Plaintiff was injured by one of •defendant’s street cars striking ber as she was crossing one of the streets in Kansas City. She brought this action for damages and recovered judgment in the trial court.
The action is founded on the humanitarian rule. The petition charges specific negligence in failing, after seeing plaintiff’s peril, to stop the car, or to slow it down, and thereby avoid injuring her. There was sufficient evidence tending to support the charge to permit the question being submitted to the jury, and we think defendant’s demurrer was properly overruled.
But there was given for plaintiff an instruction which so broadened the specific negligence charged as to permit plaintiff to recover if defendant could have prevented the injury by any effort of ordinary care, no matter what it might be. The petition specified that defendant’s neglect was in not stopping the car, or slowing it down, so that plaintiff might have esoaped, and only that issue should have been submitted. [Beave v. Transit Co.,
This fundamental rule was of especial importance in this case for the reason that counsel, in argiiment, took the liberty which the broad terms of the instruc
It is apparent that the jury were thus put in mind of' a matter not pleaded which they would be quick to hold against defendant and which they were at liberty to do under the instruction. The pleading in Ellis v. Met. St. Ry. Co.,
Nor do we think the fact that correct instructions were given for defendant can cure the harm we have mentioned. Plaintiff’s instruction submits its broad hypothesis and directs a verdict thereon. At least they were contradictory, each directing, a ver
We discover no fault with the question asked the physician as to meningitis, resulting. We think this was a phase of the case which naturally might result from the injuries charged, in the petition. And so as to the ankle. We cannot s'ay what form questions to experts will take at another trial. But that matter has been so often discussed of late by the Supreme Court and the Courts of Appeals as to leave further remark unnecessary.'
It was shown that plaintiff formerly — within a few years past — had led a life of the most hurtful and extreme immorality, degradation and dissipation. Dr. Hannawalt, a physician appointed by the court, was examined as an expert on the condition of plaintiff in reference to her injuries and the situation in ' which it would leave her, including the disturbance <of her nervous system. He examined her and asked her for her past history. She said she was a “washerwoman and helped her mother at home like a good girl.” The court refused to allow the witness to be asked whether she informed him of her demoralizing life. The record on this subject shows the court considered that should have no place in forming the doctor’s opinion. We think this was error. The doctor, himself, had thought it necessary to ask her for her history, so that he might have it in mind in forming opinions, and we think he should have been allowed to state how his opinion would be affected, if at all, by a truthful history. .If he could not form a correct opinion without a correct history, it is evident he should have it.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
