76 N.Y.S. 533 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
The plaintiff was the janitor of a building in the basement or cellar of which the defendant corporation occupied a rack for the storage of gas pipes. Having occasion to carry a barrel into the basement, the plaintiff entered it by the way of the front steps leading down through a door on the sidewalk. Some one suddenly shut the door after her, thus darkening the basement; and, in groping along, the plaintiff stumbled over a large pile of gas
It is also insisted - that certain hypothetical questions put to a physician who was’ called as a witness for the plaintiff ought not to have been allowed, because they assumed certain facts of which there was no proof in the case. On this point it is enough to say that there was no objection as to any of those questions that the question did not accord with the evidence in any specific respect, nor was there even a general objection that it did not conform to the facts. The ground of the objection actually made was that sufficient facts were not stated, and that there' were- other facts which might change the opinion of the expert. There is no rule which binds .the examining counsel, under such circumstances, to state all the facts which his opponent deems necessary.. It is enough if the assumptions contained in the question are within the probable or even possible scope of the proof given. Quinn v. O’Keeffe, 9 App. Div. 68, 73, 41 N. Y. Supp. 116.
The learned, trial, judge, in the course of his remarks, said the plaintiff claimed “that she had received the assurance of men in the employ of the defendant—the ones who carried this pipe down—that they would not be left there.” No exception was taken to this instruction, but it is nevertheless contended in behalf of the defendant that the judgment ought to be reversed because the assumption of the learned court that any such assurance was given was erroneous; and the case
For these reasons, I advise an affirmance.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs. All concur.