3 S.W.2d 120 | Tex. App. | 1927
It appears from the record that Homer Smith, the deceased, was a painter, and while working for a contractor, and alone, painting a roof, he was heard to call to those on the ground below. When they reached him he was lying on his side on a roof jack in a semidazed condition and appeared to be suffering intensely in his chest. He was taken from the roof of the building, placed in an automobile, and carried to his residence about a mile and a quarter distant, and put to bed and a doctor hurriedly summoned. The workmen who carried Mr. Smith to his home, as well as the members of his family, testified that he seemed to be suffering intense agony, and was not able to talk much, and that he seemed to be in a dazed condition. He told the doctor that he had fallen, and made the same statement, in substance, to his daughter and mother-in-law, who were in the house at the time. All of said *121 statements as to how he had been injured were made to the respective parties within from 40 minutes to an hour after the accident.
Appellant, by a number of assignments, complains of the action of the trial court in permitting the witnesses to testify to said facts. There have been almost numberless opinions written on this question, and the weight of authority seems to be that any statements by a party who is injured made immediately thereafter or in close proximity thereto are properly admitted in evidence as part of the res gestæ. We think the evidence of which complaint is made comes within this rule, and we overrule said assignments. Dallas Hotel Co. v. Fox (Tex.Civ.App.)
Appellant, by a number of assignments, complains of the action of the trial court in permitting the witnesses Dr. Smith and Dr. Collins to testify that the deceased told them several weeks after the injury that he had received a fall. It appears from the record that Dr. Smith was the family physician and at the time of the injury he could not be found, so another doctor was called in on the emergency case. A few weeks thereafter the family sent for Dr. Smith, their family physician, and, after consulting with the physician who had been waiting on the case, he took charge thereof, and in his examination of deceased, and for the purpose of making a correct diagnosis, inquired of the deceased as to the cause of the trouble, and was told that a few weeks before he had received a fall. Appellants placed Dr. Collins on the stand as a witness, and he testified in detail to the examination which he made of the deceased and with reference to the X-ray pictures that he had taken, and stated all of the objective symptoms which he saw and observed. He testified that in order for a physician to make a correct diagnosis of a case it was necessary for him to take into consideration the objective (the things he saw) and the subjective (the information furnished by the patient) symptoms. The weight of authority seems to be that a physician should be permitted to testify to both the subjective as well as the objective symptoms on which he bases his professional opinion, and we think the testimony given by said physicians was admissible, M., K. T. Ry. Co. v. Rose,
Appellant assigns error to the action of the trial court in taxing as part of the costs to be paid by appellant a $350 attorney's fee for the guardian ad litem appointed by the trial court to represent the minor defendants. Appellees filed their claim with the Industrial Accident Board and were awarded compensation for the full amount allowed by statute. Appellant appealed from said award and filed this suit against Mrs. Smith and her two minor children to set the same aside. On the trial of this cause in the district court appellees recovered judgment for the same amount as that awarded them by the Industrial Accident Board. There having been some doubt in the minds of some of the members of this court as to the right of the trial court to tax an attorney's fee as costs, this question was certified to the Supreme Court, and said court, in answer to said question, held contrary to appellant's contention. Norwich Union Indemnity Co. v. Smith (Tex.Com.App.)
Appellant, by a number of assignments, attacks the findings of the jury as being unsupported by the evidence. We think all of the issues answered by the jury were supported by the testimony, and said assignments are therefore overruled.
Appellant, by a number of assignments, complains of the argument of appellee's counsel to the jury. We have examined each of these, and do not think any of them show reversible error, and same are overruled.
We have examined all of appellant's assignments of error and same are overruled.
*122The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.