Civil action to recover damages for the wrongful killing of Ada Lynch, deceased, formerly wife of plaintiff administrator. Plaintiff alleged and offered evidence tending to show that, on 17 October, 1912, he and his then wife, the intestate, were tenants in one of defendant's houses, and the intestate had been for some time and was then sick in bed (99) with typhoid fever, and, in violation of their rights and against the will of plaintiff and deceased, they were wrongfully compelled to remove to another house, the wife being carried from her sick bed on a mattress to a wagon and driven therein 1/4 mile to the other place, etc.; that from the shock and injury the intestate, pending or very soon after the removal, became unconscious and, sinking rapidly, died, as we gather from the testimony, in about one week; several witnesses, having duly qualified as experts, giving it as their opinion, on facts submitted, as in the finding of the jury, that the removal and the manner of it caused her death. *Page 136
Defendants contended and offered evidence tending to show that the removal was not the cause of the death; that same was done on advice of a physician, cognizant of intestate's condition; that such a course would produce no injury, and that the wife and more especially the plaintiff himself consented to the removal taking place, etc.
The jury rendered the following verdict:
"1. Did the defendant Rosemary Manufacturing Company unlawfully, wrongfully, or negligently remove Mrs. Ada Lynch, the plaintiff's intestate, from the house in which she was sick to another house, against the protest of her husband or against her will, and thereby cause her death, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: Yes.
"2. If so, what damages is plaintiff entitled to recover of the defendant? Answer: Twenty-five hundred dollars ($2,500)."
Judgment on the verdict for plaintiff, and defendant excepted and appealed. The jury, accepting the plaintiff's version of the occurrence, have rendered a verdict that the defendant unlawfully and wrongfully caused the death of plaintiff's intestate, and on careful perusal of the record we find no good reason for disturbing their conclusion on the issue fixing the liability on the company.
It is urged for error that some of the expert witnesses were allowed to give it as their opinion that the removal was the cause of the intestate's death, and in violation of the rule that a witness may not express an opinion on the very question at issue between the parties, citing the Court, among other cases, to Summerlin v. R. R.,
We are confirmed in this interpretation of Summerlin's case by what was said concerning it by the same learned judge in the case of Parish v. R.R.,
There, as here, Summerlin's case was referred to by counsel as being against the ruling, and Justice Walker, speaking to Summerlin's case
and its bearing on the question then presented, said: "We cannot agree with the learned counsel of the defendant that this case bears any resemblance to Summerlin v. R. R.,
The questions objected to in the present case are clearly within the rule for the reception of such evidence, being opinions of medical experts as to the cause of intestate's death predicated upon the symptoms of the patient and attendant facts, assumed to have been found by the jury and are in accord with the authorities referred to and others of like kind in this jurisdiction. Beard v. R. R.,
In one or two of the questions the counsel, in zealous concern for their client's interest, asked if it was the "proximate cause of intestate's death" — an addenda to the usual formula that might well have been objectionable if the facts permitted any distinction between the two, but in this instance the cause, if established, was so clearly the proximate cause that the term may properly be considered as harmless error. Beard v.R. R., 143 N.C. at page 139.
Again, it was contended that error was committed to defendant's prejudice in permitting the following question: "I ask you if all recognized medical authorities do not teach that typhoid fever patients must not be moved, if possible to do without it?"
The question by plaintiff was allowed on cross-examination of a medical expert who had treated the intestate in this case and testified for defendant, in effect, that the removal, in his opinion, had not unfavorably affected the patient in this instance, and that, on the facts of the case, it would likely increase her chances for recovery.
It is very generally recognized that extracts from medical books are not admissible in evidence, and for the very sufficient reason that the author does not write under the sanctity of an oath and has not been subjected to cross-examination, and the decisions of this State are to the effect that statements from these books may not be presented as such in the arguments of counsel nor introduced by means of questions put on cross-examination, as by reading an opposing opinion from a text-book and asking the witness if it is or is not true, for this would have the effect of putting the statement in evidence and thus accomplish by indirection what is expressly forbidden. Butler v. R. R.,
The principle, however, is not as exigent in case of cross-examination, and when a witness has testified as an expert, professing to have special training and knowledge from standard works of his profession, a general question of this kind may be allowed with a view of testing the value of his opinion. Sale v. Eichberg,
While we find no cause for disturbing the verdict of the jury on the first issue, we must hold that there was error in the charge of the court on the second, that as to the amount of damages. On this issue his Honor, although correctly stating to the jury in general terms that they would award what is a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injury, in giving more specific direction, instructed them that they would "take all the evidence and say about what her earnings would have been during the balance of her life, about how long you find she would have lived." In this charge we think his Honor failed to observe and note the rule established by our decisions for the admeasurement of the damages for this kind of injury, "That it is the present net value of the life which has been wrongfully taken." Speight v. R. R.,
In this connection we deem it not amiss to call attention to the case ofBradley v. R. R.,
Partial new trial.
Cited: Buchanan v. Lumber Co.,
(103)