113 Wis. 508 | Wis. | 1902
1.' It is contended that the evidence is insufficient to sustain findings of the jury Eos. 2-J and 3, to the effect that the officers of the town failed to exercise reasonable and ordinary care in discovering and remedying the defect in the bridge or culvert before the accident. There is plenty of evidence that the defect was the result of natural rot and decay. That implies long use, and the duty of inspection from time to time to repair when necessary. A failure to perform such duty is negligence on the part of those charged with the duty. In such a case the municipality cannot escape liability because its officers did not have actual notice of the precise defect which was the cause of the accident. Spearbracker v. Larrabee, 64 Wis. 573; Paine v.
2. Error is assigned because tbe court refused to allow the defendant to prove by Dr. James, who attended the plaintiff as her physician during the eleven days she was at Solon Springs, and once after she went home, three or four weeks afterwards, against the objection of the plaintiff, as to whether he found, from his examination of the plaintiff, any bones broken, or any fractures, bruises, swellings, dislocations, or indications of injury, and whether the plaintiff was able to retain medicine and nourishment on her stomach, or vomited or spit blood, or whether her bowels moved the second day after the injury. The information thus sought to be elicited was manifestly necessary to enable the witness to prescribe for the plaintiff as her physician; and hence, under the statute, he could not be compelled to disclose any such information which he may have acquired in so attending the plaintiff in a professional character. Sec. 4075, Stats. 1898. This court has expressly held that “the object of [that statute] was to protect the patient, and, construing that section according to its spirit and intention, a physician can neither be compelled nor allowed to disclose such information in court without the consent of the patient.” Boyle v. N. W. M. R. Asso. 95 Wis. 312, 322, 323. Mr. Justice Pinney there said:
“For whose benefit was this provision intended ? Clearly, for the benefit of the patient, whose interests, reputation, and sensibilities may be injured and grossly outraged by its disclosure. . . . The object of the section, therefore, was to protect the patient, to whom protection was so important, and not the physician, to whom it was quite unimportant, from the consequences of such disclosure.”
Such ruling has frequently been followed since. Bryant v. Pierce, 95 Wis. 341; Kenyon v. Mondovi, 98 Wis. 53; In re Bruendl's Will, 102 Wis. 47; McGowan v. Supreme Court
3. Error is assigned because tbe court refused to set aside tbe verdict and grant a new trial on tbe ground of newly discovered evidence, in tbe person of one Dr. Short, who was a physician and bad practiced medicine at Solon Springs prior to tbe accident, and bad acted as tbe plaintiff’s physician, but who bad, two days before tbe accident, sold out bis business to Dr. James, with tbe view of moving away from there, and who did soon thereafter move away from there, and who bad acquired certain information in respect to tbe condition of tbe plaintiff five days after tbe accident, under tbe following circumstances: A Dr. Quinn, of tbe city of Superior, was called to Solon Springs five days after tbe accident to treat tbe plaintiff for tbe injuries sbe bad so received, in a professional capacity, as physician and surgeon, and made an examination of ber, and prescribed for and treated ber as bis patient. On reaching Solon Springs, be called on Dr. Short, and requested Dr. Short to accompany him upon bis proposed examination of tbe plaintiff. In compliance with such request, Dr. Short did so, and thereupon they both went to tbe bouse where tbe plaintiff was stopping; and Dr. Quinn, in tbe presence of Dr. Short, who was thus called in as another physician, made an examination of tbe plaintiff, and prescribed treatment for ber as ber physician, and Dr. Short made no examination, and did not remain at tbe bouse
4. It is claimed tbat a new trial should bave been granted because tbe damages are excessive. Tbe plaintiff testified to tbe effect tbat she remained at Solon Springs eleven days;-tbat when she first got there she was suffering so much she could not tell where she was hurt most; that she bad always felt pain on her side and ribs; tbat there did not seem to be any external injury tbat she could observe; that she bad a continual flowing and vomiting, which tbe doctor could not stop; tbat her bowels did not move for nine days; tbat she bad bleeding at tbe lungs; tbat after she got home tbe pain continued most all tbe time day and night; tbat she was confined to her bed about six weeks, and then was able to be around, but was taken worse, and went to Superior for treatment by a doctor there from January 16, 1900, to May 17, 1900, — under tbe care of a doctor all tbe time; tbat prior to the injury her health was good, and she did tbe general work tbat a man would do on tbe farm; tbat her husband was not able to work, and tbat she bad not been since tbe injury; and tbat she was thirty-two years old. Tbe court charged tbe jury on tbe question of damages as follows:
“You should assess sucb sum as, in your judgment, will fairly compensate her for wbat she bas suffered in physical pain and discomfort. So far as she bas been incapacitated*515 to work by reason of the accident, or there has been expense incurred for medical attendance, they are matters concerning her husband, for which he may complain if he sees fit.”
And then he added:
“So far, gentlemen, as the court intimated that the husband would have a course to pursue for loss of her services, and for his expense in medical attendance, — so fax as the ■court intimated that, — the court retracts it, as not being present law.”
Such explanatory statement left the jury to infer that they were at liberty to allow the plaintiff damages for her loss of services and the expenses of her sickness. Damages for such loss of services and expenses were formerly recoverable by the husband, and not by the wife. Hunt v. Winfield, 36 Wis. 154. The statute of 1881 took from the husband all right to or control over an action for any injury to his wife’s person or character, and all right to or interest in any judgment recovered'therein. Shanahan v. Madison, 57 Wis. 276; Selleck v. Janesville, 104 Wis. 570, 576; McKeague v. Green Bay, 106 Wis. 577. The “present law” mentioned by the trial judge in his explanation quoted manifestly referred 'to the recent amendment, which provides “that no action shall be maintained by a husband on account ■of injuries received by the wife.” Sec. 1339, as amended by ch. 305, Laws of 1899. But that statute did not give the wife any right of action for such loss of services or expenses. Under the explanatory charge quoted, the jury were likely to include, and' probably did include, in their verdict, •damages for such loss of services and expenses. We must hold that the damages are excessive. The plaintiff should not be allowed to recover more than $1,000.
By the Court. — The judgment of the superior court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial, but with the option on the part of the plaintiff, to be exercised within thirty days after the remittitur from this court is filed in the trial court, to remit, in writing, from the verdict, all