46 A.D. 557 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
The judgment from which the appeal in this case is taken must be reversed for an error in rulings upon evidence respecting the permanency, of the injuries sustained by the plaintiff. The action was brought to recover damages for such injuries which, it was alleged, were caused by the negligence of the defendant’s servant
It will thus be seen that this witness was allowed to testify from his observation to the opinion that the injuries were likely to result in á permanent loss of strength of the affected siáe and that danger existed in complications that might arise 'from chronic pleurisy, and that such complications are liable to occur. All this testimony was con jectural and speculative, and the opinion expressed by the witness was not based upon that which is required for the allowance of expert testimony of this character, namely, that the anticipated con
This rule is frequently invoked and is applicable to this case. What the witness was permitted to testify to here, was not what would happen in the future with reasonable certainty, but as to what would be likely to happen or might supervene. It was testimony as to the possibility of future consequences, and a possibility is a mere-speculation. It is said in Clegg v. Met. St. R. Co. (1 App. Div. 210) that more misapprehension exists with reference to the scope and meaning of the rule laid down in the Strohm case than in almost any decision appearing in the law reports, but since the rule there laid down has been made clear by the Court of Appeals in more recent decisions there should be no longer any serious error on the; subject, and that what was condemned in the Strohm case as speculative and hypothetical, “ related to the possible development in the plaintiff of diseases which Were non-existent at the time of the trial.”1 That is the precise condition of the case at bar. We think it cannot be said in this case that the testimony of this witness was brought within the rule of probable consequences based upon reasonable certainty, and that is the only ground upon which opinion testimony of this character is admissible.
We think this error must have affected the jury, and, as a consequence, the judgment and order must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Rumsbt, O’Brien and Ingraham, JJ., concurred; Van Brunt* P. J., concurred in result.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.