181 Iowa 407 | Iowa | 1917
1-a
Even if an answered question is complained of, if the answer is not shown, it will be presumed that all improper questions were so answered as that the question did no harm (Thurston v. Cavenor, 8 Iowa 155), and that a witness who might be incompetent answered only as he might competently speak (Lawson v. Campbell, 4 G. Greene 413). It would follow that, when no answer is made, it should not be assumed that if made it would be of such character as to make its exclusion prejudicial error. In the words of Shellito’s case, 61 Iowa 40, 41, we should not “imagine the testimony that would hare been given, and thus presume prejudice.” We say, in Arnold’s case, 155 Iowa 601, at 607:
“If we were to reverse this case upon this ground and remand it for the purpose of permitting these questions to be answered, the answers might prove to be wholly negative.” This is illustrated in this record by the fact that one question which was allowed to be answered proved to be a pure negation. “If the trial court had sustained an objection to such question, and if we were to reverse upon such ruling, such reversal would be based upon an imaginary error and not a real one. The reversal would be rendered farcical by a subsequent negative answer. And it would be none the less so though the answer were affirmative, if such answer * * * could not change the final result.”
And say in the same case that “We have repeatedly held that we will not reverse a case * * * unless it be made
To obtain a reversal on the ground that excluded testimony would have tended to establish some particular fact, it is necessary that the trial court should have been advised that the testimony excluded by it would so tend. Gustafson v. Rustemeyer, (Conn.) 39 Atl. 104; Maxwell Land-Grant Co. v. Dawson, (N. M.) 34 Pac. 191; Fearey v. O’Neill, (Mo.) 50 S. W. 918. There must be a statement which tells the trial court, “clearly and explicitly, what the evidence was which he offered and expected to elicit by the answer of the witness to the question propounded.” Whitehead v. Mathaway, 85 Ind. 85, at 86. And see Votaw & Hartshorn v. Diehl, 62 Iowa 676, 678.
The most we may do is to assume defendant expected an answer within range of the issue to which the question was advised, i. e., something that dealt with the health of plaintiff before she was injured. In situations which did more than this as to suggesting the answer sought, it has been held fatal that no profert or statement was made. In Porter’s case, 151 Iowa 279, 280, a suit on an oral guarantee, a witness was not allowed to say what passed between him and defendant respecting future liability on the note. Jordan v. D’Heur, 71 Ind. 199, 200, involves the extension of a promissory note, and objection was sustained to a question whether consent was given at the time a written consent bears date. In Shellito’s case, 61 Iowa 40, 41, the question was whether witness had not at a stated time talked with a named witness and then said that plaintiff had consented to the cancellation of the contract with defendant. In Klaman’s case, 61 Iowa 752, the defendant was bound to suffer judgment if other signatures on a note signed by him were genuine, and made the defense that they were forgeries.
We are not overlooking the approval given by American Express Co. v. Des Moines Nat. Bank, 177 Iowa 478, to the holding of Mitchell v. Harcourt, 62 Iowa 349, that, where it appears on the face of the question what the evidence sought to be introduced is, and that it is material, that suffices. The writer dissented because he believed, as he still does, that the face of the question cannot possibly settle what the answer will be. He gave other reasons for not following the Mitchell case which he still thinks are sound. But no individual criticism of the Express Company’s case need be considered in determining what weight that case shall have on this appeal. The court has recently held that said decision does not change the rule but “distinguishes this rule.” And we have enforced it as of old, and reaffirmed Arnold v. Livingstone, 155 Iowa 601, since deciding the Express Company’s case. See Biggs v. Carter, 179 Iowa 284; State v. Sayles, 173 Iowa 374; Whitney v. City of Sioux City, 172 Iowa 336. In other words, the Exp>ress Compamy’s case is an exception, to be applied only upon its peculiar facts. As no such facts exist in this case now before us, that disposes of the point for this case — as much so as if the decision had been overruled. We do not question that the rule puts some labor upon counsel, and that its enforcement may cause some delay of and some embarrassment in trial. The objection comes too late. That possibility was evident when each of the legion of decisions was made which establish the rule, and it was established notwithstanding. Evidently, the appellate courts have been -of opinion that the advantages greatly outweigh the disadvantages.
