delivered the opinion of the court:
This cause of action arose out of a collision of motor vehicles in which a car driven by plaintiff was struck from the rear by a truck driven by defendant as plaintiff was slowing because of a construction project. Judgment was entered on a jury verdict of $1,000 in favor of plaintiff. On appeal from the order denying her post-trial motion for either a new trial on the issue of damages only or, in the alternative, for a new trial, plaintiff contends ■ the trial judge erred (1) in' improperly admitting a police report; (2) in curtailing her cross-examination of the investigating police officer; (3) in refusing to allow the jury to view the police report or take it to the jury room during their deliberations; and (4) in failing to grant a new trial because of inadequacy of-damages.
During the trial, the investigating police officer, called by defendant, testified that he had no independent recollection of the occurrence, and that his recollection was not refreshed when he was shown the police report he had made. He was not a witness to the accident, but stated that the report was true and correct when prepared by him immediately after the accident. It was offered into evidence by defendant and, after objecting to this-offer on the ground that the report was hearsay, plaintiff’s attorney stated, “With-the understanding that I can cross-examine the witness clearly on every detail in this report, I will remove my objection.” The trial judge refused to accept this reservation, and plaintiff’s counsel then said, “I withdraw my "objection. I want the police report in' the record with no question.”
Thereafter, the police officer continued his testimony Concerning the contents of his report without any objection by plaintiff. A square under the heading “injury” appeared in the report, and the officer testified that the “O” in that square, meant there was no visible injury and no complaint of injury or momentary unconsciousness. If there had been a complaint of pain even with no visible injuries, then the officer testified that standard .procedure called for the recording of a “C” in the square.
On cross-examination, plaintiff’s attorney sought to bring out other facts contained in the report, specifically the fact that defendant had received a ticket for a traffic violation. After the officer testified that a ticket was issued, counsel was precluded from any further inquiry as to whom or for what reason it was issued.
Plaintiff argues on this appeal that the allegedly improper admission of the report with its notation that she had made no complaint of injury at the accident scene suggested to the jury that she had sustained no injury and resulted in a verdict for only $1,000, which was less thán the amount of special damages proven.
Opinion
Police reports are’ generally not admissible in Illinois, (Jacobs v. Holley,
One early case involving this later distinction is Koch v. Pearson,
“In our opinion the memorandum involved in the instant case was admissible although it contained the words 'No one injured’ written by the policeman. Those words cannot be considered as a statement of the officer’s opinion, but rather as a statement of fact based upon appearances which he observed and recorded at the time, or the statements made to him by the parties.”
More recently, Noumoff v. Rotkvich,
“We conclude that defendant did not establish: (1) that Officer Gaffney did not have an independent recollection of the facts relating to the sobriety and physical condition of Michael McFarland; and (2) that after reviewing the police report Gaffney was unable to refresh his recollection. Therefore, Defendant’s Exhibit 2 (the blocked-out portion of the police report) was erroneously introduced into evidence under the doctrine of past recollection recorded.”
Had the proper foundation been laid, tire report could properly have been admitted. See Rigor v. Howard Liquors, Inc.,
Here, we note that a proper foundation for the portion of the police report containing the “O” in the square under the heading “injury” was made. The officer testified that he had no independent recollection of the occurrence; that his recollection was not refreshed by the police report; that the “O” in the square meant there was no visible injury or complaint of any injury; and that it was a correct entry when made. Thus, admission of that portion of the report was proper. Admission of the remainder of the report would have been error had objection been made, insofar as it also contained conclusions of the officer which were not the product of the officer’s personal observations. However, no objection was made and, in any event, any such error was waived by plaintiff’s attorney when he said, “I want the police report in the record with no question.”
Plaintiff also contends that the court erred in curtailing her cross-examination of the police officer regarding the issuance of a ticket to defendant. The general rule is that where no restriction is placed on the purpose for which a document is received, it becomes general evidence (Dill v. Widman,
Likewise, we do not believe there is any substance to the contentions of plaintiff that after the police report was admitted, it was error not to allow the jury to examine the report or to take it to the jury room. Initially, we note that section 67(4) of the Civil Practice Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1973, ch. 110, par. 67(4)) provides that papers read or received in evidence, other than depositions, “may” be carried from the bar by the juiy. Thus, a court, in its discretion, may permit the jury to take with them on retiring to consider their verdict, writings and tangible objects which have been duly admitted into evidence (Kaspar v. Clinton-Jackson Corp.,
Plaintiff’s final contention is that the court erred in failing to award a new trial as to damages, because her special damages were in excess of the verdict. It is alleged by plaintiff that she incurred $852.60 in medical bills and that her claim of lost time from employment was $242.
It is well-settled that new trials may be granted where the jury has awarded inadequate damages (Zielinski v. Goldblatt Bros., Inc.,
From our examination of the record, it appears that, of the $852.60 in medical bills claimed by plaintiff to have been incurred as a result of this accident, some $732 of this total was for weekly “massage therapy” from 1967 up until just prior to trial in 1973. We note also that plaintiff’s medical witness testified that:
“Mrs. Wilkinson presented intervertebral pathology at the level of the fifth and sixth vertebrae. That this was a condition which had been present for a long time, that had been aggravated by an injury on May fifteenth, 1967.”
In light of this pre-existing condition and the nature of the treatment, we do not believe the jury’s verdict was so grossly inadequate or so contrary to the manifest weight of the evidence as to necessitate a new trial.
In view thereof, we affirm the judgment.
Affirmed.
DRUCKER and LORENZ, JJ., concur.
