95 N.W. 153 | N.D. | 1903

Cochrane, J.

The defendant, a foreign corporation, appeared specially in this case, and moved to set aside the service of the summons and complaint because W. H. Gross, the person on whom the service was made, was not a managing agent within the meaning of the statute, and consequently, that service upon said Gross was not service upon the defendant corporation. In support of its motion, defendant presented the affidavit of one of its attorneys, setting forth that the only service of summons and complaint in this action was-that made upon W. H. Gross, who, at the date of such service, was-local station agent for defendant at the city of Fargo, in Cass county, N. D. ■ That the defendant in January, 1896, pursuant to the require-*65merits of section 3263, Rev. Codes, 1899, filed its irrevocable certificate in the office of the secretary of state appointing such secretary of state and his successors its true and lawful attorneys upon whom all process in any action or proceeding against it might be served, and stipulating therein that service of process upon its said attorney should be of the same force and validity as if served upon it personally in this state. That the defendant did not own any property or have any office in the county of Stutsman. That W. H. Gross, its station agent at Fargo, on whom service was made, had authority fo act for it in the sale of passenger tickets for the carriage of passen • gers, and to collect pay for tickets so sold, to receive and deliver freight, and to collect unpaid charges for freight carried on said railway, with necessary incidental authority for the execution of the above powers, but with no other or further authority to represent it as agent.

This motion presents the question whether the station agent of a foreign railway corporation doing business within this state is a managing agent within the meaning of subdivision 5, section 5252, Rev. Codes 1899, which provides that the summons in a civil action may be served upon a foreign corporation by delivering a copy thereof to the secretary of state, or to the president, secretary, cashier, treasurer, a director, or managing agent thereof, if within the state, doing business for the defendant. We agree with the trial court that Mr. Gross was enough of a managing agent for defendant to sustain this service. He transacted freight and passenger business for it at its Fargo station or office. “The person who, as its agent* does that business, should be considered its managing agent; and more especially should that be so where the foreign corporation has an office or place of business in the state; and when that office is in charge of that person, and he there acts for the corporation, he is there doing business for it, and so manages its business.” Tuchband v. Ry. Co., 115 N. Y. 440, 22 N. E. 360. “An agent who is invested with the general conduct and control, at a particular place, of the business of a corporation, is a managing agent within the meaning" of the Code, which authorizes service of summons on a managing agent of a foreign corporation.” Porter v. Ry. Co., 1 Neb. 14, American Ex. Co. v. Johnson, 17 Ohio St. 641; Foster v. Lumber Co., 5 S. D. 57, 58 N. W. 9, 23 L. R. A. 490, 49 Am. St. Rep. 859. Every object of the service is attained when the agent served is of sufficient character and rank to make it reasonably certain that the defendant will be apprised of the service made. The statute is satisfied if he be *66a managing agent to any extent. Palmer v. Pennsylvania Co., 35 Hun. 369.

Plaintiff alleged, in her complaint, permanent injury to her uterus and bladder, also the fracture of the hip bone, through the negligence of defendant's servants in bumping cars together, in one of which she was a passenger.

Defendant, after service of the complaint upon it, demanded of plaintiff’s counsel the privilege of having plaintiff’s person examined by medical experts, with a view to qualifying them to testify upon the trial as to the nature and effect of her injuries. This request was refused; whereupon one of defendant’s counsel made affidavit that defendant was without knowledge as to the nature or extent of plaintiff’s injuries, if any, and was without means of obtaining knowledge as to plaintiff’s condition; that an examination of plaintiff’s person was necessary to a correct diagnosis of her case, without which examination defendant would be without witness as to her condition. To the end that justice should be done, defendant set out that an examination of her person by medical experts should be required and had, and moved the court, upon this showing, that plaintiff be required, before trial, to submit to an examination of medical experts as to the nature and. effect of her injuries. This motion was denied.

Upon the cross examination of plaintiff she was asked to submit her person to an examination by a physician for the purpose of enabling him to testify touching her physical condition. The question was objected to by her counsel. He stated that she was unwilling to submit to such an examination. The objection was sustained. The trial court placed his ruling upon ground thus tersely stated in hir. charge to the jury, and to which instruction an exception was also reserved: “The court is of the opinion that it is without power to make or.enforce such order; and if the court is in error on that point, and has such power in a proper case, yet in this case, in view of the plaintiff being a woman, and in view of the examination necessary under all the circumstances, still would the court decline to make the order, for the reason that it would in this case be an ordeal to which she ought not to be subjected.” This instruction and the several rulings hereinbefore set out are assigned for error, and present, for the first time in this jurisdiction, the question as to the court’s power to require the plaintiff in a proper case to submit her person to a physical examination. We are of opinion that the court *67possessed the power in this case,-and that it was an abuse of discretion to refuse to require plaintiff to submit herself to the examination of physicains under such reasonable restrictions as the court should prescribe.

