124 Ala. 557 | Ala. | 1899
— After pleas in bar have been filed to the complaint, it is discretionary with the court to permit the withdrawal of such pleas and to allow- the defendant to file demurrers. The action of the court in the exercise of such discretion, as a rule, is not revisable on appeal.
It is shoAvn by the record in this case that on the 27th day of August, 1895, a idea in bar was filed to the complaint by the defendant, represented by his attorneys, TutAA'iler & Knight. The judgment entry of the court sIioavs, that on the 3rd day of September, 1897, the day of the trial of the cause, P. A. Tntwiler, one of the attorneys AA'ho had previously appeared for the defendant* “moved the court to appoint an attorney to defend this suit for and on behalf of said defendant, on the ground that said defendant is insane and incapable of defending his said suit;” AAdiich said motion Avas by the court granted, and P. A. Tntwiler, an attorney at laAv practicing in said court, AAras by the court appointed to de
The fifth plea set up as a defense to the action the statute of frauds. The contract here sued on was in Avriting and under seal. If it be conceded that the sale made by the register was obnoxious to the' statute of frauds for want of any memorandum in writing made
While it is competent for a non-expert witness to testify that a person is “sick,” “diseased,” or “has a fever,” these being statements of such facts as are perceptible to the senses and not mere expressions of opinion, yet it is not competent for such witness to testify, if the evidence sought calls for an opinion instead of a statement of fact until the witness shall have placed himself within the rule as to expert testimony. To state that a person is stick, or diseased, is a statement of a fact which does not necessarily involve professional knowledge or skill, but to state the particular kind of disease necessarily involves some degree of professional knowledge and skill, and consequently the expression of an opinion. To state that one has a fever is a statement of fact perceptible to the senses of the ordinary man, which it does not necessarily require the knowledge or skill of an expert to determine, but to say whether the patient is suffering with malarial, or yellow fever would require the knowledge and skill of an expert, and necessarily the expression of an opinion.
In the case of Melton v. Rowland, 11 Ala. 732, where it was stated that it was competent for a non-expert to testify to the fact that a person was sick, or diseased, or had a fever, and in which case the witness also stated the particular kind of disease, it was clearly intimated in the opinion of the court in this case that if the objection had been properly made to the statement as to the kind of disease it would have been good. The cases of Wilkerson v. Moseley, 30 Ala. 562; Bennett v. Fail & Patterson, 26 Ala. 605; Fountain v. Brown, 38 Ala. 72; Blackman v. Johnson, 35 Ala. 252; Parker v. Coleman, 35 Ala. 221; S. & N. R. R. Co. v. McLendon, 63 Ala. 266, affirmed the doctrine laid down in Melton v. Rowland,
It Avas proposed to prove by the defendant’s Avitnesses in the present case, all of AAdióin Avere non-expert Avitnesses, that the defendant had suffered with a stroke of paralysis in the year 1802. On the objection of the plaintiff, the court refused to permit the testimony on the ground that it called for the expression of opinion by a Avitness Avlio did not come Avithin the rule as to expert testimony. We think the ruling of the court' was without error in this regard, and the facts in this case serve to illustrate the correctness of this ruling. The only expert testimony offered Avas that of Dr. F. M. Peterson, a graduate of several medical institutions of high repute in the country, and avIio had practiced his profession for fifty years, Avith much experience in numbers of hospitals. This Avitness had knoAvn the defendant for forty years, Avas his physician and attended hini in the year' 1822, and states that the defendant suffered with thg rheumatism in his left hip and also had chronic diarrluxia. The nature and character of the disease of the defendant, as stated by this Avitness, Avas the expression of the opinion of an expert, based upon knoAvledge and experience that might impart to it Aralue, and it is such knoAvledge, skill and experience which renders such testimony admissible and Avithont which it would be incompetent. It is quite probable that what this expert Avitness described as rheumatism the non-expert witness supposed to be paralysis. We do not, hoAvever, intend, in AA'hat is said above, today doAvn the rule that all expert testimony shall be measured by the standard of such knoAvledge, skill and. experience as Avas sliOAvn by the Avitness, Dr. Peterson.
Where insanity is a fact in issue, Ave think the rule laid doAAur in the case of Burney v. Torrey, 100 Ala. 172, as to the admission of testimony by non-expert Avitnesses, the correct rule. It is stated in that case: “Where there has been that long and intimate acquaintance with another to enable the formation of a correct
While we think the evidence shows that the witness, C. E. Waller, had had an acquaintance sufficiently intimate and long with the defendant, Martin Dominick, to render him competent as a non-expert witness to testify to the sanity of the defendant, we' do hot think the evidence sufficient to bring the witness, Cad Jones, within the rule.' He expressly states that his acquaintance with Martin Dominick has not been intimate — only a speaking acquaintance, and' his conversations with him occasional, and the most of them of very recent date. This does not sufficiently show that degree of long and intimate acquaintance that would render his opinion as a non-expert witness. admissible upon the question of sanity.
On cross-examination by appellee of defendant’s witness, J. D. Griffin, this witness was asked: “Was he (meaning defendant) capable of making a deed at that
There was no error in the admission in evidence of the report of sale made by the register. The recitals contained in this report were undoubtedly relevant under the issues in the case. The report had been made to, and filed in, the court by the register, in the course of his duty as register, and after the filing of the report there was an order of the chancery court, .made in that case, continuing the cause under the former orders of the court, which was a continuance for a resale of the property. This was tantamount to a confirmation of the report of sale and a non-compliance with the same by tlié purchaser, as made by the register, and made it a part of the records in that cause.
The court charged the jury at the request of the appellee : “That the fact that a man made an improvident bargain, that he is generally unthrifty in his business, or unsuccessful in one or more enterprises, does not, of itself, prove him to be a non compos mentis.” This charge asserts a correct proposition of law. In re Carmichael, 36 Ala. 514. It is contended by the appellant that the giving of this charge was an invasion of the province of the jury. We do not so understand and construe it. It asserts a legal proposition, and was based upon evidence in the case, which prevented it from being abstract.
The court further charged the jury at the request of the appellee: “Reason being the common gift of God to
The court charged the jury at the request of the appellee as follows: “In this case the plaintiff is entitled to recover unless they are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that he was at the time of making the contract of unsound mind to that extent that he was not capable of attending to the ordinary affairs of life.” The only objection to this charge that we can see, is that the word defendant should have been used where the first pronoun he occurs in the charge. As it stands the word he would refer to the plaintiff.
The following charge was requested in writing by the appellant: “The court charges the jury that proof of partial insanity will invalidate contracts generally, and would be sufficient to defeat an action upon a contract, which contract was the direct offspring of partial insanity, although the party making the contract, at the time of making it, was sane in other respects upon ordinary subjects.” Under the decision of Cotton v. Ulmer, supra, this charge contains a correct statement of the law. There Avas testimony tending to shoAV insanity, and also testimony tending to show a species of mania on the part of defendant, for buying and selling regardless of profit or loss. The charge was, therefore, not abstract, and as asserting a correct legal proposition should have been given.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment of the court must he reversed and the cause remanded.