119 Ky. 592 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
Eliza Shade' was discovered on 38th of February, .1902, on or near the northern end of appellee’s bridge, injured; her leg, or one hone of it, being broken. Possibly she was otherwise hurt. She was sent in a carriage to her home, in Covington, and died in a few weeks. Whether she died of the injuries received on the bridge was not proven. In this suit by her administrator against appellee, the owner of the toll-bridge, to recover damages for her injury and death, the plaintiff declared upon the negligence of appellee in suffering its bridge to he and remain in unfit condition by the accumulation of ice and snow upon the passenger footway. At
It is doubtful whether there was any evidence that the bridge was in an unfit condition for travel by pedestrians .at the place and at the time where Mrs. Shade fell, if she fell on the bridge. That there was considerable ice and snow ¡elsewhere and at other times on the bridge does not satisfy plaintiff's allegation or sustain his action. But assuming that there was at least a scintilla of evidence that the bridge was in dangerous condition throughout from the accumulation of ice and snotv negligently allowed by appellee, during the whole of the day Mrs. Shade was injured, there is- still a hiatus in plaintiff’s case. There was no proof that she fell "because of the ice and snow, or that she was herself in the ■ exercise of due care, or that her injuries were caused by the condition of the bridge. The witness Waring does not at all identify Mrs. Shade as one of the persons whom he says he helped up from falls about that time. Indeed, his evidence rather shows that she was not. Plaintiff’s case rested, if it ¡can be maintained at all, upon the declaration made by Mrs. '.Shade to her physician, some time after she had been taken to her home, that she had fallen on the ice on the C. & 0. bridge (the name by which appellee's bridge is popularly -called). It is contended by appellant that her declarations made to her physician in explanation of the cause of her injury, and made to him to enable him to treat it, are of .the res gestae, and receivable in evidence as such. “Where the bodily and mental feelings of a party are to be proved, the usual and natural expressions of such feelings, made 'at the time, are considered competent and original evidence in his. favor. There are ills and pains of the body, which are puoper subjects of proof in a court of justice, which can be
The opinion in Omberg v. U. S. Mutual Accident Ass’n., 101 Ky., 303, 19 R., 462, 40 S. W., 909, 72 Am. St. Rep., 413, is relied on by appellant. -In that case the patient, who was suffering from an inflamed toe, the result of septic poisoning, told his physician that it was caused by a mosquito bite at the affected 'spot. The evidence was) held to be competent on the ground that the statement was necessary, or at least proper, to enable the physician to understand the illness, and was part, of the description of the wound, and inseparable from the patient’s complaint with respect thereto. But the court was careful to. restrict the application of the rule to statements made by the patient to the physician in the treatment of the malady, and added: “A narrative of the events attending the mishaps would not be competent.” Nor was a narrative of the events attending the mishap competent in this case.
The judgment must be affirmed.