288 Mass. 75 | Mass. | 1934
This is an action of tort to recover compensation for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff as a result of the defendant’s negligence in operating an automobile. There was a verdict for the plaintiff. The case comes before us on the defendant’s exception to the refusal of the judge to instruct the jury, as requested by the defendant, that “There is no evidence that the sickness in consequence of which Mrs. Walner was treated in 1928 by Dr. Rowen, Dr. Rogers, Dr. Hamilton and Dr. Powers was caused by her injury.”
The defendant’s request was denied rightly since there was evidence on which it could have been found that the plaintiff’s sickness referred to in the request was caused by her injury.
The accident occurred on December 30,1927. The physician who attended the plaintiff at that time and up to February 10,1928, testified that she was “suffering from a sprained back, involving the right hip joint, hematoma of the scalp, traumatic neurosis, disturbance in menses,” that her condition was “adequately explained by the automobile accident,”
The evidence in regard to the plaintiff’s sickness in 1928, referred to in the request for instructions, was as follows: The plaintiff’s husband testified that he took his wife to several doctors including Dr. Rowen, Dr. Rogers and Dr. Powers. He testified to the fees paid by him to Dr. Rogers and to Dr. Powers, for medical services. Dr. Hurley, a witness for the defendant, testified that he examined the plaintiff September 24, 1929, in the presence of her husband, and that statements then made to him included, among others, statements in regard to the automobile accident and the treatment of the plaintiff and her physical condition immediately thereafter, and statements that the “following April she was taken sick with a high fever and a swollen face, which was also red and blue. A Dr. Rowen of St. Elizabeth’s Hospital saw her and he thought she was suffering from pink eye. She stated she saw no improvement under his care and after a time called a Dr. Rogers of Commonwealth Avenue. Dr. Rogers thought she was suffering from typhoid, but the various tests that were made proved negative. A Dr. Hamilton of Boston was called in consultation and he did not know what the matter was with her, but he treated her for typhoid fever. She was confined to her bed at that time for about six weeks and was then up and about again. She stated that she
The evidence of the plaintiff’s condition while being treated by the physicians, referred to in the request for instructions, was based in part upon their observations and opinions, though they did not testify directly. This evidence tended to show that the plaintiff’s condition during this period was in material particulars similar to her condition prior to Febru
If the defendant’s request for instructions required the judge to deal with the subject matter thereof, though not in the precise form requested, that requirement was met by the instruction in the charge as given that the jury in making an award to the plaintiff should “eliminate any condition or symptoms or results which you say can’t be traced to the accident.”
It is unnecessary to consider whether the refusal of the judge to instruct the jury as requested can be sustained on any ground other than that herein discussed.
Exceptions overruled.