The injury is alleged to have been sustained about the 26th day of February, 1914. The plaintiff testified concerning it, in effect, that it injured her left leg and left hip and made her arm sore; that it caused a numb feeling all through the lower part of the bowels and about the hips; that it made her feel sick; that she had hard work to get home and was sick and weak after she reached home, and remained in that condition for several days. A medical
Did this testimony open the door to letting a doctor whom plaintiff did not call as a witness disclose what he obtained professionally during the period covered by the testimony adduced for plaintiff, to the extent of telling any and all things he then found the matter with her, and all differences in ailment then existing? In resolving this, one may not leave out of consideration the policy of the statute. That statute should have a liberal construction, because its purpose is to make it possible for every person to fully and fairly consult with a physician or submit himself to his examination without anticipation or fear that the confidence-reposed may be broken in upon by a subsequent examination of the physician as a witness. Battis v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 124 Iowa 623, 626. The keeping in mind of the policy and object of the statute, and that it should be liberally construed to effectuate and attain these, have developed what will not waive the privilege. Eliminating what will not operate as a waiver will narrow what we have to decide.
As has been seen, it was the legislative intent that the patient might confide freely, and was not to be deterred therefrom by fear that'this confidence would create opposing testimony. There is no punishment provided for the physician who reveals what has been confided to him. About all, then, that the statute could have aimed to do was to prevent revealing on the witness stand. It must have been understood by the legislature that those who made confidential revelations to physicians might enter into and
“Undoubtedly in testifying to receiving the tablets in April, 1907, and their purpose, she waived the right to insist on the protection of the statute excluding the physician’s testimony concerning the same (Woods v. Incorporated Town of Lisbon), but only as to matters concerning which she spoke. What the doctor may have done two years previous she did not allude to, and as to that his lips were sealed.”
We said further:
“What their purpose was then [in 1905] would throw no light on the transaction in 1907, and would tend to open up professional matters on which plaintiff had the right to have him remain silent.”
We approved Treanor v. Manhattan R. Co., 16 N. Y. Supp. 536, which holds testimony of a physician admissible when related “to the precise matters concerning which the complainant .had testified,” and that, therefore, the implied waiver related thereto, and not to an independent transaction. We know what the plaintiff and her medical witness disclosed as to some physical conditions, at or about the time to which it was attempted to have the doctor for defendant speak. We have no way of knowing that, if the other had spoken, the answers would have been confined to what the plaintiff and her witness had revealed. In State v. Ben
These cases are within the statement of 4 Wigmore,Evidence, Sec. 2388, approved in Nolan v. Glynn, 163 Iowa 146, at 150, that:
*423 “A waiver is to be predicated, not only when the conduct indicates a plain intention to abandon the privilege, but also when the conduct (though not evincing that intention) places the claimant in such a position, with reference to the evidence, that it would be unfair and inconsistent to permit the retention of the privilege. Tt is not to be both a sword and a shield.”
What is ruled by cases like that of Woods v. Lisbon is made quite plain by the nature of what plaintiff revealed, and by our statements in the opinion, such as:
“Manifestly, if the patient himself breaks the seal of secrecy and gives publicity to the whole matter, there is a waiver, and this is true whether publicity is given by the testimony of the physician, by the testimony of the patient himself, or by the testimony of his other witnesses. * * * It would be a reproach to the administration of justice, even in the absence of the statute, if the patient himself might detail all that occurred with his physician and yet compel the physician to remain silent.
“* * The plaintiff and her husband testified as to what was done when she was first taken to the hospital and thus opened the door for the testimony of her physicians on the same subject. * * * Where two or more physicians are engaged in the same operation, a waiver of the prohibition of the statute by making public the otherwise privileged matter makes them all competent witnesses.”
We find no applicability in Nugent v. Cudahy Packing Co., 126 Iowa 517, at 523, which merely holds that, where defendant brings out that a physician found plaintiff unconscious, whereupon plaintiff brings out the same fact in a preliminary examination addressed to whether the witness was accepted as plaintiff’s doctor, there is no waiver, and such examination brought out no affirmative evidence of a material fact on plaintiff’s behalf, and would not make ad
We find no reversible error, and the judgment appealed from must be — Affirmed.