Court Opinion

ID: 9834341
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 23:30:10.764196+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:44:13.965655
License: Public Domain

PLEASANTS, C. J.
This is a suit by ap-pellee to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the appellant Mrs. Dickey in dressing appellee’s hair with what is known and designated a “permanent wave.” Harris-PIahlo Company, in whose store building the beauty parlor conducted by Mrs. Dickey *585was situated, was also made defendant, and judgment sought against that company.
Mrs. Dickey, joined by her husband, C. H. Dickey, answered by general demurrer and general denial to plaintiff’s petition and to the cross-action of defendant Harris-Hahlo Company. They further pleaded assumed risk and contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff. The concluding plea in their answer is as follows:
“These defendants say that the defendant Mrs. Edith Dickey is a competent and capable operator in the process of making a permanent wave in the hair; that the process used upon the plaintiff was the usual and proper method of doing such work, and was done in the usual and in a careful and expert manner; that all instruments and apparatus used in connection with said work at said time were thoroughly and carefully sterilized; that no excessive amount of heat was used; and that, if the plaintiff had a blister on her scalp, and if the plaintiff’s scalp became thereafter infected, the same was the result of other causes than the said process of making a permanent wave, and that said process was in no manner connected with or caused such injuries — all of which defendants are ready to verify.”
The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff against appellants Mrs. Dickey and her husband for the sum of $5,000, and in favor of Harris-Hahlo Company that plaintiff take nothing against it.
At the last term of this court we reversed the judgment of the trial court on the ground that appellees’ pleadings were insufficient to support the judgment against appellants. 275 S. W. 310.
The opinion reversing the judgment did not dispose of other questions presented by appellants. Upon application of appellee, the Supreme Court granted a writ of, error from our judgment reversing and remanding the cause, and, upon final hearing on the writ, reversed our judgment, and remanded the cause to this court for disposition of the other questions presented by appellants’ brief. (Tex. Com. App.) 281 S. W. 1043.
The first proposition presented in appellants’ brief predicates error upon a ruling of the trial court permitting Mrs. Glover, a witness for plaintiff, to testify that, upon the receipt of a letter from plaintiff shortly after the injury to plaintiff’s scalp, she went to the beauty parlor, and “I told her I had received a letter, and that my cousin said her hair was falling out and that she wanted something to help her with this trouble, and Mrs. Dickey took this tar tonic, a prepara-' tion she had, and mailed it to my cousin from her department.” Appellant objected to this testimony, on the ground that it was self-serving “and an ex parte .statement by plaintiff to other than the defendant.”
It goes without saying that the statement in the letter written by plaintiff was not admissible as evidence of the condition of plaintiff’s scalp. It was admissible, however, under the issue raised by appellant’s answer, that appellant was negligent in failing to properly care for her scalp after its injury, for appellee to prove that she had informed Mrs. Dickey of the condition of her scalp, and had treated it as directed by her.
Mrs. Dickey testified as to the conversation with Mrs. Glover, and voluntarily corroborated the statement made by Mrs. Glover as to the contents of appellee’s letter, and stated that, in response to Mrs. Glover’s re-' quest, she sent appellee a bottle of hair tonic to be applied to her scalp. Appellant did not ask that this evidence be only admitted on the issue of appellee’s negligent treatment of her scalp, and, it being admissible on that issue, the court did not err in not excluding it for all purposes. In addition to this, the fact that appellee lost her hair as a result of the treatment received in Mrs. Dickey’s beauty parlor is shown by other undisputed testimony, and the evidence objected to could not have influenced the jury on that issue.
Under the sixth proposition presented in their brief, appellants make the following complaint:
“Under this proposition we have raised the question of the error of the trial court in submitting special issue No. 3, which was as follows: ‘In answering this special issue, you may take into consideration, if shown by the evidence to be the natural and probable consequences or results of such injury, any pain and suffering, or mental anguish caused thereby, as well as any embarrassment or humiliation, if caused by said injury,’ etc.
