—This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries. In the second amended complaint Josephine Heiman, one of the plaintiffs, alleged that she was injured by being struck by one of defendant’s cars on the 5th day of June, 1935. It is also alleged that Leo P. Heiman, her husband, incurred numerous expenses and was compelled to make numerous expenditures for medical care and treatment of his wife, and that he lost a considerable sum being the reasonable value of her services. In the complaint it is alleged that in the accident Mrs. Heiman suffered “extreme shock to the nervous system, numerous contusions upon the body and legs, ecchymosis of the occiput of the head, ecchymosis of the left eye, lacerated wound on the inside of the upper lip with surrounding ecchymosis, involvement of the nerve supply to the arms and legs, and concussion of the brain”. It was also alleged “that prior to and before the collision and accident aforesaid, said plaintiff, Josephine Heiman, was an able-bodied woman; sound in mind and body, etc.”. The defendant filed an answer in which it admitted it was a corporation operating a street railroad, but denied all of the other allegations contained in plaintiffs’ complaint. The action was tried before the trial court sitting with a jury. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for $800. The plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial, the motion was denied, and they have appealed from the judgment entered on the verdict.
The case was presented by the parties in the trial court on two radically different theories. It was the theory of the plaintiffs that Mrs. Heiman was seriously bruised and that as a result of the impact she was rendered a physical and nervous wreck. On the other hand, it was the theory of the defendant that Mrs. Heiman was a malingerer and *313 that she was attempting to claim as injuries suffered in the accident things that were in no manner referable thereto but were the results of other ailments and injuries. The defendant in that connection developed the fact that on June 5, 1935, the date of the accident and for several months prior thereto, Mrs. Heiman was going through the period of change of life. They also developed the fact that in April, 1936, while riding in an automobile at Willits, Mendocino County, Mrs. Heiman was seriously injured in a collision. The trial was had commencing June 15, 1936.
The first point made by the plaintiffs is that the verdict of the jury was manifestly a compromise verdict and that $800, the amount awarded to the plaintiffs, did not amount to more than about one-half of their expenditures and allowed nothing for pain and suffering. There is not a word contained in the record on which this court may predicate the conclusion that the verdict of the jury was a compromise. There was substantial testimony that in the accident alleged Mrs. Heiman suffered merely superficial bruises which quickly responded to treatment and that the cost of the treatment of those bruises and wounds was not considerable. Much evidence was introduced of and concerning the various injuries and complaints claimed by the plaintiffs. It may be said that the evidence was conflicting but it may not be said that the plaintiffs introduced clear proof to the effect that many of the injuries complained of were referable to the accident occurring on June 5, 1935.
During the trial the plaintiffs called Dr. George J. Heppner, the family physician and surgeon of the plaintiffs. Later he was cross-examined by the defendant. Having developed the fact that after the accident Mrs. Heiman ivas sent to the French Hospital and was there under the treatment of Dr. Heppner, the defendant laid the foundation therefor and later introduced in evidence the record kept of Mrs. Herman's ease at the French Hospital. The record was signed by Dr. Heppner and contained statements inconsistent with statements given by the doctor in the courtroom. The plaintiffs earnestly contend that the record was hearsay and was improperly received in evidence. If Dr. Heppner had not testified on the trial then, as the plaintiffs contend, the record of the French Hospital would have been hearsay in the instant case and would not have been admissible. (22
*314
C. J. 902;
Bollinger
v.
Bollinger,
After Mrs. Heiman became convalescent she went to Palo Alto for the purpose of rest and to further recuperate. During the period she was at Palo Alto she claimed to have been so debilitated, sick, sore, and nervous, as to be a confirmed invalid. As a part of its case the defendant introduced a set of moving pictures. They purported to show Mrs. Heiman’s movements in Palo Alto; to show her driving an automobile in and out of heavy traffic; and to show her shopping, walking, stooping and bending without assistance from anyone. They also showed her carrying grocery bundles. The testimony showed that the pictures were taken in August, about two and a half months after the injury occurred. The plaintiffs contend no foundation was laid, but they do not show in what respect it was not laid.
*315
The plaintiffs go further and contend that in no instance should moving pictures be received in evidence. This contention is based on the fact that numerous “pranks and tricks ’ ’ may be developed on the screen. The same contention can be made regarding many classes of evidence. The record before us does not disclose that the reels were examined and it was not disclosed they had been altered in any respect. But when, as here, testimony is introduced to the effect that the picture is a true representation of the scene as witnessed by the photographer, the objections mentioned are without foundation. That photographs may be admitted in evidence will hardly be questioned (10 Cal. Jur. 896); that moving pictures are but a series of single pictures is known to everyone. If single pictures may properly be received in evidence, it is difficult to see any reason why moving pictures may not be, and at the present time the general rule is that they may be.
(Boyarsky
v.
G. A. Zimmerman Corp.,
We find no error in the record. The judgment is affirmed.
Nourse, P. J., and Spence, J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on August 5, 1937.