Plaintiff asserts that her injuries are permanent, but to organs of the body which, whether sound or unsound, diseased or well, temporarily or permanently impaired in the performance of their functions, cannot be made to appear to the court but through her ipse dixit, or the' opinion of experts, founded upon a personal examination of the parts. Where a. plaintiff claims damages from another because, from its negligence, some bodily injury has been inflicted, or the functions- of any organ of the body impaired, the fact of the injury or impairment of the function, its nature, extent and probable duration must be established by competent, and that the best, evidence of which the case is susceptible. The very nature of the injuries here complained of is such as to render it highly improbable that the plaintiff could testify as to their development, whether permanent or susceptible of immediate cure. The best evidence is that .of medical experts, who, from experience and training, can testify as to the conditions, wherein abnormal, and the probable duration and effect of the injury. To enable them to so testify, a personal examination was necessary. Plaintiff should not claim damages for an injury of which she was unwilling to furnish the best evidence.

Plaintiff was injured on the 26th of March, 1902; was examined by a physician in St. Paul, who gave her a bottle of medicine. She, on the same day, took the train for Dazey, N. D. She stayed with her son-in-law from March 27th until May 9th. No physician saw her or made an examination of her during this time. On the 9th day of May, Dr. Lang, at the request of her counsel in this case, made an examination for the purpose of qualifying him to testify upon the trial. She did not ask him to prescribe for her, and he did not prescribe for her; and she did not take any medicine or remedies of any kind for the ailments of which she complained, save the bottle of medicine before mentioned. Dr. Eang testified that he made a physical examination of her internally and externally; that he took off her clothes, and spent an hour and a half in the examination; that he did not find any fracture. He describes conditions of soreness and a retroversion of the uterus, which might have resulted from the accident complained of. The weight to be given the testimony of Dr. Lang as to what he found on this examination depends largely upon *68the value of plaintiff’s unsworn statements to him, thus: He found tenderness near the great trochanter. She complained of great pain on the inner side. Found a tender point about one inch descending of the ramus and ischial tuberosities. This injury was very painful; it caused pain at every step, and painful abduction of the limb. The mouth of the womb was pressing against the bladder, which caused pain at micturition. She complained of pain in passing water, and difficulty in starting to pass water. It further appeared that Dr. Pat* ton made a personal examination of plaintiff a few days before the trial, with a view to testifying in her behalf. That he was in Jamestown on the day of the trial and was not called as a witness. Dr. Lang’s examination, on which he discovered no fracture, ante* dated the complaint in which a fractured hip is alleged as one result of the accident. If plaintiff suffered the pains testified to by her, the fact that no physician was consulted for nearly two months, and then only to secure his testimony in her contemplated suit; that a physician of her own employment, who had examined her to qualify him as her witness, was present in town at the time of the trial, and was not called as a witness; in connection with her constant refusals to submit to an examination by physicians not in her employ — subjects her to criticism of not having produced the best evidence of which the case was susceptible, but rather with the suspicion of having suppressed or held back something. If a court is powerless, in a case like this, to require a plaintiff to submit her injuries to the inspection of physicians, to the end that the exact truth as to their nature, effect, and possible duration may be ascertained, when she, by her suit, has made them the subject of judicial investigation, then the law would permit her to put forward just so much and such parts of the facts, as, in her judgment, would benefit her case, at the expense of her adversary, and to invoke the court’s aid to compensate her for an injury, through a partial and one-sided investigation. The court, under such circumstances, would become a means of accomplishing the grossest injustice.

We subscribe to the rule, declared by the supreme court of Georgia and followed in many other states, that when a person appeals to the sovereign for justice he impliedly consents to the doing of justice to the other party, and impliedly agrees in advance to make any disclosure which is necessary to be made in order that justice may be done. Richmond, etc., Ry. Co. v. Childress, 82 Ga. 719, 9 3. E. 602, 14 Am. St. Rep. 189, 8 L. R. A. 808; Graves v. City, 95 Mich-*69266, 19 L. R. A. 641, 54 N. W. 757, 35 Am. St. Rep. 561; Lane v. Ry. Co. (Wash.), 57 Pac. 367, 46 L. R. A. 153, 75 Am. St. Rep. 821. Plaintiff, under this rule, could not insist upon her case going on, when she obstructed the investigation by her adversary which was necessary to a full consideration and correct determination of the controversy. She could not, over the objection of her adversary, withhold the best obtainable evidence as to the nature and permanency of her alleged injuries, and insist upon a verdict in her favor upon evidence of less weight. Graves v. City, 95 Mich. 266, 54 N. W. 757, 19 L. R. A. 641, 35 Am. St. Rep. 561. If impartial justice is to be administered, we see no way of its attainment in all cases, if an important source of evidence is open to one, and closed to the other party. City v. Turner (Ind. Sup.) 60 N. E. 271, 54 L. R. A. 396, 83 Am. St. Rep. 200.