“These defendants excepted to special issue No. 3 for the reason ‘that it submitted a measure of damage and authorized a finding of damages not-pleaded and not proven; because it authorized the finding of double damages for the same injury; because-it submitted a double measure of damage for mental anguish and authorized a finding for damages likely to be suffered in the future.’ ”
We cannot agree with appellants’ construction of this charge. The mental anguish caused by the pain and suffering resulting from appellee’s injury, does include the embarrassment or humiliation felt by appellee as the result of the loss of her hair and the sore and disfigured appearance of her scalp, and the charge does not submit a double measure of damage. All of the elements of damage submitted in the charge were fully pleaded by appellee. Railway Co. v. Hood, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 334, 118 S. W. 1119; Railway Co. v. Geraldon, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 71, 117 S. W. 1004.
Appellants’ eleventh proposition is as follows:
“A plaintiff in an action for personal injuries cannot recover for medical bills and medical expenses, in the absence of allegations and proof that such expenses were necessary, reasonable, and proper charges, and in the absence of such *586proof no 'judgment can be rendered for such items.”
There is no statement in appellants’ brief showing that the verdict of the jury included medical expenses incurred by appel-lee, or that that element of damage was submitted to the jury. Under well-settled rules of briefing we are not required to consider a proposition which, as presented in the brief, is but an abstract question of law. If, however, the record discloses that appellee’s recovery included these expenses, the proposition could not be sustained. The petition alleges:
“And, as a result of the injuries aforesaid and in her attempt to alleviate the damages caused thereby, plaintiff has been compelled to employ skillful medical attention and skin experts, and will be compelled to do so in the future, * * * and will become liable to pay for said medicine and medical treatment the sum of $1,500.”
There was no exception to this allegation of the petition, and it is well settled that it was sufficient to admit evidence of the reasonableness of the expense incurred by ap-pellee as the result of her injury. Railway Co. v. Lee, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 174, 51 S. W. 351, 57 S. W. 573; Railway Co. v. Short (Tex. Civ. App.) 58 S. W. 56; Railway Co. v. Jones (Tex. Civ. App.) 231 S. W. 824; Temple Lumber Co. v. Living, 289 S. W. 746, recently decided by this court; Railway Co. v. Frazee, 179 Ky. 488, 200 S. W. 948. There was also sufficient evidence to enable the jury to determine the reasonableness of the medical expenses incurred by appellee.
While the amount of damages awarded by the jury seems to us a liberal compensation for the injuries sustained by appellee, we cannot hold, under all the evidence, that it is so excessive as to authorize this court to disturb the verdict. '
The remaining propositions presented in appellants’ brief, with the possible exception of the seventh, were .all involved in the decision by the Supreme Court reversing our former judgment in this case, and are disposed of in the opinion of the Supreme Court.
The seventh proposition, is as follows:
■“A plaintiff cannot recover against one of the defendants, where such defendant is not mentioned in the pleadings and there is no prayer for judgment against such defendant.”
It is true that appellee did not make C. H'. Dickey a party defendant, and there is no pleading by appellee asking judgment against him. But, when he voluntarily .came into the suit and joined his wife in answering plaintiff’s suit,' he submitted himself to any judgment that might be properly rendered against him as the husband of his wife, and pro forma defendant in the suit against her. Having voluntarily assumed this position.in the suit, any judgment which the appellee was entitled, under her pleadings, to recover against Mrs. Dickey, could be properly rendered against him in his capacity of pro forma defendant, without any amendment of appellee’s pleading.
As held in our former opinion, and in the opinion of the Supreme Court, the judgment against Mr. Dickey should not be a general judgment which would bind his separate estate, but only a judgment against him in his capacity of pro forma defendant, and binding only on the community estate of the defendants.
The judgment of the trial court is reformed as above indicated, and, as so reformed, has been affirmed.
Reformed and affirmed.