This is an appeal from an order granting a new trial after verdict for defend *588 ant in an action respondent brought for damages for injuries she alleges she received in a collision between two of appellant’s cars, on one of .which she was riding as a passenger. The injuries alleged are bruises and contusions upon the hip, side and back; a straining of the muscles and tendons of the back; bruises and a straining of the spinal column; and a miscarriage, which induced nervous shock, headaches and insomnia. There was evidence tending to prove respondent was, while a passenger, injured in a collision as alleged, and evidence to the contrary which tended to show that the impact of the collision was so slight that injury could not have resulted to respondent therefrom. There was also other evidence from which the jury might have found that the miscarriage alleged did not result from the collision. The jury found against respondent on the facts. The court sustained the motion for new trial oh the ground that error had been committed in certain rulings excluding testimony.
In this court respondent contends the order should be sustained on the grounds assigned by the trial court, and also because of the refusal of Instruction 10 requested by her counsel.
I. A physician who attended respondent two days after the collision occurred testified she complained of pain in the side, back and head and of a “bearing down
The real contest in this case was upon'the question whether respondent was injured at all in the collision in question. On the record it is not surprising that the jury found she was not. That is what the verdict means. Even if it were held that it was error to exclude complaints when the witness, a physician, who is offered to prove them, testifies that the conditions the complaints tend to prove did in fact actually exist and were disclosed to him in the course of a professional examination he made, yet the evidence was, in the circumstances, merely cumulative evidence of the amount of damage suffered, and its exclusion cannot he relied upon as error when the jury found that respondent suffered no injury at all through any fault of appellant. In some circumstances the nature of an injury may tend to prove the cause of action. [Orris v. Ry. Co.,
The same principle applies to some .of the rulings discussd in succeeding paragraphs.
II. There was no error in excluding the physician’s testimony that he found respondent “in a very bad
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III. There was no error in excluding Mrs. Burke's statement that the reason she did not leave the car at once was because "Mrs. Gricus couldn't ket lip." This
IV. There was no preju~icia~ error in exc.luding Mrs. Burke's testimony that prior to the date of the alleged collision respondent "was always well." The witness subsequently was permitted to testify that
V. Mrs. Carter was asked, "What would you say as to the condition of her [respondent's] apparent health
VI. There was no real contest upon the question whether respondent had suffered a miscarriage. The contest was rather upon the question whether the miscarriage was the result of injuries received
VII. The petition sp~cifical1y alleged certain physical injuries whioh were then alleged to have produced a miscarriage. In cross-examining a physician who had
VIII. Instruction 10, given for appellant, told the jury not to assess any damages for “any bruised back or any bruises of the spinal column.” The petition alleged plaintiff had received such bruises but there was no evidence tending to prove these
There was no error in the case which prejudiced respondent. The order granting a new trial is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to reinstate the verdict and render judgment thereon.
