141 N.Y.S. 98 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
The plaintiff leased from the defendant' rooms in a tenement house in the. city of New York, and while, going therefrom down' a public stairway slipped, fell and sustained
The plaintiff claims to have sustained a fracture of the skull, a lesion of the brain which has resulted in a partial or complete paralysis and anaesthesia of the right side. To prove that the paralysis and anaesthesia resulted from the injuries, plaintiff’s counsel called two medical experts, who were permitted to answer a hypothetical question which, in my opinion, was ■ erroneous in form and' substance, and of itself necessitates a new trial. Prior to calling the experts, one witness had testified that plaintiff had been hit with a piece of plaster about the size of one-half the front of a newspaper (eleven by sixteen inches), and another that it was only about nine by four inches. One witness testified that after the plaintiff was struck by the plaster, about a tumblerful of blood flowed from his right ear, while another testified that only a small quantity of blood flowed; that it merely trickled out and coagulated. The attending physician testified that on seeing the blood flow from the ear he diagnosed the plaintiff’s injury as a lesion of the brain, while another physician testified that a few weeks after the injuries he concluded from the increasing paralysis that the plaintiff had sustained a fracture of the skull. The hypothetical question which was propounded to the experts, instead of containing a statement of the facts which the plaintiff claimed to have proved, contained a recital of the conflicting testimony, and the opinions of the physicians who had attended the plaintiff. Por instance, the experts were asked to assume, referring to the plaster which fell, that “ a piece struck him, varying in size from a half of the front page of a newspaper to a piece somewhat of the dimensions of the Bible by the side of your right arm there, and about an inch and a
A hypothetical Question put to an expert witness requires him to give his opinion based entirely upon an assumed state of facts. This question did not ask for an opinion of that kind. The experts, instead of being asked to assume that a tumblerful of blood had flowed from the plaintiff’s ear, or that only a small quantity had done so, were permitted to decide for themselves just what the fact Was; so, in regard to the size of the piece of plastér which struck the plaintiff, and the diagnoses of the two attending physicians. The result was that when the experts answered the question that in their opinion the injuries received by the plaintiff were the cause of his then condition, the jury was unable to? say upon what facts that opinion was based. In other words, the experts might have assumed the existence of one state of facts, the jury have
But, if it be assumed that the hypothetical question just considered were proper, then the court erred in not permitting defendant’s witness McDonald to answer it. Dr. McDonald was produced by defendant as a medical expert and after the question had been read to him he was asked from what, in his opinion, the plaintiff was then suffering. He made an irresponsive answer, saying, “ I do not know. ” ■ He was not asked to state what the plaintiff was suffering from, but for his opinion based upon the facts set forth in the hypothetical question. Hé was then asked: “ Can you form any opinion from that statement of facts ? ” This was objected to, the objection sustained, and the defendant excepted. The witness had qualified as an expert prior to the question being asked, and the fact that he gave an irresponsive answer did not render hirn incompetent to express an opinion. He had not treated the plaintiff, nor did he have, so far as appears, any actual knowledge of his. condition. He did not know from what he was suffering or its cause. Nevertheless, he could give an opinion upon an assumed state of facts.
The court also erred in permitting the plaintiff to prove that some twenty-four hours after the plaintiff fell upon the stairs .the janitor of the building, a person in the employ of the defendant, was observed making repairs to the step claimed to have been defective and upon which plaintiff claimed to have fallen. An attempt is made to justify the ruling of the trial judge in this respect on the ground that the testimony received tended to prove that the defendant had notice of the defect in the stairs prior to the accident. What was done twenty-four hours after the accident did not prove or tend to prove defendant’s knowledge of a defect which existed twenty-four hours before. The rule is thoroughly settled and well understood that changes or repairs made in an appliance, structure or
Other errors are alleged to have been committed, hut since the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered, they may not again be presented, and, therefore, it is unnecessary to discuss them. .
■ The judgment and order appealed from are reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.
Ingraham, P. J., Laughlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event. • Order to be settled on notice.