121 Mo. 22 | Mo. | 1894
This case was here before, and it is-reported in 105 Mo. 550. It is an action for damages, for personal injuries received by the plaintiff by falling-into a sewer opening. On the motion of the defendant, the circuit court ordered a special jury. The-order was communicated to the clerk of the county-court of Jackson county, who drew the names of forty-persons from the wheel and certified the list back to-the division of the circuit court in which the cause was.
We shall treat the motion “to quash the panel” for what it was eyidently intended, that is to say, an objection to the action of the court in itself designating the talesmen to be summoned. The question then is whether the court had the right to designate the talesmen, or whether the additional jurors should have been drawn from the wheel, or selected in some manner other than that pursued by the court.
The act of twenty-first of April, 1891 (Acts of 1891, p. 172) makes it the duty of the county court to cause a list of all the qualified jurors of the county to be made out. The names of such persons are then written on cards and the cards placed in a wheel. It-then provides that whenever any court “desires a panel of jurors, or any part thereof” such court or the judge-thereof shall so order, and shall designate in the order the number of jurors desired. It is then made the duty of the clerk of the county court to draw out of the wheel that number of cards and certify the names of the persons drawn to the court calling for the jury. The clerk of the court to which the list is certified is then required to issue a writ to the proper officer commanding him'to summon the persons thus selected. It is left to the
Section 7 provides that the name of every juror drawn for a special venire ■ shall be returned to the hox or wheel from which it was drawn; and section 6 is in these words:
“When a jury for the trial of a cause can. not be made up from the regular panel, the judge of the court before whom the cause is pending may make out and deliver - to the proper officer a list of jurors sufficient to complete the panel, but such extra jurors shall be summoned only for the trial of the particular case.”
It appears very clearly from section 7 that special juries should be drawn from the wheel the same as juries ordered to serve generally for the term or some ■other stated period of time. The- question then is -whether section 6 applies in case of special juries. It may be observed here that courts have the power to order talesmen to be summoned in case of special juries the same as in case of common juries. Thompson & Merriam on Juries, sec. 103; Proffatt on Jury Trial, sec. 73. If section 6 has no application to a special or struck jury, then the court can direct the ■sheriff to fill up the panel. But it is quite evident the act of 1891 was intended to furnish a system for selecting juries, full and complete in and of itself. This much can be gathered from the act taken as a whole.' Section 6 says when a jury for the trial of a cause can not be made up from the regular panel, the judge may deliver to the proper officer a list of jurors suffi-
The objection, it will be seen, goes to the answers, given by the witness rather than to the questions propounded. The objection was also made after the questions had been answered. The proper practice in such cases is to move to strike out the objectionable
The plaintiff, in these personal injury cases, may recover damages suffered up to the date of the verdict, .and also such damages as will be suffered in the future, but no allowance for future damages should be made, except for such as it is reasonably certain will result from the original injury. 2 Shear. & Red. on Neg. [4 Ed.], sec. 743. The question whether future damages will, with reasonable certainty, flow from the injury is one for the jury. But it does not follow that the witness must be interrogated in language which would be proper and appropriate in an instruction. The object of the examination is to get the opinions of persons competent to express an opinion on the subject, and the different shades of opinion which the physicians may entertain, leaving it to the jury to say whether future damages are reasonably certain. Here there was evidence that the plaintiff received severe and permanent injuries to the spine and womb. In such cases the most that any physicians can say as to the effect of the injuries on the life of the injured person, however experienced or learned in his profession, is to give his opinion as to the probable consequences. An opinion being expressed, it becomes a proper subject for cross-examination, and in the end it is for the jury to •determine the question as to the degree of certainty.
A number of cases have been cited on behalf of the ■defendant, but they relate to instructions, and are of but little aid in this case. The case of Strohm v. Railroad, 96 N. Y. 305, is most in point. An examination however, of that case shows that the witness was interrogated on the examination in chief as to consequences which were contingent, speculative and merely possible.
“He [the physician] was then asked to state the length of time that the plaintiff may live in the natural and ordinary course of events. This was objected to and the court ruled that he might answer if he could speak with reasonable certainty in reference thereto. The doctor answered that he could only give the probability from the history of other similar cases, and this he was permitted to do under the objection and exception of defendant. It will be observed that as to the latter answer, the answer was as to the probability and that in the former question he was called upon to express his opinion in reference to the result of the disease in the natural and ordinary coursed’ After citing cases, it is said, “under the rule as laid down in these cases we consider the evidence competent.” The general rule is that a physician may testify as to the probable result of personal injuries upon the health and life of the plaintiff. See notes to Griswold v. Railroad, 42 Am. & Eng. Railroad Cases, 223. The objection to the evidence of Dr. Foster was, therefore, properly overruled.
The manhole leading from the surface of the street to the sewer was from five to seven feet deep. There was an iron casting oii top with a grating or cover in
This evidence gives a perfect and complete description of the casting and the cover, and it was not necessary to call witnesses to testify in terms that the cover was too small and therefore dangerous. Had such evidence been introduced it would doubtless have been objected that it was not a proper case for expert evU dence. The casting and its cover being described, it was for the jury to say whether the cover was reasonably safe. This casting and cover were placed on the surface of a street where it was subject to jars from vehicles, and the conclusion that the cover was too^ small or not properly supported is a reasonable one— one which the jury could draw from the evidence. There was therefore no error in submitting this issue to the jury.
That the plaintiff was seriously injured ought to be conceded, and there is certainly an abundance of evidence that the injuries are in some respect permanent. Injuries of the character disclosed by the evidence in this case are certainly far more serious than the loss of a limb without internal injuries. All things considered, we can not say the verdict is excessive, though large it seems to be.