146 N.Y.S. 762 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
This action is brought to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the negligence of the defendant, a physician and surgeon, in attending the plaintiff who suffered an injury to his leg in an accident while in the employ of the State upon the barge canal. Upon a previous trial the jury found a verdict of $4,000 in favor of the plaintiff, the judgment being reversed on appeal to the Fourth Department on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, though the learned court did not enter into a discussion of the merits of the case. (143 App. Div. 957.) Á second trial, resulted in a like verdict of the same amount as that found upon the original trial, and the case has been certified to this department on an appeal from the judgment entered upon the verdict and from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.
The learned trial court, in denying a motion for a new trial, after citing the rule laid down by the court for this character of actions in Pike v. Honsinger (155 N. Y. 201), says: “Within these rules, had it been my province to decide the questions of fact, I should have had no difficulty in reaching a conclusion adverse to plaintiff’s right of recovery,” and that “While there is grave doubt as to whether the present verdict should be permitted to stand, still it should not be set aside except upon a careful review of the testimony and a statement of reasons to justify it and to serve as a guide upon another trial,” and so the case is passed on to this court for that “ careful review of the testimony ” which it is peculiarly the province of the trial court to make with all of the details of the trial fresh in mind. A judgment of the trial court comes to an appellate court with the presumption that it has been prop
While an examination of this case convinces us that there are questions of fact which belong to the jury to determine, and while, under ordinary circumstances, the fact that two juries have reached the same conclusion would be practically conclusive here, there is running through the entire record such a suggestion of unfairness in presentation, and the questions of fact are so lacking in conclusiveness, that we feel that the ends of justice require-a new trial. If the same insidious effort to mislead characterized the trial which is apparent in the respondent’s brief, it is easy to understand how a jury, with sympathies aroused for the misfortunes of the plaintiff, could be induced to overlook the weight of evidence and to reach a conclusion which induced grave doubts in the mind of the trial justice. For instance, we are told that “ Justice Foote denied the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and wrote an opinion in which he carefully reviewed the rules of law applicable to the case, and held that under the evidence it was a case not within the province of the court, but within the province of the jury to decide.” While this may be true in a sense, it very clearly does not express the real attitude of the learned trial justice who distinctly suggests the propriety of setting aside the verdict “upon a careful review of the testimony and a statement of reasons to justify it and to serve as a guide upon another trial.” Again, we are told that the plaintiff was a strong, healthy man, who had never been sick or under a physician’s care “until he was taken to the hospital and engaged the defendant to care for his dislocated knee upon December 5, 1904;” that “plaintiff arrived at the hospital about four o’clock in the afternoon of December 5, 1904, was received in the emergency room, and soon thereafter engaged the defendant to treat his leg, and agreed to pay for such treatment.” This, with much other matter, is asserted in the brief to convey the impression that the defendant was specially engaged to look after the plaintiff, while as a matter of fact
In the case now before us the plaintiff was taken to the
But assuming that there was such a conflict of evidence upon this question as to warrant the jury in finding that the defendant did not proceed as rapidly as he might have done, or as he ought to have done, the testimony of Frederick W. Zimmer, a surgetin of a different school of medicine, who afterward performed the major operation referred to above, shows conclusively that this failure was not the cause of the ultimate shortening of the leg and the removal of the joint, for his evidence is direct and positive that the plaintiff had sustained a fracture of the patella which had left pieces of bone in such a position that it was impossible to reduce the fracture and get the bones in a position to reunite without an operation with the knife, such as the defendant testifies he advised the plaintiff would be necessary. Plaintiff’s witnesses never saw the leg while it was in its original condition; they merely testified from the X-ray pictures what they thought ought to have been done, and there was a decided conflict in the evidence both as to the opinion of the witnesses and as to what was the correct version of the X-ray.pictures, while Dr. Zimmer, who actually opened up the leg and took out the knee joint, testifies positively as to what he found, and says that no operation less than that involved in the use of the knife could have resulted in getting the pieces into position, and he does not believe that the plaintiff could have been given anything other than a stiff leg, though apparently having some confidence that it might not have been necessary to remove the knee joint if the plaintiff had permitted an operation with the knife at the proper time. But the defendant had no right to perform a major operation, involving great danger to the plaintiff, without the latter’s consent, and while the plaintiff denies that he refused such consent, the evidence can hardly be said to preponderate on the side of the plaintiff, for the defendant swears positively
It does not, in view of the prejudicial error occurring at the opening of the trial, appear to be necessary to determine the question of the weight of evidence, or what is the effect to be given to a second verdict of the jury. The trial now under review did not preserve to the defendant his rights; his case was prejudiced by the interjection of matter having no relation to the issues, and which plaintiff’s counsel must have known was highly improper, and the defendant ought not to be adjudged to pay this plaintiff $4,000 unless he has by due process of law established his superior right to the same, and this he has failed to do.
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the final result.
Lyon, J., concurred; Smith, P. J., and Kellogg, J., concurred upon the ground that the verdict is against the weight of evidence; Howard, J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.
See Code Civ. Proc. § 1180.— [Rep.