medical expenses in treating these
    maladies. The record also indicates that although plaintiff had initial medical treatment for her
    injuries, she apparently did not have any persistent trouble for some months after the accident.
    When she started seeing Dr. Smith she had intermittent problems, and during the same period
    8
    of time was having totally unrelated physical problems for which she was receiving treatment.
    There was some indication that plaintiff may have sustained another neck injury, but the record
    doesn’t reveal any investigation of this other than the statement made by Dr. Smith as to what
    plaintiff had told him. The belated onset of neurological deficits could very possibly have
    influenced the jury. Clearly Dr. Zellum’s opinion is based upon the history given to him by the
    plaintiff. He indicated that the correctness of his opinion could possibly be affected if some
    other facts had been known to him. The medical opinion in this case was based upon the history
    given by the plaintiff. If the jury questions the plaintiff’s credibility, it is not bound to accept
    the physician’s medical opinion if it is based upon the history given by the plaintiff. Baxter v.
    Vandenhovel, 
    686 S.W.2d 908
    , 912 (Tenn. App. 1984).
    Based upon the entire record in this case, we find material evidence to support the verdict
    of the jury.
    Plaintiff’s fourth issue has heretofore been answered by our consideration of the first
    issue. Plaintiff’s last issue for review is:
    5. The Trial Court erred in his charge to the jury as to the
    Defendant’s duty to the Plaintiff.
    Plaintiff asserts in her brief:
    The Courts charge upon the issue of the Defendant’s duty (Tr.
    174) begins with an assertion that the assured clear distance rule
    (without any explanation of what the assured clear distance rule
    is or was) does not apply “. . . where a driver encounters a
    dangerous situation which he had no reason to anticipate . . .” and
    proceeds to relieve the defendant of the duty to observe to his
    front and to maintain a safe distance between his vehicle and the
    vehicle to his front and to have his vehicle under control at all
    times.
    The trial court charged the jury:
    In addition, you should consider the law on following too
    close. A driver is required to comply with Tennessee Code
    Annotated 55, dash, 8, dash, 124, which provides in part as
    follows: The driver of a motor vehicle shall not follow another
    vehicle more closely than is reasonable and prudent, having due
    regard for the speed of such vehicles and the traffic upon and the
    conditions of the highway.
    He is required to drive his vehicle at a sufficient distance to the
    rear of the vehicle ahead so as to be able to stop in the clear space
    between the vehicles in case the preceding vehicle is stopped with
    due care.
    The assured clear distance rule does not apply where the driver
    9
    encounters a dangerous situation which he had no reason to
    anticipate, and the required standard related to following too close
    is then up to the judgment of the jury.
    We find the court’s instruction to be correct, and if plaintiff felt that the charge was
    incomplete, she should have presented a special request for instruction to complete the charge.
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed, and this case is remanded for such further
    proceedings as may be necessary. Costs of the appeal are assessed against the appellant.
    _________________________________
    W. FRANK CRAWFORD,
    PRESIDING JUDGE, W.S.
    CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    ALAN E. HIGHERS, JUDGE
    ____________________________________
    DAVID R. FARMER, JUDGE
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