90 Vt. 253 | Vt. | 1916
This case was tried by the court. The findings of fact were filed, judgment was rendered for the defendant, and exceptions to the judgment were filed, all on the same day, November 30, 1914. Later an amended bill of exceptions was filed, and finally on January 3, 1916, a substitute bill was filed. In the last named bill, the transcript of the evidence is referred to in respect to the exceptions taken during the trial and is made a part thereof for that purpose ! ‘ and shall control according to rule 31, section 2, of the (new) county court rules. It is made the bill of exceptions in this case, in respect to the exceptions taken during the trial, in substitution of any bill of exceptions on file.” Notwithstanding the case was tried and determined in the court below before the present rules of the county courts went into effect, we treat the reference to rule 31, section 2, as treated by both sides in argument, as properly made. By that rule and section, bills of exceptions shall refer to the transcript of the evidence and make the same controlling, ‘ ‘ except in cases in which the parties otherwise agree or the presiding judge otherwise directs.” Here the presiding judge otherwise directed to the extent of referring thereto only for the specific purpose named, and we confine our use of it accordingly.
It is said that there are rules adopted by the Windham County Bar for the purpose of expediting the trial of causes, and that these rules have the approval of the superior judges. Of those rules, No. 5, reads: “The court is requested to direct that all cases of objection and exception shall be noted as a matter of course and without request or direction therefor except' where the court shall distinctly rule as a matter of discretion, in which case, an exception, if one is claimed, shall be specifically noted.” The plaintiff claims to have proceeded under this rule in saving her exceptions during the trial. Defendant calls our attention to one of the regular county court rules that no exception lies without a ruling by the court. It becomes neces
By rule 28, (then in force,) paragraph 2, “No exception shall be allowed unless the point relied upon was presented to and exception noted by the court at the time of making the decision excepted to, if a decision of the court, and if to the charge, before the jury retires.” This being one of the general rules of the county courts, and uniform, made under the provisions of the statute quoted above, it can not be affected in its provisions or operations by any local rule or rules of any particular county. Local rules operating in a single county, are not in conformity with the statute, that the “rules shall be uniform.” So far therefore as the exceptions are concerned, we must be controlled by the general rules of the county courts, and not by the local rules of the county.
We will consider the points made in plaintiff’s brief in their order.
I. It appeared that the plaintiff and the defendant reside in the village of Wilmington, this State, the latter being a practicing physician having an office there; that in March, 1914, the plaintiff slipped on some ice, fell, and injured her right arm at the wrist. In putting in her opening case, the plaintiff called the defendant to testify, and examined him at considerable length as to her coming to see him at the time of her accident, his examination of her injured arm, the condition in which he found it, his treatment of it, the number of times he saw her respecting it, who were present, etc. During such examination, the plaintiff’s attorney showed defendant an X-ray plate marked “Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1,” and asked him to examine it, particularly the
II. The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to show that at the time of her injury she went as quickly as she could to the defendant’s office which was twenty-five or thirty rods away; that the defendant gave her arm immediate attention; that he examined her wrist, rubbed on some iodine and arnica, and then put on splints and a bandage; that she told him she was afraid the wrist was broken, but after examining it he said he was sure it was not broken, but was badly sprained; that she saw him the next morning, and he then took the bandage off and examined
Dr. Eobert J. Carpenter of North Adams, a physician connected with the hospital at that place,.called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified to having had more than a year’s experience in taking and developing X-ray photographs; that on October 29, 1914, he took and developed X-ray plates of the plaintiff’s two hands, which plates (introduced in evidence) are marked, one as “Plaintiff’s No. 2,” and the other as “Plaintiff’s No. 3,” the latter being taken with the palms down, and the former with the palms up; that in No. 3, “On the thumb of the right hand, on the proximal phalange, the distal end, is a small indentation” shown, and the same thing is shown in No. 2; that this condition is iiot seen on the left hand of either of those plates. The witness was asked to examine “Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1,” and see if the same indentation is there shown, and to state what it shows in
On the foregoing authorities, we think it clear that as the evidence in the case then stood, the evidence offered was admissible for the purpose for which it was offered, namely, of verifying “Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1,” and its exclusion was error.
III. The question raised by this exception is in legal effect the same as that raised by exception I, and nothing need be added to what is there said.
IV. Dr. Aldrich, mentioned above as called by the plaintiff, was also called as a witness by the defendant, and as such testified in his examination in chief that exhibit 4, it being one of the X-ray photographs taken by'him of the plaintiff’s right wrist and hand, shows that a small scale of the styloid process of the ulna was detached by a rupture of the internal lateral ligament ; that this is the only fracture shown by the picture; that by “rupture of the internal lateral ligament,” he meant a “sprained wrist.” He further testified that the X-ray photographs taken by him of her wrist do not show a Colles’ fracture, nor any fracture of the radius. On being asked whether the epiphyseal line is shown in the photographs he then had, answered, “It shows on one.” Then being asked whether it shows on No. 5, answered, that in ordinary daylight it is very hard to tell, but “should say there was a slight trace of the epiphyseal line.” In cross-examination the witness testified responsively
V. Dr. Aldrich and other expert medical witnesses called by defendant, testified in effect that the X-ray plates Nos. 2, 3, 4, and 5, show the epiphyseal line. In rebuttal the plaintiff showed by Dr. Carpenter that on the preeedihg day he was requested by plaintiff’s attorneys to take an X-ray photograph of a pair of normal wrists, and that he had done so. The plaintiff then offered the X-ray photograph so taken, for the purpose (1) of rebutting the defendant’s evidence that the radii shown by the X-ray plates in evidence, are normal; (2) of rebutting the testimony given in defence that the epiphyseal line appears on the X-ray plates (in the case) of the radii; and (3) of showing normal radii, the condition and appearance of normal radii, to rebut the testimony of defendant’s witnesses that the radii shown by the X-ray plates in evidence, show normal conditions. The offer was excluded and exception noted. This ruling was not erroneous for two reasons, if not more: (a) The receipt of
VI. The plaintiff made requests for additional findings of fact, and took exceptions to findings made. But inasmuch as a new trial is granted because of error in excluding evidence, the exceptions to the findings of fact become immaterial.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.