140 Mo. App. 169 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
Plaintiff asks damages for a personal injury alleged to be traceable to defendant’s negligence. It was suffered in a stumble over an iron rail extended across the sidewalk on the west side of Tower Grove avenue in the city of St. Louis. The rail was four inches wide at the base, three and one-half inches high and at an elevation of eight inches above the surface of the walk. Defendant was engaged in excavating a sewer in an alley midway between Norfolk and Swan avenues, east and west thoroughfares, and intersecting Tower Grove avenue, a north and south thoroughfare. A machine called a “tower wagon” from fourteen to sixteen feet long and nine to ten feet high was used in the work. No description imparting a clear notion of this machine is given in the testimony, but we learn the tower wagon, or some part of it, was moved by steam power forward and backward in the alley, on two rails which extended across the sidewalk of Tower Grove avenue, as said, eight inches above the walk. Connected with the toAver wagon and overhanging the sidewalk six or seven feet above it, were large cans used to hoist and carry the dirt taken out of the seAver trench. The tower Avagon, boiler and engine stood in the driveway of the street nearer the east than the Avest side, but leaving plenty of room for a wagon to drive
1. We are pressed to hold the court below should have directed a verdict for defendant on the ground plaintiff was negligent in endeavoring to pass under the framework of the machinery without investigating the condition of the walk, when according to his own testimony it wms so dark he could not see what was under the framework, and to hold further that in undertaking to pass along the sidewalk without investigating, instead of stepping into the street and going around the tower wagon, plaintiff chose an obviously unsafe way when there was a perfectly safe one. In disposing of this contention we should remember the jury might find defendant was negligent in obstructing the sidewalk with rails eight inches above it without putting out danger signals to warn passersby. [Norton v. Kramer, 180 Mo. 586; Perigo v. St. Louis, 185 Mo. 274.] To say plaintiff might not proceed along the sidewalk and pass under the framework if there was nothing to warn him it was dangerous to do so, instead of making a detour into the street, would deny him his legal right to act as men commonly do under like circumstances. Defendant’s counsel insist the framework of the machinery operated by defendant was visible fifty feet away and was actually seen by plaintiff, and this was sufficient warning of danger. The portion of the machinery visible to plaintiff was either out in the street and hence no obstruction of the walk, or hung so far overhead one might pass under it in safety. The visible portion did not necessarily import notice there were
2. Error is assigned on an instruction granted for plaintiff regarding the measure of damages. In this instruction the jury were told to allow plaintiff in case a verdict was given for him, reasonable compensation for any physical or mental pain or suffering which had resulted directly from such injuries as the jury might find the accident had caused, and for any expense paid for such medical care and treatment as the jury might believe from the evidence became necessary in consequence of the injury. The contention at this point is
3. A physician Avho attended plaintiff was asked to state what plaintiff complained of and said his troubles were, and what, if any, expressions or statements plaintiff made regarding his condition and his suffering or ailments at the times when the physician subsequently treated him. In ansAver the'witness said plaintiff continually complained of “misery in the lumbar region of the back and inability to sleep.” To the court’s refusal to strike out this answer defendant excepted and noAV assigns error for its admission. The argument is this testimony Avas hearsay, as it was a statement by the physician of a history of past symptoms related by the patient. . On the contrary it was testimony regarding complaints or statements of present symptoms made by plaintiff whenever the doctor treated him. The latter’s opinion about plaintiff’s condition was based on them, and they might be given in evidence in connection Avith the opinion and as its basis. [1 Greenleaf, Evidence (16th Ed.), sec. 162b; Barber v. Merriam, 11 Allen 322; Insurance Co. v. Mosley, 8 Wall. 397; Holloway v. Kansas City, 184 Mo. 19.]
“The questions addressed to the physicians calling for their opinions as to whether the physical condition in which they found the plaintiff to be, upon their examination of her, could have resulted from a fall, were not objectionable and infringed upon no rules of evidence. We see no objection to the expression of opinions by competent medical experts upon an ascertained physical condition of suffering or bad health, as to whether that condition might have been caused by or be the result of a previous injury.”
5. Complaint is made that the jury were authorized to allow damages for permanent loss of virility, though permanent loss of it was not alleged. This point is without merit. [Cook v. Railroad, 19 Mo. App. 329; Golden v. Clinton, 54 Mo. App. loc. cit. 117; Lewis v. Independence, Id. 183.]