123 Mo. App. 325 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
The plaintiff received an injury by falling on a sidewalk in the town of Canton, about nine o’clock in the evening of May 31, 1902, and instituted-this action to recover damages. When the accident happened plaintiff was with her husband. The sidewalk was composed of boards laid across three stringers, the ends of the boards projecting beyond the outside stringers. Plaintiff’s husband stepped on the end of a loose board, thereby causing the other end to fly up and catch plaintiff’s left foot as she was in the act of stepping. Her foot ran into the opening left by the raising of the board and threw her on the walk. The injury received was painful and promises to be permanent; for at the second trial of the action, which began January 17, 1906,
At the first trial of this case the deposition of Dr. H. B. Miller, a resident of St. Louis, was put in evidence; and when the case was appealed this deposition
‘‘There might be objections I could raise to portions of it that I couldn’t raise by this transcript. It would not show. We could make objections now probably that we didn’t make before to some portions of it. If they are going to offer the transcript instead of the deposition, I insist they place themselves in proper light before the court to do it.
“They haven’t undertaken to account for the deposition. I object to the introduction of thé transcript because the deposition itself is the best evidence and the proper evidence, and because there has been no foundation laid for the introduction of the evidence as preserved in the transcript; and because the witness himself is within the jurisdiction of the court.”
In the testimony of Dr. Miller his residence was stated to be in St. Louis, and not in the county where the case was on trial. This statement in the deposition was sufficient to make the original admissible. [Sullivan v. Railroad, 97 Mo. 113, 121, 10 S. W. 852.] The only theory on which it can be said that no proof was adduced of the loss of the original is the failure to swear the attorneys who stated they had made, diligent search for it both at Hannibal and Canton. But it is clear that defendant’s counsel were not insisting that sworn testimony be received from them regarding their search, instead of their statement. Granting for argument’s sake that the copy contained in the bill of exceptions was not admissible if the original could be procured, the judgment ought not to be reversed, in view of the objections that were made to the admission of the copy, merely because of the form of the proof regarding the loss of the original. Defendant’s counsel gave as their reason for wanting the deposition instead of the
It is strongly contended that the damages awarded were excessive, but we cannot yield assent to this proposition. The board which caught plaintiff’s foot fell on her instep and the trip threw her violently on the Avalk. I-Ier foot was caught under the loose board and sustained a harsh wrench, while at the same time her knee and shin were bruised and abrased. The serious injury, though, Avas to the foot; and it was of such a nature as- to force plaintiff to walk on the outside of the sole of her left foot, and to render it impossible for her to plant her, foot firmly while Avalking. That is to say, the inside of the sole does not press doAvn on the surface on AAdiich plaintiff walks. The great toe, instead of occupying its normal position, stands upward and plaintiff is unable to control it by the muscles.
There is an abnormal growth of bone on the instep of the foot and it had continued there from the time of the accident to the time of the second trial, an intern val of about four years; and at the end of the interval it was larger than before. There is testimony to show plaintiff still limps, and that, on account of having to Avalk in a strained and unnatural position, she suffers from soreness in the muscles and leaders of the left side of her body and her movements are unduly laborious. She was a healthy woman prior to the accident, but has become nervous in consequence of it. These distressing-conditions will probably be permanent, according to the
Complaint is made of two instructions given at the request of plaintiff in regard to the duties of the mayor and street committee of the city of Canton. Suffice to say as to these instructions they were approved on the former appeal and became the law of the case. [Chapman v. Railroad, 146 Mo. 481, 48 S. W. 646.]
Error is assigned because the record shows various ansAvers to questions in depositions were read to the jury, although said answers had been ruled out by the court as inadmissible. This assignment will be illustrated by quoting from the deposition of Mrs. Edith Eckert as contained in the bill of exceptions.
“How do you know that it (the board) came loose when you stepped on it — what effect did it have?
“Object to same on the part of defendant because it is incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial. Objection renewed. Objection by the court sustained, to which ruling of the court plaintiff then and there at the time excepted.
It is contended that the above excerpt shows the excluded answer was in fact read to the jury, and that the same is true of many answers similarly excluded. Counsel for defendant do not assert that such answers were read, but merely that the conclusion to be drawn from the bill of exceptions is that they were. Plaintiff’s counsel say they were not. The record does not say they were and we think the natural inference is to the contrary. ' The court would not let numerous portions of depositions that had been excluded, be read in evidence. However, suffice to say that if they were read after the court had ruled them out, defendant has preserved no exception to the reading of them.
Other points are pressed on our attention, chiefly in relation to rulings on evidence. We have not omitted to consider all these alleged errors in the light thrown on them by a study of the full record, and in our opinion none of them is of substantial merit.
The judgment is affirmed.