33 Minn. 130 | Minn. | 1885
1. We have examined all the evidence in this case, and are of opinion that it justified the verdict.
As the object of all judicial investigations is, if possible, to do exact justice and obtain the truth in its entire fulness, we have no doubt of the power of the court, in a proper ease, to require the party to perform a physical act before the jury that will illustrate or demonstrate the extent and character of his injuries. This is in accordance with analogous cases in other branches of the law. When a view of real estate will aid the jury in reaching a conclusion, it is within the discretion of the court to permit it. When an inspection of an article of personal property will aid them, it is not infrequent to cause the article to be brought into court for the same purpose. Line v. Taylor, 3 Fost. & F. 731; Lewis v. Hartley, 7 Car. & P. 405. The practice in patent and in certain equity cases, of allowing tests to be applied before the court, is somewhat analogous in principle. So is the practice of divorce courts, of ordering an examination of the person of the party in certain cases.
.It is a common practice to allow plaintiffs, in actions.for personal injuries, to exhibit to the jury their wounds, in order to show their extent, or to enable a surgeon to demonstrate their nature and character. This has been held proper. Mulhado v. Brooklyn City R. Co., 30 N. Y. 370. If for these purposes a plaintiff may exhibit his injuries, there would seem to be no reason why, under proper circumstances, he may not be required to do the same thing, for a like purpose, upon request of the defendant. In some eases it has been held that a party may be required to submit to an examination by competent professional men, for the purpose of ascertaining the nature and extent of his injuries. Schroeder v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 47 Iowa, 375; Atchison, etc., R. Co. v. Thul, 29 Kan. 466. From
In the present case, we think the court very properly refused to direct the plaintiff to exhibit herself to the jury and by-standers by walking across the room. Such an act would have furnished the jury little or no aid in determining the extent or character of her injuries.. The only fact it could by any possibility have determined was whether or not she was lame or “limped,” as she testified, in walking. But. there was already ample and uncontradicted evidence of this fact. Her own evidence on the point was fully corroborated by that of three or four other witnesses, her neighbors or members of her family, who-had seen her almost daily since the accident.
Order affirmed.