The court had power to require her to submit to an examination, and it was an abuse of discretion in this case to refuse to exercise its power and require plaintiff to submit to such examination, or to submit to a dismissal of her case if she refused, because defendant was without evidence as to her condition, and without means of procuring it, excepting in so far as the plaintiff made disclosure. Th ¿0 great weight of modern authority is to this extent. The cases vindicating this position are fully cited in the following opinions: City v. Turner (Ind. Sup.) 60 N. E. 271, 54 L. R. A. 396, 83 Am. St., Rep. 200; Lane v. Ry. Co. (Wash.) 57 Pac. 367, 46 L. R. A. 153, and note; City v. Gilliland (Kan.) 65 Pac. 252, 88 Am. St. Rep. 232; note to Cleveland, etc., Railway Company v. Huddleston, 6§ Am. St. Rep. 238, (s. c., 36, L. R. A. 681, 151 Ind. 540) ; Wanek v. Winona, 80 N. W. 851, 46 L. R. A. 448, 79 Am. St. Rep. 354; Louisville, etc., Ry. Co. v. Simpson (Ky.) 64 S. W. 733; Belt Line Co. v. Allen (Ky.) 44 S. W. 89, 80 Am. St. Rep. 374; 16 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 483; 16 Enc. L. 810. The Supreme Courts of the United States, Massachusetts, Texas, and Delaware deny the power. Union Pacific Ry. Co. v. Botsford, 141 U. S. 250, 11 Sup. Ct. 1000, 35 L. Ed. 734; Stack v. Ry. Co., 177 Mass. 155, 58 N. E. 686, 52 L. R. A. 328, 83 Am. St. Rep. 269; Mills v. Ry. Co. (Del. Super.) 40 Atl. 1114; Galveston v. Ry. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 67 S. W. 776.

In so far as the majority opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States was influenced by the federal statute quoted in its opinion, the Botsford case cannot be considered an authority here. When *70it is remembered that courts of the United States other than the Supreme Court possess no jurisdiction but what is given them by the congress which created them, and that no statute gives to these courts power to order a discovery, the argument of the majority of that court that the statute of the United States prescribes the mode of proof in the trial of actions at common law, and that it shall be by oral testimony and examination of witnesses in open court, except as in the statute provided, and that the only exception provided for is the one for taking depositions, and for compulsory production of books or writings in the possession of a party which contain evidence pertinent to the issue, and therefore that the statute inhibits any other form of examination or discovery, and removes from the courts the power to require it, we find this court is treating of limitations by statute that have no binding force upon state courts. There is no limitation, either in the Constitution or statutes of this state upon the power of the district court to order such a discovery as was demanded in this case, under the circumstances here set out. The courts of Massachusetts, Texas, and Delaware, in following the Supreme Court of the United States, did not notice the influence which the federal statute had upon the determination of the question by that court.

It was no answer to defendant’s request for an examination that it would offend the modest and womanly instincts of the plaintiff to require her to submit to an examination of experts. She told a jury of twelve men of her pains; how and when they affected her. She submitted to a digital examination of her injured parts by two physicians of her own selection. It would have been no greater indignity to be examined by other doctors; but “when it becomes a question of possible violence to the refined and delicate feelings of a plaintiff, on one side, and possible injustice to the defendant on the other, the law cannot hesitate. It was essential to the ends of justice that plaintiff should submit to this examination.” Alabama, etc., Ry. Co. v. Hill, 90 Ala. 71, 8 South. 90, 9 L. R. A. 442, 24 Am. St. Rep. 764; City v. Turner (Ind. Sup.) 60 N. E. 275, 82 Am. St. Rep. 481; White v. Ry. Co., 61 Wis. 536, 21 N. W. 524, 50 Am. Rep. 154: note to Cleveland, etc., Ry. Co. v. Huddleston, 68 Am. St. Rep. 247. Neither was it an answer that one physician had examined her and testified .to what he found, and was cross-examined by the defendant. Surgeons of equal learning and honesty may not diagnose an injury in the same way. They may not be equally strong in perception, or *71equally accurate in observation or in measurements, and thus form different judgments of the existing conditions, which, of necessity, must constitute the basis of their scientific opinions. If a defendant must make his defense against the expert opinions of the plaintiff’s chosen surgeons, without the opportunity of testing the verity of the basis of such opinions, he may be placed at a disastrous disadvantage, such as the law cannot and does not sanction. City v. Turner (Ind. Sup.) 60 N. E. 275, 82 Am. St. Rep. 481. Defendant’s right was, through an examination, to test the effect and reduce the weight of the evidence introduced by plaintiff. Haynes v. Trenton, 123 Mo. 326, 27 S. W. 622. The result of the investigation asked for should have put plaintiff’s claim on impregnable ground, or have destroyed it altogether. In either case there would have been an assurance that justice had been done; an assurance which finds no secure anchorage in the present record. Alabama, etc., Co. v. Hill, 90 Ala. 71, 8 South. 90, 9 L. R. A. 442, 24 Am. St. Rep. 764.

(95 N. W. Rep. 153.)

The judgment appealed from is reversed. The district court will enter an order reversing its judgment-, and directing such further proceedings as may be lawful in the premises. Appellant will recover costs.

All concur.
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