153 N.Y.S. 753 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
These were several actions by husband and wife to recover damages arising from injuries received by the wife while alighting from a street car on which she had been a passenger. The two cases were tried together, the testimony of the various witnesses being taken and received as common to both. There was a sharp conflict at the trial on the question of defendant’s negligence and also as to the seriousness of the wife’s alleged injuries, and a substantial verdict for the plaintiff was rendered in each case. On the question of defendant’s negligence we are not disposed to interfere with the verdict; but in view of the state of the evidence on the question of damages it is proper that we should critically examine any alleged errors in the admission of evidence which might have affected the amount awarded.
Dr. Goodman, a medical expert, who examined the wife, was sworn in plaintiff’s behalf and was permitted to testify
In the case at bar, as I have said, the complaint alleged that the wife had “sustained serious and painful injury to her left leg, and was made sick, sore, lame,” etc. But when called upon to specify the particulars of her injuries we find that although plaintiff went into very considerable minutiae in specifying the exact injury she had received, she totally failed to state that her left leg had been shortened, although she did state that as a result of the injuries thus particularly specified she “has become lame.” It cannot be said that a shortening of the leg was such an injury as necessarily, usually or immediately arose from the injuries particularly specified, nor that plaintiff’s lameness was necessarily to be attributed to a shortening of her leg rather than to the particular injuries she had chosen to specify. It follows, therefore, that it was error for the court to admit the evidence in question.
So far as the record concerns the action of the husband I think further error is disclosed in the admission of evidence. The husband’s complaint contained a general allegation that in consequence of the alleged injuries to his wife he had been deprived of her services “ and his comfort, happiness and companionship in her society have been impaired.” There was no allegation of damage other than in the above general words. The husband was not entitled to recover general damages for the injury to his wife, for those damages belonged to and were recoverable by her alone; the husband could recover special damages only, and it was necessary that all such special damages should be alleged. (Uertz v. Singer Mfg. Co., 35 Hun, 116.) Over the defendant’s objection and exception the husband was permitted to testify that for a period of upwards of five months after the accident his wife’s condition was such that intercourse between them was impossible. Assuming that damages were recoverable by the husband because of any such state of facts, they were special damages and as such should
For the reasons above stated, both judgments should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., and Dowling, J., dissented.
Judgments and orders reversed and new trials ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.