177 N.Y. 59 | NY | 1903
On February second, 1902, the plaintiff was injured in a collision on the defendant’s belt line in Buffalo. It was a cold, stormy night, and a great deal of snow had fallen and drifted. Objects could not be seen very far through the snow and it continued to storm after the plaintiff left the train. The car in which the plaintiff was seated had the seats arranged so that for a third of the length from either end of the car they were continuous along each side and in the middle third of the car the seats were crosswise. The plaintiff and her hunt sat in the seats crosswise' of the car, and after the train had stopped at one of the regular stopping places, and had just got started forward, an engine following in the rear collided with the train by running into the rear end of it. As soon as the headlight was seen approaching, the plaintiff and her aunt got up out of their seats and went forward to the head end of their car. The plaintiff stood there without supporting herself, until the collision occurred, which caused her to sit down involuntarily upon one of the iron arm rests, or divisions, between the individual seats along the side of the car. ' The collision appears to have been a slight one; nothing was broken about the car except the glass in the front door, and the train started up again and ran on to the next stop in the usual way. The plaintiff and her aunt having reached their destination, got out and walked for some ten minutes through the storm and snow to the home of the aunt. It was Sunday evening and plaintiff stayed there that night and the next day and night, and on Tuesday went home. The plain
• The extent of the injury and the damages were sought to be established by the plaintiff largely upon the testimony of medical experts. These experts were conducted by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, in his examination, through a very wide field of speculative inquiry. Much of this testimony appears in the record without exception though it was constantly objected to by defendant’s counsel. The testimony was not at all confined to the condition of the plaintiff at the time of the trial, Avliich took place about eight months after the accident, but the experts were permitted to speculate upon the consequences of the alleged injury which might affect the plaintiff in the future. It was suggested that the injury might affect the bladder, the kidneys and other organs of the body and in the end. become permanent. The following is a specimen of the testimony given by one of the plaintiff’s experts who had seen the plaintiff but once and then long after the accident: “ The bladder is a very bad master and a very good servant. If you humor it, or it gets into bad habits, it is almost impossible to correct them. I make this statement more than ordinarily positive, because I have seen a great many of them. Because of this irritability, in this child is either from her general nervousness or if it is from some central trouble the result of the blow and the shock she has received, the outcome of it is, in my judgment, permanent. * * * The effects on this child, of this bladder, are of a general effect and local. The general effect of frequent urinating is harassing,
It is, undoubtedly, true that in an action to recover damages for personal injuries the evidence of experts as to the future consequences which are expected to follow the injury are competent, but 'to authorize such evidence, however, the apprehended consequences must be such as, in the ordinary course of nature, are reasonably certain to ensue. Consequences which are contingent, speculative or merely possible are not proper to be considered in estimating the damages and may not be proved. (Strohm v. N. Y., L. E. & W. R. R. Co., 96 N. Y. 305; Tozer v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 105 N. Y. 617; Jewell v. N. Y. G. & H. R. R. R. Co.,
The judgment should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Pabkbb, Oh. J., Mabtin, Cullen and Webnee, JJ., concur': Gbay, J., not sitting; Haight, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed, etc.