82 Ga. 719 | Ga. | 1889
Childress, a lad thirteen or fourteen years of age, recovered a verdict against the railroad company for $3,500, on account of a personal injury alleged to be permanent. The seat of the injury was the chest. The company made a motion for a new trial on several grounds, the 4th being as follows : “Because the court erred in declining to order the examination of Childress by physicians to be appointed by the court, on the motion of defendant before the jury was impanelled but after the case was called for trial, for the purpose of determining whether or not he had been permanently injured as claimed; the said defendant offering to pay the expense of such examination by the physi
The code, §206, declares that “every court has power . . to control in furtherance of justice the conduct of its officers and all other persons connected, with a judicial proceeding before it, in every matter appertaining thereto.” It can certainly admit of no doubt that in a proper case for such examination, the cause of justice would be subserved by it, and the decided weight of modern authority is that courts have such power. A very full and clear statement of the matter is found in 1 Thompson on Trials, §859. The language of the author is as follows: “In modern trials of civil actions for physical injuries, the question has frequently arisen whether the court has power to order an inspection of the body of the plaintiff' or person injured, for the purpose of ascertaining the nature and extent of the injuries. Some of the courts, carrying in their minds no higher conception of a judicial trial than the conception that it is a combat, in which each of the gladiators is permitted, within certain limits, to deceive and trick the antagonist and the umpire, have denied the right of the defen dant to have an order for such inspection. Other courts, taking the more enlightened view that the object of a judicial trial is to enable the State to establish and enforce justice between party and party, have held that it is within the power of the trial court, in the exercise of a sound discretion, in proper cases, upon an application seasonably made, under proper safeguards designed to preserve the rights of both parties, to order such an inspection, and to compel the plaintiff or injured person to submit to it. Another court has held
As to the suggestion made in argument, that the rule would operate hardly upon delicate and modest females, we can only say that they would be safely guarded by the discretion of the trial judge. There would be no danger, we think, in this country, of an examination being ordered needlessly or where an improper shock to modesty or feelings of delicacy would be likely. We decide simply that the power exists, and that in each case it is to be exercised or not, according to the sound discretion of the presiding judge.
We think there ought to be anew trial in the present case. As we deal only with the question of power, we forbear to enter into the nature of the showing which ought to be required as preliminary to its exercise, further than to say that generally there should be a request made of the plaintiff' before the trial comes on to submit to the examination voluntarily, and that when an order is applied for, the1 plaintiff’s refusal to do so should be verified, as also should the probability that examination would likely result in some material discovery or disclosure. When the examination is compulsory, there is obvious propriety in the experts being selected by the court rather than by one or both of the parties. It is likewise obvious that all the expenses should be borne by the party at whose instance the examination is made.
Judgment reversed.