90 N.Y.S. 678 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The plaintiff has recovered a verdict of $3,500 for personal injuries sustained through the negligence of the defendant. Upon the evidence the plaintiff’s freedom from contributory negligence and the defendant’s negligence were questions for the jury. An exception to certain items of evidence relating to the question of damages requires a new trial. The plaintiff was struck and run over by a truck which was being backed by hand down an incline over a sidewalk along which she was passing. She alleged, concerning her injuries, that she was thrown to the sidewalk; that the wheels of the truck passed over her “ whereby she sustained many contusions and bruises of the body and limbs, was made sick and sore, and her nervous system received a severe shock, from all of which she suffered and still suffers great pain and agony, was taken to a hospital, where she still remains,” and upon information and belief alleges “ that it will be a long time before she will be able, if indeed she is ever able, to carry on her occupation which is that of a nurse.” She further alleges upon information and belief that she will from time to time require the services of a physician, and “that the injuries above set forth will be the whole or in part permanent.” No bill of particulars of the injuries appears to have been demanded or given.
A physician who examined the plaintiff about two weeks before the trial, called in her own behalf, was asked whether her powers of locomotion were impaired. Counsel for the defendant objected as immaterial, incompetent and irrelevant, unless it was connected with the injuries to which the doctor had testified. The court ruled that the physician might state whether her locomotion was impaired as a result of the injuries he found upon her and the witness answered that her locomotion was impaired as a result of the injuries she received. Counsel for the defendant then moved to strike out the evidence upon the ground, among others, that it was
This case is distinguishable from Ehrgott v. Mayor (96 N. Y. 264), where the allegations of the complaint were quite general. Here the allegations of the complaint are specific as to the injuries. The only allegation that may be said to be at all general is that her nervous system received a severe shock from which she still suffers great pain and agony. Manifestly, these allegations do not embrace a disease which resulted from the shock unless that result would be inevitable, which the evidence does not show.
The defendant’s motion to strike out the evidence at the close of
It follows, therefore, that the court erred in denying the motion to strike out the evidence, and the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien and Hatch, JJ., concurred ; Patterson, J., dissented.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.