The questions and answers in the deposition of Dr, Weld are clearly competent and were rightly admitted. They are not open to the objections urged by the defendant’s counsel. It does not appear that the witness testified to any fact which was not derived from his own personal observation
The other objection relied on in support of the exceptions is also untenable. In Bacon v. Charlton,
It is true that evidence of the statements of a party to his
There can be no doubt that testimony of this character has always been received in the courts of this commonwealth without any serious doubt or question. In Aveson v. Kinnaird, 6 East, 188, 195, Lord Ellenborough seems to assume that its competency is too clear to admit of discussion. In the proceedings in the Gardner Peerage case, 78, 172, 175, it is taken for granted that the statements of a patient to a physician of symptoms and complaints are competent and admissible. The testimony which was offered and rejected in that case was not the declaration of a party in relation to the symptoms or sensations
It is suggested, in behalf of the defendant, that the statements in the present case were made by the plaintiff after the commencement of this action. But we do not think that for this reason only they ought to have been rejected. It was a circumstance which may have detracted from the weight of the evidence of the opinion of the physician, so far as it was founded on these statements. But as the statements were made to a medical man and for the purpose of receiving medical advice, they were competent and admissible.
Exceptions overruled.
