167 Mich. 297 | Mich. | 1911
Plaintiff recovered a judgment in the Wayne circuit court against the Detroit United Railway for personal injuries which she claims to have received while attempting to alight from one of its cars in the city of Detroit. The defendant asks for a reversal of the judgment on several grounds, chief of which is that the trial court erred in the admission of testimony.
While plaintiff was on the witness stand, her counsel developed that she was a married woman, residing with her husband at Merrill, in this State; that on the day of the accident she was in Detroit on business, and while in the act of alighting from one of the defendant’s Jefferson avenue cars she was thrown to the pavement by the sudden starting of the car, and seriously injured; that the most serious injury which she suffered was a retroversion of the uterus. Following this, plaintiff’s counsel showed by Dr. Kennedy that the injury was a serious one. Upon
We are of the opinion that it was competent for plaintiff to show the seriousness of the injury and what the probable cost would be to effect a cure, and, after defendant had shown that the proper time for an operation was immediately following the accident, we think it was proper for plaintiff to show that neither she nor her husband had the means to pay for such an operation. But we are inclined to agree with defendant’s counsel that when she went further and testified that her husband was engaged in conducting a store, and that it went bankrupt by reason of the loss of her services and attention, that she went further than was proper, and further than was necessary to explain any unfavorable inferences which
Her husband was entitled to her services, and, if he lost them through the wrongful act of defendant, they could be recovered for only in a suit instituted by him. We think the testimony was incompetent, and that the effect of it was to augment the damages allowed her by the jury.
There are other assignments of error, but they are of such a character that they will not likely arise upon a new trial. Therefore they will not be considered.
For the error pointed out, the judgment will be reversed, and a new trial granted.