229 Mass. 275 | Mass. | 1918
These are actions of tort to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been received by the plaintiffs, on April 30, 1915, while boarding an outbound car at the Public Library,
Mrs. Keough was treated by Dr. Hastings twice each day until May 10, 1915. She then went on a vacation with her husband and on her return Dr. Hastings treated her three or four times a week. He died early in June, 1915. On May 5 of the same year, she testified in the Municipal Court of the City of Boston on a criminal complaint against the conductor of the car.
She was asked if she had a talk with Dr. Hastings about "that trip” (to Washington), and answered “Yes.” This question was then put: “Will you state what you told the doctor about your condition, and what he advised you to do, the day after you had been to court?” Subject to the defendant’s exception, she replied: “I told him I felt sorry this had happened, because Mr. Keough was to go on his vacation, and if I had to stay home, why it would spoil his vacation, because he could not have it later.” This evidence was clearly inadmissible. Her statement that her husband’s vacation would be interfered with, could not be received in evidence. The fact that these statements were made to her physician now deceased, does not make them admissible. They were her declarations made to him and not his declarations, and it is the declaration of the deceased person which the statute admits. R. L. c. 175, § 66. Such a narration could not be testified to by her, even if the doctor were alive, under the rule permitting an attending physician to testify to the condition, symptoms, feelings and sensations, as stated by the patient; nor could the physician testify to such a statement. Roosa v. Boston Loan Co. 132 Mass. 439. As this evidence may have been harmful to the defendant this exception must be sustained.
Mrs. Keough also was asked, “What did the doctor advise you to do?” The defendant excepting, she replied: “Advised me to go away a few days and see how it affected me, because he thought I was in such a horribly nervous state that if I got among strangers or got away from home, possibly my nerves would feel better.” The declarations of a deceased person are admissible when made upon the personal knowledge of the declarant. The advice of Dr. Hastings to the patient, based upon his opinion of her nervous condition, to go away from
The plaintiff introduced evidence in rebuttal to which the defendant excepted. As the question of the admissibility of this evidence • may not arise at a subsequent trial, it need not be considered.
Exceptions sustained.