74 N.Y.S. 375 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1902
In view of the admissions of the defendant, practically the sole issue submitted to the jury by the learned court (Gaynor, J.) was whether the plaintiff suffered any injury from the accident. The jury found for the defendant. The plaintiff insists that the verdict should not stand, and that the learned court was not correct in its statement of the law.
It is not suggested that the jury were improperly influenced by any extraneous circumstances, but the proposition is that the verdict .was erroneous because the evidence did not warrant it. The, plaintiff contended that she was thrown from her seat when the defendant’s car ran off its track onto a blind switch. The injuries alleged were confined to her nervous system, which was said to be seriously and permanently affected. The plaintiff’s attending physician testified that he found her suffering from shock on the day ‘ after the accident, and several witnesses corroborated the plaintiff as to the impairment of her nervous system. On the other hand, it appeared that at the time of the accident the plaintiff did not tell of any injury to the police or to the physician who was sent to the scene, or to any other person present. She was neither bruised nor maimed; she boarded the next car and went on her way. Further, there was evidence from which the jury might have inferred that the impairment, of the nervous system was entirely due to causes antecedent to the accident and not affected by it. And there was also evidence which might have been considered as affecting the credibility of the witness. I think that the verdict must stand.
The learned counsel for the appellant insists that the refusal of the court to charge that the jury must find for the plaintiff was error. The counsel states in his points- that “ the court’s refusal is couched in the following language: -‘No; not unless she was hurt,’ ” and then the counsel says, referring to his brief: “ But we have already demonstrated that she was hurt.” If the jury credited the evidence of the plaintiff, it was established that her nervous system was impaired or abnormal, but that fact, of course, casts no liability
It is also contended that the' learned court erred in its disposition of the request to charge “ that after the plaintiff had rested the defendant could have called Drs. Levy and Metcalfe and asked them concerning the lady’s consultations and their examinations of Mrs. Pronk, and their evidence could not have been excluded by any objection of the plaintiff that they were privileged communications.” The court replied : “ There was no obligation on the part of the company or anybody else to call-these doctors that she was treated by in the past, and no inference can be drawn against the defendant’s side for not calling them. The company was under no legal obligation whatever to call any of these doctors.” The plaintiff then objected to the refusal to charge and to the modifica
There is a further consideration. The defendant sought to establish certain facts connected with visits paid by the plaintiff to her physicians long prior to the accident. For this purpose it produced evidence which, if credited, established such facts. If it had proceeded to call such physicians it was thereby precluded from calling any witness to impeach their character or from offering any proof of prior contradictory statements, or from offering any proof to contradict such witnesses by another, when the only- effect would be to impeach and not to give any evidence material to the issue. (Becker v. Koch, 104 N. Y. 394.) Hence, the practical result of the plaintiff’s proposition, that the learned trial justice erred in his statement that “ no inference can be drawn against the defendant’s side for not calling them,” is in effect either that the defendant after having established the facts in its own way at its own peril as to the sufficiency thereof, must thus bind itself by calling such physicians, or must suffer a charge against it that from such mere omission under the circumstances an “ inference can be drawn.”
The court correctly charged the statute of privilege. But' the criticism is that the court added that it “ has nothing to do with the case.” The physicians had not been, called by either party, and so the criticism of the learned counsel was not based upon any incident in the case or upon any question arising in' the trial thereof, and the grievance is that the court refused to charge what ruling it would have made upon a question of the admissibility of testimony provided that question had been raised in the case by the calling of witnesses who were not called and whom the defendant was not required to call in the establishment of its case, and that the court remarked that the question thus presented was not involved in the trial.
The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.