This was an action to recover damages for personal injuries caused by the wrongful expulsion of the plaintiff, by an officer of the defendant, from one of its street cars. On the trial of the questions at issue in the case J. M. Sharlde was called and sworn as a witness ou behalf of the plaintiff, and testified that he was a physician and surgeon by profession, and had been in practice since 1849. Thereuрon a book, entitled, “ A System of Surgery, Pathological, Diagnostic, Therapeutic and Operative,” by Samuel D. Gross, published in Philadelphia, was exhibited to the witness, and he was asked: —
“Are you acquainted, sir, with Gross on Surgery?’” In response to which the witness answered:—
“Yes; it is recognized as a standard work on surgery ....*14 and I consider it good authority on the subject on which it treats.”
This was all the testimony given by the witness. No questions were asked him, in connection with the book or оtherwise, as to the alleged injuries, which were the subject-matter of the action. But upon the testimony of the witness, counsel for the plaintiff insisted upon his right “ to read from said book, as though the author were a witness then and there present in court, and testifying in the case before the jury”; and in the exercise of that asserted right, he offered to read in evidence extracts from the book upon the fоllowing propositions: (1) That wounds to joints are very dangerous, no matter how trivial. (2) That lacerated wounds are more to be dreaded than incised wounds. (3) That the larger the joint the more danger from the wounds. (4) That anchylosis, or stiffening of the knee, may set in from the most trifling wounds of the joints. (5) That a tendon may be impaired or may be injured without the consequence of much inflammation, etc.
To the right of the plаintiff to read the book, or any part of it, as evidence, and to each offer of evidence, as it was made, and to the reading from the book at all, the defendant objected upon the ground that nothing contained in the book was relevant, material, or competent evidence, but the objections were severally overruled, and the plaintiff read the book, at great length, to the jury, as evidence. In People v. Wheeler,
But it is contended that the common-law rule has been changed by the Code law. Section 1936 of thе Code of Civil Procedure makes "historical works, books of science or art, and published maps or charts, when made by persons indifferent between the parties, .... prima facie evidence of facts of general notoriety and interest,” and the question arises, whether such books, which were not regarded before the adoption of the Codes as competent evidence, are not, by force of that provision of the Code, made competent. Doubtless the intention of that legislation was to extend the rule of evidence rather than to restrict it. But the extension is limited by the terms “ facts of general notoriety and interest.”
What are “ facts of general notoriety and interest ? ” We think the terms stand for facts^of a public nature, either at home or abroad, not existing in the memory of men, as contradistinguished from facts of a private nature existing within the knowledge of living men, and as to which they may be examined as witnesses. It is of such public facts, including historical facts, facts of the exact sciences, and of literature or art, when relevant to a cause that, under the provisions of the Code, proof may be made by the production of books of standard authority. So Mr. Justice Story, in Morris v. The Lessees of Harmer’s Heirs,
Such facts include the meaning of words and allusions, which may be proved by ordinary dictionaries and authenticated books of general literary history, and facts in the exact sciences founded upon conclusions reached from certain and constant data by processes too intricate to be elucidated by witnesses when on examination. (1 Whart. Ev. § 667.) Thus mortuary tables for estimating the probable duration of the life of a party at a given age, chronological tables, tables of weights, measures and currency, annuity tables, interest tables, and the like, are admissible to prove facts of general notoriety and interest in connection with such subjects as may be involved in the trial of a cause. (Wager v. Schuyler,
But medicine is not considered as one of the exact sciences. It is of that character of inductive sciences which are based on data which each successive year may cоrrect and expand, so that, what is considered a sound induction last year may be considered an unsound one this year, and the very book Avhich evidences the induction, if it does not become obsolete, may be altered in material features from edition to edition, so that Ave cannot tell, in citing from even a living author, Avhether Avhat we read is not something that this very author uoav rejects. (Whart. Ev. § 665.) And as wе said in Wheeler’s case, supra, “if such treatises were to be held admissible, the question'at issue might be tried, not by the testimony, but upon excerpts from works presenting partial vIbavs of variant and perhaps cоntradictory theories.”
Of course, the author himself, or any other physician, may be called upon to testify to opinions and professed facts, which
In thе trial of the latter case a veterinary surgeon, examined as an expert, in his direct examination gave it as his opinion that the injury, which was the subject-matter of the action, was attributable to a certain cause, which he undertook to define, and to support his opinion and definition, referred to a standard work known as the “Modern Horse Doctor,” by Dr. Dodd. Upon his cross-examination the wоrk was offered and admitted in evidence for the purpose of discrediting him; and the Supreme Court said it was rightly admitted, because “the expert borrowed credit for the accuracy of his statement by
Judgment and order reversed and cause remanded , for a new trial.
Ross, J., and McKinstry, J., concurred.
