138 N.Y.S. 834 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
The plaintiff brings this action to recover damages for an , alleged assault committed upon her by the defendant. There is evidence in .the case, from which the jury might properly find that the plaintiff accompanied her sister, a Mrs. Avery, to the store of the defendant on or about the 16th day of December, 1909; that Mrs. Avery had some controversy with the defendant over the payment of a small bill for repairs made upon a pair of shoes; that Mrs. Avery refused to pay the charge, and that the defendant attempted to detain her in his store until
The only error urged here is that the court erred in permitting the plaintiff’s physician to answer a hypothetical question. The physician had testified that he was.licensed to practice; that he had been practicing for about nine years; that he had heard the plaintiff testify, and that he had attended her on the eighteenth day of December. He testified: “The outer lower surface of the left fore-arm, between the wrist and the elbow, was scraped, abrased, and the skin was broken. I have attended Mrs. Kidney at other times, and was. acquainted with her physical condition.” He was then asked: “ Knowing that, suppose she had been' violently seized by a man, and then thrown violently to the floor, and immediately and for weeks thereafter she suffered from nervousness and headaches, sleeplessness and crying, in your judgment, as a physician, might and could such conditions and ailments have been caused by the treatment she suffered from the alleged assault ? ” This was objected to as incompetent and improper, and the objection being overruled the witness answered, “Tes.” . ■
It is undoubtedly true that it would have been better practice for the plaintiff to have established her prior physical condition, but the answer necessarily involved the assumption
The judgment and order appealed from should he affirmed, with costs, and without opinion.
Jenks, P. J., HirSchberg and Bich, JJ., concurred; Burr, J., dissented upon the ground that the court erred in allowing the answer to the hypothetical question addressed to the physician discussed in the prevailing opinion.
Judgment and order, affirmed, with costs.