44 A. 992 | Md. | 1899
The appellee sued the appellant company for injuries sustained by him when boarding one of its cars. The injuries were received on May 7th, 1897, and the suit was brought on the 22nd of the same month. The declaration avers that the appellee hailed the car at the corner of two streets; that it stopped and he attempted to board; it but that it was negligently and prematurely started before he could get into it, and he was thrown to the street and dragged for some distance, whereby "he received a serious nervous shock; was injured about the body, arms and head;" was compelled to lay out money, c., "and had been deprived of the opportunity to attend to his business or avocation of a traveling salesman," c.
The accounts given by the witnesses of the happening of the accident are conflicting, but it is sufficient for the purposes of this opinion to say that there was evidence tending to show the following facts: The appellee attempted to board an open trolley car when it had come to a stop at the corner of Eutaw and Baltimore streets; he had gotten both feet upon the footboard which runs along the side of the car and was about to step up into the car, when, at the signal of the conductor, it started with a sudden jar and threw him off the footboard and dragged him along the *103 street for from thirty to fifty feet before the conductor was able to stop it. The appellee held to one of the sidebars of the car until it was stopped and he was bruised and injured in the legs, side and abdomen by being dragged along in that position. The evidence tended also to show that some of these injuries were of a permanent nature.
At the trial of the case, on March 25th, 1898, the appellee having testified that since the accident he had lost a great deal of his will-power and physical power; was asked by his counsel what was the condition of his vision before the injury as compared with it afterwards; to which he replied that there was considerable change; that he did not see as well now as before the accident. He was further asked by his counsel whether or not he was compelled to make calculations of his purchases and sales in his business, and whether there was any difference in his condition in that respect since the injury as compared with his condition before the injury, to which he replied that he found some deficiency in that respect; that before the accident he could figure more quickly.
Dr. Archibald Atkinson, who attended the appellee professionally after the accident, when asked whether, in his opinion as a medical, man the injury received by the appellee would probably affect his vision, testified as follows: "Vision is a thing very hard to get at unless you have regular examinations, but I should think the injury was sufficient to so jar the optic nerve as to cause a diminution in that respect; I couldn't say positively; I wouldn't say positively." The same witness being asked whether the appellee's alleged inability to figure as quickly after as before the accident would probably and ordinarily arise from such an injury as he had received, replied: "Well the brain is greater than the optic nerve, the optic nerve is only a small part of it, and if it is affected the optic nerve is also affected." * * * "My conclusion would be yes." He also testified that he saw no special nervous symptoms in the appellee at the time of the accident but that his condition ten months afterwards, *104 at the time of the trial, he being then very much emaciated, was the effect of some injury to the nervous system, and would go toward showing that he had suffered some great shock or injury.
The appellant excepted to the admission of all this testimony of the appellee and his physician, and by its sixth and seventh prayers, which the Court rejected, asserted that there was no legally sufficient evidence to enable the appellee to recover for any injury to his nervous system, nor any sufficient evidenceunder the pleadings to enable him to recover for any injury to his vision. The questions presented by these exceptions and prayers are first, whether the injury to the vision of the appellee was such a natural consequence of the accident which occurred to him that it did not require to be specially alleged in the declaration in order to enable him to recover for it, and secondly, whether there was any legally sufficient evidence that he had in fact suffered injury to his vision or from nervous shock.
This Court has had frequent occasion to consider and apply the proposition that damages which are not the natural and probable consequences of the injury complained of cannot be recovered unless they have been set out in the declaration. In the cases ofEllicott v. Lamborne,
In Sloan v. Edwards,
The case of Kemp v. Balto. City Pass. Railway Co.,
Upon the authority of these cases we think that the testimony relative to injury to the vision of the appellee was properly permitted to go to the jury to be considered by them in estimating the damages, if they determined from all the evidence that such injury resulted from the accident complained of.
We think the same principle applies to the testimony excepted to in reference to an alleged nervous shock to the appellee. Nervous shock was only spoken of incidentally by the witness in connection with the emaciation and want of nutrition on the part of the appellee which were present some months after the accident and may have been caused by it. The medical witness testified that in his opinion the injury suffered by the appellee was sufficient to produce all the bad results of which we have spoken.
There was no attempt in the case at bar as there was in the case of Dashiel v. Railroad, 7 App. Cases, Dist. of Columbia, 513, which was much relied on by the appellant, to procure an instruction to the jury making the loss to vision or the nervous shock a separate and independent ground for awarding damages. The evidence in reference to these two elements of damage was not in itself conclusive but it was in our opinion sufficient to go to the jury to be considered in connection with the other testimony in order to determine to what, if any extent, the injuries to the appellee resulted from the accident, and also in order to estimate the amount of damages from such of the injuries as they should conclude arose from that cause. It follows from what we have said that the appellant's sixth and seventh prayers were properly rejected.
We find no reversible error in the refusal of the Court below to permit the appellant's counsel to ask the appellee upon cross-examination if Dr. Atkinson, the medical witness, did not advise him on the very day on which the accident happened to bring this suit. If the question was intended to test the bonafides of the witness, or show an interest on his part in the suit, and thus affect the weight *107 of his testimony, no harm was done to the appellant by its rejection, for the appellee, before the Court had ruled upon the subject, promptly answered the question in the negative. If it was intended to lay a foundation for contradicting the doctor he should have first been asked if he had advised the bringing of the suit, but that was not done.
The appellant's ninth and tenth prayers were properly rejected; the ninth because it was general and abstract in its statements and not connected with or applied to the facts of the case, and the tenth because there was the evidence of the medical witness that some of the injuries of the appellee were permanent in their nature. The eleventh prayer of the appellant which requested the Court to take the entire case from the jury for want of legally sufficient evidence was also properly rejected. The evidence as to the circumstances under which the accident occurred was conflicting, as we have already said, but the appellee testified that he hailed the car for the purpose of getting on it; that it stopped, and he then started to mount it, and had gotten both feet upon the side platform and was about to enter the car, but as soon as he got on the platform and before he could get to a seat the car started with a sudden jar and threw him off and injured him. His testimony was in part corroborated by the witness Hoffberger. In view of this testimony it would have been improper for the Court to have taken the case from the jury.
If the appellee's testimony be true, the conductor of the car was made aware of his desire to board the car and stopped it for the purpose of allowing him to do so. If the conductor then started the car prematurely without allowing the appellee a reasonable opportunity under the circumstances of first taking a safe position, he was guilty of negligence, and under the rulings of this Court in Central Railway Co. v. Smith,
The law of this case was correctly stated in the appellee's prayers which were granted by the Court, and which with the exception of the sixth one were copied from those which met the approval of this Court in the case of the P.W. B.R.R. Co. v.Anderson,
The judgment will be affirmed with costs.
(Decided November 24th, 1899). *109