Cridland v. Crow

221 Pa. 618 | Pa. | 1908

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Potter,

In the first assignment of error in this case, counsel for appellant complains of the exclusion by the trial judge of certain testimony of a physician. The offer was to show the condition of plaintiff’s hand and arm Avhen the witness began attending her in May, 1900, six months after the injuries were alleged to have been inflicted, and that he then treated her for the condition which she described on the trial. Plaintiff had testified as to the injury to her hand and arm inflicted by the deputy sheriff, and that the witness, Dr. Angeny, whose testimony was offered, had treated her for it, within a month after the occurrence; and that the effects of the injury had continued up to the time of the trial, and that she still suffered from it. She was corroborated in this statement by the testimony of her sister. If the evidence of the plaintiff and her sister was believed, it was sufficient to show a continuous condition of injury lasting until long after May, 1900, and the testimony of Dr. Angeny should therefore have been admitted. If plaintiff was injured as she claimed, by the use of unnecessary and excessive force, by the deputy sheriff, she had the right to show the extent and character of the injury, and the evidence of the doctor might have been of material value in this respect to the plaintiff. The trial judge would of course have cautioned the jury in his charge, that they must be satisfied from the evidence that the- injured condition of plaintiff when she was treated by Dr. Angeny was connected with, and resulted from, the injury inflicted in the previous November by the deputy, sheriff. But subject to this caution and control by the *621court, we think the testimony offered should have been admitted.

The second assignment of error relates to the comment of the trial judge upon the actions of the plaintiff and her sister, while in the court room, but not while' they were upon the witness stand. In his charge to the jury, he used this language of which complaint is made: “ The conduct you saw displayed here in the court room by the plaintiff and her sister may throw some light on the subject; their attitude toward the doctor when a witness upon the stand, and their ungoverned and hysterical conduct when his testimony did not please them — this exhibition may aid you in determining whether or not the story of Scarlett, Moore and the policeman is true and whether this excitable temperament was not in a measure the cause of the trouble.” The record does not show just what the occurrence was to which the court referred, but it appears from the statements of counsel, to have been a violent and hysterical outbreak of some kind, which created an unpleasant impression. In thus commenting upon the conduct of the witnesses, when they were not upon the stand, we think the trial judge went too far. He was not justified in asking the jury to compare their conduct in the court room with what it was said to have been at the time of the alleged assault. The circumstances were entirely different, and as to the latter, the facts were directly in dispute. The suggestion of the court put into the case a question of excitable temperament on the part of the plaintiff, and invited the jury to conjecture as to effect of that at the former occasion, instead of confining them to the evidence. Plaintiff charged her excitability in part to the effect of the injury in question; and yet the jury were asked to regard her excitable temperament at the time of the trial, and were permitted to infer from that, her condition several years before. Great latitude is properly given to the trial judge in commenting upon the evidence; but it is going too far to comment upon the conduct of a witness while not upon the stand. If a witness shows bias, feeling or partiality upon the stand, it may very properly be commented upon by the court as affecting credibility. But’ the demeanor or conduct of the witness while not upon the stand is no part of the evidence in the case. It is easily conceivable that various *622unusual circumstances may arise during the course of a trial, and that under the stress of excitement, personal peculiarities may lead to the doing of things in a court room of which no notice should be taken in the orderly administration of justice. The jury should not be instructed to consider, in arriving at a verdict, anything but the law and the evidence in the case.

The first and second assignments'of error are sustained, and the judgment is reversed with a venire facias de novo.

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