14 P.2d 632 | Kan. | 1932
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff recovered a judgment for $16,125 for personal injuries sustained in an automobile casualty. Defendants have appealed and contend that the court erred in not sustaining their motion to strike out the testimony of certain of plaintiff’s witnesses and that the verdict is excessive.
The case was here before (Van Pelt v. Richards Paint & Paper Co., 132 Kan. 581, 296 Pac. 737), when a judgment for $18,000 in plaintiff’s favor was reversed because plaintiff’s counsel persisted in injecting into the trial before the jury the inference that defendants were protected by indemnity insurance and because of certain evidence erroneously admitted. It was then ruled that the errors requiring reversal did not go to the primary question of liability, and that the new trial should be limited to the extent of plaintiff’s injuries and the amount she should recover.
At the trial from which this appeal was taken eight physicians, called as witnesses by plaintiff, testified about her condition from examinations or treatments of her. As to four of those witnesses no complaint is made by appellants of their testimony. The other four
It is well settled by former decisions of this court, which accord with the general rule, that a physician may not testify as to what a patient said in respect to the past history of the case, or the cause or duration of the injury. Neither can he give an opinion based partially upon his personal examination and partially upon what the patient told him in reference to the past history of the case, and also upon statements of third persons in reference thereto. (See A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Frazier, 27 Kan. 463; Telegraph Co. v. Morris, 67 Kan. 410, 73 Pac. 108; Betterment Co. v. Reeves, 73 Kan. 107, 84 Pac. 560; Ballard v. Railway Co., 95 Kan. 343, 148 Pac. 764; Hill v. Railroad Co., 113 Kan. 489, 491, 215 Pac. 310; Priest v. Life Insurance Co., 116 Kan. 421, 427, 230 Pac. 529; Murphy v. Edgar Zinc Co., 128 Kan. 524, 278 Pac. 764; Lefebvre v. Western Coal and Mining Co., 131 Kan. 1, 289 Pac. 456.)
This general rule is necessary to prevent the admission of self-serving declarations of patients, or of statements made by him or others not under oath, which would be hearsay, and also that the defendant in the action, the jury and the trial court have a right to know how much of the opinion of the physician is based upon such self-serving declarations and hearsay statements, and how much of it is based upon his own examination of the patient, or established by X-ray pictures or other competent evidence. The real question before us is whether the testimony of the witnesses sought to be stricken out violated this rule at all, or to the extent that the judgment appealed from should be reversed. It is not every reference by a physician who is a witness to the history of the case that requires reversal of judgment. (State v. Keester, 134 Kan. 64, 4 P. 2d 679.) While there are some differences in the testimony of the four witnesses complained of, the testimony of each of these witnesses, taken as a whole, discloses quite clearly that only two things
The second point regarded as a part of the history of the case was whether plaintiff was suffering pain at the time examinations were made or treatments given her by the witnesses. Of course, pain cannot be seen by a physician, nor felt by him, nor is it disclosed by X-ray pictures; but it does not necessarily follow that an examination or treatment of a patient by a witness does not disclose that the patient has pain. The nature of plaintiff’s injury, as disclosed by the examination, was such that she necessarily had or might have pain. To some of the witnesses the fact that plaintiff was suffering pain was disclosed by her appearance and by her reflexes. To one or two of them she complained of having pain. These complaints only tended to confirm opinions which had been reached by the examination of the patient and her condition. Stated in the most favorable way for appellants, there was very little in the testimony of any of these witnesses which could have entered into their opinions, as testified to by them, which was based upon any history of the case objectionable under the rule recognized and applied in the cases above cited. No objection was made to the testimony of any of these witnesses while they were on the witness stand, nor was any motion made to strike out any portion of their testimony, nor were they asked to segregate in any way any part of their judgment based upon any statement of plaintiff’s with respect to pain. Certainly most of the testimony of these witnesses was competent in any event. The motion to strike out the entire testimony of each of them, made at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, was not well taken and was properly overruled.
Appellants complain of the amount of the verdict. One of the grounds of the motion for the new trial was that the verdict was excessive. That ground was not argued on the hearing of the motion, but the court, having tried the case twice, specifically found
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.