04 Sep Charles v. Dudley

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF BRITISH COLUMBIACitation:Charles v. Dudley,2012 BCSC 1301Docket: M101674 Registry: Vancouver Between: Shirley Charles Plaintiff And Matthew Dudley, Julie Valough-Buhl and Alfred Bailey Defendants Before: The Honourable Mr. Justice McEwan Reasons for JudgmentCounsel for the Plaintiff:M.J. BauerCounsel for the Defendants:J. LockePlace and Date of Trial/Hearing:Vancouver, B.C. June 25-27, 2012Place and Date of Judgment:Vancouver, B.C. September 4, 2012 I [1] The plaintiff was injured in a motor vehicle accident on June 1, 2008. She was a passenger in a 1999 Chevrolet Silverado truck owned and operated by her boyfriend Alfred Bailey which was struck by a 2007 Hyundai operated by Matthew Dudley near the intersection of Fraser Highway and 200th Street in Langley, British Columbia. Liability is admitted by Mr. Dudley, as is the fact that he was operating the vehicle involved in the accident with the consent of Julie Valough-Buhl, its registered owner. II [2] The trial proceeded in a fashion I would have described as unorthodox until recently, with the medical evidence called before the plaintiff testified. Counsel advised that they understand this to be the preferred way to run a personal injury case. I do not know where they get this idea. If persuasion of the trier of fact is the objective, the practice of leading medical opinion unattached to any factual foundation is the most awkward way to go about it. I have observed elsewhere that doctors do not subject their patients to a forensic examination. They generally assume that what the patient tells them is true and attempt to treat their symptoms. Their observations are of assistance to the trier of fact to the degree to which they reasonably conform to the facts that have been established after the plaintiff’s assertions have been tested. It is very difficult to assimilate medical evidence provisionally, that is, with no means of sorting what matters from what does not. A trier of fact obliged to hear a trial this way must go back over such evidence to put it in context. This Court is not alone in making this point....

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04 Sep Brechin v. Pickering

             The plaintiff is a journeyman electrician. He lives in Castlegar, British Columbia. On March 23, 2007, he was a passenger in a motor vehicle that was struck by another vehicle on Highway 3, about 15 kilometres east of Grand Forks, British Columbia. The defendant died in the accident. There is no issue as to liability for the collision.II...

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31 Aug McArthur v. Hudson

             On June 9, 2008, the plaintiff was driving home from a physiotherapy session at the Back in Motion program in Burnaby, when he was struck on the driver’s side of his vehicle by the defendant, who had failed to stop at a stop sign (the “Accident”). The force of the impact was sufficient to spin the plaintiff’s pick-up truck 180 degrees and render it uneconomical to repair....

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21 Aug Tsang v. Borg

             The plaintiff claims damages for injury and loss sustained in a motor vehicle collision that occurred on December 22, 2008, on East Broadway Street near Renfrew in the city of Vancouver. The plaintiff’s vehicle was struck from behind. Liability is admitted. The trial proceeded on the issue of damages only....

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14 Aug Peragine v. Serena

           This action arises out of a motor vehicle accident that occurred on Friday, March 13, 2009 at the intersection of Willingdon Avenue and Pender Street in Burnaby B.C....

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10 Aug Witt v. Vancouver International Airport Authority

           Mr. Witt is a fire truck salesman.  He claims damages for losses he suffered as a result of an incident (“Fall”) at the Vancouver International Airport (“Airport”) on December 8, 2006.  Mr. Witt states that he stepped through a gap between two metal plates on the roadway as he was walking towards a shuttle bus that would take him to his vehicle which was parked in a long-term parking lot.  The metal plates were in place on a temporary basis as construction proceeded on the Canada Line construction at the Airport.  The work at this particular area involved the relocation of underground utilities with the metal plates covering the gravel that had been placed over the excavated area to create a temporary roadway to cover the work being undertaken....

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10 Aug Fairchild v. British Columbia (Vancouver Coastal Health Authority)

           The plaintiff appeals a Registrar’s decision disallowing and, in some cases, reducing certain disbursements incurred in the course of preparing her personal injury action for trial. The Registrar’s hearing followed a settlement of a complex medical malpractice action in which both liability–more specifically, causation–and quantum were in issue....

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31 Jul Foubert v. Song

             On May 28, 2007 the plaintiff was driving her older model Volvo from downtown Vancouver, British Columbia to her home in Point Grey over the Burrard Street Bridge. Without warning she found herself struggling to control her vehicle after it was struck by the defendant’s Mazda RX8 seen by others immediately prior to the accident weaving in and out of traffic at a high rate of speed. The photographs of the vehicles reveal extensive damage to the Mazda and damage to the front end of the Volvo. The Volvo was written off....

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