95 Md. 751 | Md. | 1902
Opinion by
There are four exceptions presented by the record; two with respect to evidence admitted subject to exception, and subsequently refused to be stricken out; one to the ruling upon special exceptions to certain prayers of plaintiff for want of evidence to support them, and one to the granting of certain prayers of plaintiff, and the rejection of certain prayers of defendants. The first and second exceptions present closely analogous questions. Plaintiff, as a witness, had described the circumstances which led to and characterized the assault, testifying that he had entered the building in a quiet and orderly manner to inquire about a car he had ordered ; that Robert Sellman said plaintiff had ordered no car, and he replied that he had, but that Sellman had taken it for his own use ; and that Sellman said he was “ a damn liar and thief; ” that at that time Alonzo B. Sellman, the postmaster, son of Robert Sellman, came in, and Robert Sellman said: "Throw the damn thief out,” and Alonzo Sellman seized him by the back of the neck and the bottom of his pants or by the suspenders, and he was thrown out from a porch eight or nine feet wide, and five feet high, to the ground. He further testified, subject to exception, that while being carried across the porch he had an aching and burning sensation in his left testi
The defendants moved to strike out the testimony above embraced in quotation marks, and the first exception was taken to the refusal to strike this out.
In support of this exception defendants rely upon the rule that the opinions of non-expert witnesses are not evidence, and they argue that the testimony objected to is merely the opinion or inference of the plaintiff. They admit that he can testify as to his condition before and after the injury, in order that from these facts, the jury may form its opinion and draw its inferences as to the cause of the injury, but they say to ask the witness, “how* did this injury which you speak of affect you,” is to ask the very question the jury had to decide ; and that to permit the witness to answer “It made me' nervous, &c.,” is to give probative force to the mere inferences of the witness as to the cause of the injury. It certainly cannot be seriously contended that the rule invoked excludes that part of the testimony objected to, which precedes the question as to how the injury affected him, since that is a simple description of his physical condition, and of facts which he knew. City Pass. Ry. Co. v. Nugent, 86 Md. 360. Nor do we perceive any valid objection to the two following questions and the answers thereto. Each of these questions called for the statement of facts only, descriptive of his physical condition to which he was certainly competent to testify, and the answers contained nothing but such statements of
Dr. Joseph Hering, a practicing physician, then testified that plaintiff came to him in December, the assault having been in September, and further testified, subject to exception, as follows : “I examined Mr. Wheeler who came to me complaining of a pain in his testicle. I found him to be suffering with an enlargement about the testicle. I suggested some treatment for him, and that if it continued he would have to go to the hospital and have an operation performed. I did not thoroughly diagnose the exact condition, but there was an enlargement of the left testicle. I next emamined Mr. Wheeler yesterday morning, and saw that an operation had been performed, from a scar.” Upon cross-examination, Dr. Hering testified : “I know nothing of the cause of the trouble.”
The- second exception was taken to the refusal of the Court to strike out this testimony. The ground of the objection is that this testimony was immaterial, irrelevant, and hearsay. But if Dr. Hering had not been sworn it would have been a legitimate argument to the jury that the plaintiff had failed to produce the best available evidence of the character and extent of his injury. Upon that point therefore his testimony cannot be either immaterial or irrelevant. Nor is it hearsay. Mr. Greenleáf says, vol. 1, sec. 102, 14th ed: “The representations by a sick person of the nature, symptoms and effects of the malady under which he is. suffering at the time, are
The third exception was to the overruling of the special exceptions to the plaintiff’s eighth prayer as modified by the Court, for the reason that the evidence does not support the prayer. We think there is ample evidence to- support this prayer, which lays down ’the rule for assessing damages, so familiar in cases of this character. Five reasons are assigned in support of the special exception. Of these the first and second fail to specify the particulars in which the proof is supposed to be defective, and need not therefore be considered. The third alleges there is no evidence that the plaintiff was disabled or unfitted for pursuing his ordinary occupations. The fourth that there is no evidence to show that the injury complained of resulted from the alleged assault, and the fifth that there is no evidence that the medical attention and the operation was necessitated by the alleged assault. Wheeler
Plaintiff and defendant each offered eight prayers. Of these the plaintiff’s 7th prayer was granted as offered—the 8th was modified and so granted, and the 3rd was modified and so granted in connection with defendant’s 4th prayer.
Of defendant’s prayers, the 3rd and 4th were granted, and all the others were rejected. The fourth exception was taken to these rulings upon the prayers. It follows from what we have said in reference to the special exception to the plaintiff’s eight prayer as modified, that we think it was correctly granted, it having been too often approved by this Court, when supported by legally sufficient evidence, to require any citation of authorities.
Plaintiff’s seventh prayer instructed the jury that the burden
Upon the same principle defendant’s third prayer relating to the burden of proof on plaintiff to establish the assault and the resulting injury was properly granted. The defendant’s first prayer asked that the jury be instructed that there was no evidence legally sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover under the pleadings as against Robert Sellman. This is upon the theory that Alonzo B. Sellman, as postmaster, ejected the plaintiff, as authorized by the postal laws and regulations read in evidence, and that in this act of expulsion Robert Sellman did not participate directly or indirectly, and he therefore incurred no liability even if undue force was used by Alonzo Sellman. But this would ignore the plaintiff’s testimony that the difficulty originated with Robert Sellman who cursed him and called him a liar and a thief when he came to see England about the car he had ordered, that as soon as Alonzo Sellman appeared upon the scene Robert Sellman called to throw plaintiff out, which was immediately done by Alonzo B. Sell-man. If the jury believed this testimony, Robert and Alonzo Sellman were jointly liable for the wrong done, and this prayer therefore was properly refused.
The defendant’s third prayer, as modified and granted, covers everything properly embraced in the second prayer, and there was no error in the rejection of the second prayer for this reason. Moreover, the attempt to distinguish in the second prayer between damages which would, and those which would not, entitle the plaintiff to a verdict, was sufficient to justify its rejection. The plaintiff’s third prayer, as modified
Defendant’s fourth prayer set forth all the facts of justification, which if found by the jury would relieve the defendants from legal liability. .These two prayers, taken together, as required by the instruction to that effect, were in substance a direction that notwithstanding the jury upon the plaintiff’s evidence might find an assault by the defendants, yet if upon defendant’s evidence they should find the assault justified, their verdict must be for defendants. Or in other words that if they found the facts stated in the third prayer, they must give a verdict for the plaintiff, unless they found the additional facts stated in the fourth prayer, in which event they must render a verdict for the defendants, and it is not possible to suppose that the jury could have been in any way misled or confused by such instructions. This practice has been frequently approved, as in Deford v. Dryden, 46 Md. 256, and in Garey v. Sangston, 64 Md. 38. Under these instructions the jury could .determine from all the evidence, whether the plaintiff was ejected without undue violence, in a bona fide attempt by Alonzo Sellman to exercise his lawful authority as postmaster, or whether the defendants intended from the first to commit a wrong, with the purpose t.hen, or subsequently formed, to set up Alonzo Sellman’s legal authority as postmaster as a cover for their joint illegal conduct. Taylor v. Jones, 42 N. H. 35.
Defendant’s 5th, 6th and 7th prayers contain no proposition
It follows from what we have said in regard to the first and second exceptions that there was no error in rejecting defendant’s eighth prayer which asserts that there was no legally sufficient evidence to show that the necessity for the operation upon plaintiff was the result of his ejection from the store by defendants. Finding no error in any of the rulings, the judgment will be affirmed.