175 Iowa 1 | Iowa | 1916
As we read it, the text.in 17 Cye. 527, militates against, rather than helps, the position of appellant. It declares fairly that, where a paper is out of the jurisdiction, the ordinary rules as to .secondary evidence do not govern. Hawkins v. Rice, 40 Iowa 435, merely holds that a written assignment cannot be established by parol upon a showing that the instrument had been sent to the clerk for record and not returned, because such assignment is still constructively in the possession of the assignee; and Grimes v. Simpson Centenary College, 42 Iowa, at 590, applies said ordinary rules because there was no positive and direct evidence showing where it was or who had the contract at the time of the trial, or that it was lost or mislaid. We think Adams v. Coulliard, 102 Mass. 167, 173, squarely sustains the trial court.
Kennell v. Boyer, 144 Iowa, at 306, is that memoranda made in a transaction where the maker acts as agent for both parties are admissible. Donovan v. Boston & M. R. Co., (Mass.) 33 N. E. 583, 584, holds memoranda are admissible where there is no reasonable possibility that they were intentionally made incorrect; where made by one acting in the line of: duty and in the usual course of employment, under conditions which .tended to make the entry correct; made before any controversy had arisen, and when all concerned had no interest other than to. know and state the truth. According to Inhabitants of Townsend v. Inhabitants of Pepperell, 99 Mass. 40, on issue of the insanity of a patient during a certain period, ,a record of his condition and treatment as a patient in a hospital, .produced at a trial 40 years after its date by the superintemlent of-the hospital as part of a series of records of which he is the official custodian, purporting to be contemporaneously made by the.attending physicians, and which it is their.duty .to make, is admissible .in evidence as a-foundation for the
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‘ * Q. What was your opinion at that time as to what was ailing that woman’s shoulder? (Objected to as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial to any issue in this case. Overruled. Exception.) A. I was of the opinion that the trouble was due to a rheumatic disease of the shoulder.”
This testimony is not incompetent, because it appears that witness was a practicing physician of at least 10 years’ experience. It is not irrelevant and immaterial to any issue in the case, because it is relevant to the inquiry whether injury to health or body shown on this trial was wholly due to the accident sued for or wholly or partly to something that occurred before this accident.
To this last ruling, no exception was taken. The answer is that, while in strictness the dues were not remitted, the local lodge paid them.
•Eliminating what is not excepted to, this is testimony amounting, in effect, to a statement that before the accident the plaintiff was sick. The inquiry as to the allowance of sick benefits and all the rest of it leads up to, is part of, and told the jury of, this previous sickness. It is neither irrelevant, immaterial nor incompetent. Plaintiff exhibited herself before the jury; she testified to physical conditions which she claims resulted from the car accident. Anything was material, relevant and competent which tended to challenge' that conditions found existing at the trial were due in whole or in part to the car accident. Any previous illness is relevant to that inquiry. Any admission that involves being sick before this accident, and any inquiry made before that accident as to
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“As the motion for new trial was particularly grounded upon the errors we have hereinbefore argued, argument of errors in overruling it would involve repetition which could hardly be helpful. So far as is applicable, and we believe all of it is, we refer to what has already been said and adopt it as our argument in support of our assignment against the order denying new trial.”
Governing ourselves by the abstract for the appellee, we find that the testimony on medical service and the like, and objections thereto, were as follows: Plaintiff said the “next” doctor she had was Grimes; he never presented his bill and she does not know what it is; knows what the bills of some of the doctors are — Grimes, Yest and Duhigg. Dr. Grimes charged “us” $2 a visit; she thinks she owes Dr. Grimes $8. This was stricken out as wholly immaterial “and no foundation laid showing what the amount of the bill was,” and plaintiff excepted. She was then asked, “What is your best judgment as to whether Dr. Grimes rendered you a state
In Elzig v. Bales, 135 Iowa 208, 215, we held it was error to allow recovery for part of the amount paid out for medicines, without any showing that these were prescribed by physicians or necessary, or that the amount paid was the reasonable value thereof.
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In this state of the evidence, it could not be error to charge that the verdict should not include compensation for loss of time, or services, or inability to perform labor or earn money. There was no evidence upon which to award such compensation, and, at best, nothing from which the jury could determine how much money had been' thus lost. If there be error, it is not in thus charging, but in the rulings that kept the evidence in this condition. On fair consideration, it is, however, clear that plaintiff proffered all the evidence she proposed to put in — some evidence as to profits. She made no attempt to prove the personal labor necessarily used or money expenditures required to carry on this business, nor to prove the ultimate point — how much the gross earnings would exceed the value of the personal service plus the gross expenditures. But the court indicated that such
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“Wherefore, plaintiff prays that she may have and recover judgment against defendant in the amount of $12,000.”
We think it beyond all argument that the claim for damages in this petition is exclusive in the sense that the only thing charged to have caused the damage, and the only thing for which the amount claimed is prayed,'are the specific things enumerated as causing the damage, and as being the reason for.the prayer. The decision on the point is controlled by the rule of ejusdem generis, and of designwtio unius est exclusio alterms. The demand for relief rests upon distinctly enumerated things, and it excludes all others.
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To the criticism of both instructions, the following language in Markey v. Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co., 171 Iowa 255, 268, is quite applicable:
“But negligence in law is not made out by failure to employ absolute care. The erection of high walls on both sides of a railroad track, and employing effective guards at every crossing, would practically prevent the injuring of trespassers. But the absence of such walls and guards does not establish actionable negligence. And the law of negligence is, for all practical purposes, a set of' rules defining how far absolute care may be departed from, without liability. Negligence is not failure to do all possible, but failure to do what ordinary prudence dictates.”
20' instructionsstrucáons:11" harmless er-Neither can we agree with the contention of the appellant that these two instructions, 6 and 8, are prejudicial, even if erroneous. Suppose that they did misdirect the jury as to what constituted negligence on the part of the defendant, or constituted contributory negligence committed in improper boarding of ear_ rp0 a]jow piaintiff a single dollar, the jury was compelled to find that the defendant had been negligent, and that the plaintiff had not contributed to her own injury. The alleged error was not prejudicial, because there was a verdict for plaintiff.
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Where the evidence tends to show that plaintiff has suffered severe pain right up to the time of the trial, and that she had not then yet fully recovered from the injury, future pain and suffering may rightly be submitted. Bruce v.
Migliaccio v. Smith Fuel Co., 151 Iowa 705, 708, does not hold that the damages awarded here are, as matter of law, grossly inadequate. The exact holding is that, where the deceased had an expectancy of over 30 years, was a steady worker, earned $1.80 a day, an award of less than $50 was so absurdly inadequate as that there clearly was no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s grant of a new trial on this ground alone.
We are unable to see how Hubbard v. Montgomery County, 140 Iowa 520, bears on the propriety of admitting evidence as to previous attacks of rheumatism, the contract with Carson and as to getting sick benefits. And Swanson v. French, 92 Iowa 695, 699, is authority for no more than that, when testimony has been erroneously admitted, prejudice will be presumed. And Puth v. Zimbleman, 99 Iowa 641, merely holds that objection to a letter, stating that same is incompetent and immaterial because it was not binding on defendant, will not permit the objector to insist on appeal that same was erroneously admitted because it was written after intercourse.
The judgment below should stand affirmed. — Affirmed.