delivered the opinion of the Court.
A housewife whose back was injured when the taxicab in which she was riding was struck in the rear by an automobile sued both drivers and the owner of the cab, as did her husband. The jury returned a small verdict in their favor against all defendants and they appealed, claiming that her physicians were restricted from giving their opinions of her disability from the accident, to her prejudice, that the fact
Appellant testified she had never had trouble with her back before the accident, and that since she has had continual trouble and could not wash, iron, or cook as before, or properly take care of her young baby. During her pregnancy after the accident she was nervous and listless and is still weak.
An orthopedic specialist, who had examined appellant at the request of the general practitioner to whom she had gone after the accident, testified that she had tenderness and pain in the lower part of the lumbar spine, with a limitation of movement and pain on forward, and right and left lateral bending. He said the X-rays showed a slipping of the vertebra, “a joggling at the end of the spine,” and that the claimant had a pre-existing bone defect to which the accident added a traumatic injury. He added that he had evaluated her disability and reached a prognosis but on objection was not allowed to say how great the disability was or its effects. Counsel for appellant told the court he was not seeking an answer as to the extent of industrial disability. The doctor gave the prognosis that pain would continue but no further amplification was permitted.
The general practitioner testified as to the many visits to him by appellant, that the accident had aggravated an existing back defect, that she had had no trouble with her back before the accident, and had so told him, and that she had a sprained back with “muscle spasticity.” He was asked his opinion of the extent of disability and his prognosis. His reply “that she has sustained approximately a 20 per cent loss of use of the lower back” was stricken on motion of defense counsel and the jury told to disregard the answer. Appellant’s counsel protested, and then again asked for a prognosis. The court said to the witness: “* * * let me caution you not to refer to percentages such as you previously mentioned. * * * If you want to refer to a degree of limitation in percentages, that is all right, but not as you have previously attempted to do.” The doctor answered: “It is my opinion that she has
The parties have narrowed the issue presented for decision. They agree that a qualified physician can testify as to physical and functional impairment or loss of use of the body or a part or member thereof, that is, as to anatomical disability, and may express that impairment or loss of use in percentages of normal. They part on whether the doctor may give his opinion as to the effect of the anatomical disability on the habits and activities of the victim, personal and economic. The appellant urges that he can; the appellees say: “Appellants complain, in effect, that their doctors were not permitted to use the magic words—‘20% disability to the back’ * * *. Admittedly, this form of evidence has been in vogue, without objection, for some years. Apparently, it had its beginning in workmen’s compensation cases, in which the language of the statute required such testimony; and it found its way, without objection, into the trial of common law negligence cases. * * * the function of the medical expert is limited to the determination of the extent to which a person has lost the motion of a portion of their body and is not to determine the extent to which a person is disabled as a result of that loss of motion. * * * Evidence as to a percentage of disability given by a doctor from the witness stand invades the province of a jury because it states the ultimate fact which is to be determined by the jury.”
Courts have differed on the question. We think the sound view is that a physician who has, in addition to his medical knowledge, familiarity with and understanding of the activities and occupation of his patient, may express an opinion as to the extent to which the anatomical disability will cause personal or economic disability. Whether in a particular case the physician has such extra-medical knowledge is primarily for the trial judge to decide in the exercise of a sound discretion.
Wigmore and McCormick agree that the test of admissibility of an expert’s opinion should be whether his testimony will be of real appreciable help to the trier of fact in deciding the issue presented.
7
Wigmore,
Evidence
(3rd Ed., 1940),
Both Wigmore and McCormick think little of the argument that opinions on the very issue before the jury should be rejected because they invade the province of the jury. 7 Wig more, op. cit. Sec. 1921, deals with this idea as follows: “When all is said, it remains simply one of those impracticable and misconceived utterances which lack any justification in principle.” McCormick, op. cit. Sec. 12, page 26, says: “It is believed, however, that this general rule is unduly restrictive, is pregnant with close questions of application, and often unfairly obstructs the party’s presentation of his case.”
Many appellate courts, in cases in which the point had been contested below, have held that a doctor could correlate his medical knowledge and skill, his estimate of the patient’s anatomical impairment and his understanding of the patient’s personal and economic activities into an opinion of how far those activities had been and would be curtailed.
1
Some de
In other decisions the appellate court has approved the expression below of medical opinion on the amount of curtailment of personal or economic activity in terms of percentage. 3 As the appellant stresses, and the appellees concede, there are countless cases in Maryland and other States in which opinions as to disability have been received and acted on as a matter of course where they came in without objection.
In
Williams v. Dawidowicz,
In the case before us, we find the discretion of the trial court not to have been soundly exercised and the appellant’s
The fact that the defendant who owned the automobile involved in the accident was uninsured came before the jury by chance. There is no reason to anticipate that if the case is retried this will happen again, and we see no need to discuss or decide the questions raised in connection with the point.
There remains the admissibility of the hospital records of the appellant.
There was read to the jury by appellees’ counsel those portions of the record dated before the accident which referred to complaints of appellant as to low back pain or symptoms. The appellant, her husband, and the general practitioner all had testified she had suffered no back pain, trouble or symptoms before the accident. The record was admissible as containing statements of appellant which contradicted testimony on facts which were not only relevant and material but the heart of the case.
Kantor v.
Ash,
Appellees read that part of the hospital record of appellant dated after the accident to show that she had consulted the hospital for ailments and complaints she had not told her doctors about and to show that her disability, nervousness and lethargy were, or could have been, attributable to these other ailments and not to the accident. These parts of the record were relevant also as reflecting on the credibility of appellant and the value and responsibility of her doctor’s opinions, reached without their having been told of these other ailments.
Judgments reversed, with costs, and case remanded for a new trial.
Notes
. Mintz v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. (N. C.),
. Price v. Industrial Comm. (Utah),
. Seal v. Blackburn Tank Truck Service (N. M.),
