322 Mass. 253 | Mass. | 1948
Both these actions are in tort to recover for the conscious suffering and death of the plaintiff’s intestate, Katherine C. Trump, aged seventy-five years, caused by the collision on September 1, 1944, of a taxicab in which she was
The only exception taken by the defendants was to the admission of a part of the certificate of the death of the plaintiff’s intestate from the records of deaths in Everett, which part read as follows:
15. Cause of death & duration: Sudden death. Arteriosclerotic Heart (a) Contributory cause and Disease. Accident,' 9/1/44; Taxi Cab; duration; Injuries to Side of Head, Ear and Arm
General Laws (Ter. Ed.) c. 46, § 19, provided that “The record of the town clerk relative to a birth, marriage or death shall be prima facie evidence of the facts recorded.” By St. 1943, c. 228, § 1, no change was made in that sentence, although a change was made in the later sentence relative to the proof of such a record by certificate. But by St. 1945, c. 570, § 1, which took effect before the trial of the instant cases, a comma was inserted after the word “recorded” in that sentence, and the following qualification was added: “but nothing contained in the record of a death which has reference to the question of liability for causing the death shall be admissible in evidence.”
Prior to St. 1945, c. 570, § 1, there is no doubt that the whole death certificate in question would have been admissible. Walcott v. Sumner, 308 Mass. 413, 415. Caccamo’s Case, 316 Mass. 358, 362. The question before us is whether the part of the death certificate in dispute is made inadmissible by that statute as having “reference to the question of liability for causing the death.” The words last quoted are strikingly similar to the words of the statute as to the admissibility of hospital records (G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 233, § 79; St. 1941, c. 389, § 2; St. 1943, c. 233, § 1; St. 1946, c. 473, § 1), which are that nothing in such hospital
In the present cases, it may be that there was error in the admission of the words "Taxi cab.” But if that was error, it did the defendants no harm, for it was conceded that the defendant Burdick was in collision with the taxicab in which the plaintiff’s intestate was riding, and that he was negligent. Apart from the words "Taxi cab,” the disputed part of the death certificate appears to us to have reference, primarily at least, to the injuries of the deceased, rather than to liability. That she died suddenly, and had arterio-sclerotic heart disease, were medical facts. So were the facts that she received injuries to the side of her head, her ear and her arm. It was not in dispute that she was in an accident on September 1, 1944. The hospital record held properly excluded in Inangelo v. Petterson, 236 Mass. 439, 440, consisted of a statement that "while patient was running along the road four days ago, she was run over by an automobile producing injuries” to her leg. That case seems to us quite different from the instant cases. In Caccamo’s Case, 316 Mass. 358, 362, a hospital record that the injured employee was suffering from a "cerebral hemorrhage (traumatic in origin) ” was held admissible on the ground that "it defined the nature and type of the hemorrhage.” And see Cohen v. Boston Edison Co. ante, 239.
Exceptions overruled.