Abbot v. Tolliver

36 N.W. 622, 71 Wis. 64, 1888 Wisc. LEXIS 103
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 N.W. 622 (Abbot v. Tolliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbot v. Tolliver, 36 N.W. 622, 71 Wis. 64, 1888 Wisc. LEXIS 103 (Wis. 1888).

Opinion

Cole, C. J.

Some objections are taken to the rulings of the circuit court in admitting or excluding evidence on the trial, but as we have concluded that the judgment must be reversed on another ground it is not necessary to determine whether these rulings were erroneous or not. Whether the court erred in not permitting the witness Jones to testify to the matters concerning vrhich he was interrogated, depended upon the fact whether Jones was the plaintiff’s husband or not. The plaintiff testified on the trial that she was never married to him, though she had stated in her deposition previously taken that she was married to Jones after she was divorced from Miller. Jones was called by the defendant, and testified that he was married to the .plaintiff in 1877, at Hancock, Wisconsin, by a justice of the peace by the name of Moore, and the justice himself testified that he performed the marriage ceremony between Jones and the plaintiff on the 25th or 26th of February, 1877, at the town of Hancock, where he then lived and held the office of justice of the peace. On this state of the evidence there was good ground for holding that Jones was not a competent witness. The defendant ought not to dis[67]*67credit his own witness, but assume that he told the truth in the matter. This is the only remark we feel called upon to make upon this point.

The plaintiff was injured while traveling as a passenger on the Wisconsin Central Railway, in April, 1886, between Dorchester and Stetsonville. The parlor car in which she was riding got partially off the track, made a lurch, and threw the plaintiff, as she was rising from her chair, down on the floor in the center of the car; and while she was attempting to rise she was again thrown backwards in a sitting position. The accident doubtless happened in consequence of the track being in a defective state; the ties were badly de'cayed, and this caused the rail to spread and the car getting off the track or becoming derailed. The negligence of the defendant in failing to keep the road-bed in a reasonably safe condition is not seriously denied, nor could it well be upon the proofs. The plaintiff was rendered unconscious by the fall, and had no recollection of anything which occurred on her journey home to Ashland. She was entirely helpless, and says it was quite a number of days before she became conscious, and when she did she could not even move her fingers without crying out. Her left arm and limb were numb; “she was in sinking- spells most of the time, and was in pain all over,”, as she describes her condition. She suffered from pain in her spine and womb. Dr. Hosmer, who was called to attend her the night she reached home, says she complained of her womb, and he found she was sore up and down the back; he saw no black and blue spots on her body anywhere, but her spine was sensitive or tender. When he made an examination, as he did some weeks after the accident, he found a displacement and laceration of the womb, and he thought there was more or less concussion of the spinal column. He says she was troubled with fainting spells, something like epileptic fits. He attended upon her for some months. [68]*68At times, he says, she got along very well, ancl was recovering, but a little indiscretion on her part, in attempting to sit up, would bring her back just as she was at first. Dr. Idadden also called to see the plaintiff, in consultation with Dr. Hosmer, three or four days after she was injured, and he saw her several times afterwards. He made an examination, and found a soreness or tenderness along the spinal column, and an enlargement and laceration of the womb. He agreed with Dr. Hosmer as to her condition, but thought she was suffering from no organic trouble except the displacement or inflammation of the womb. He discovered no symptoms of any organic disease of the spine, except the statements of the plaintiff. The nurses who had the care of the plaintiff for several months say she complained of pain, was quite helpless, could not be moved without making her scream, and that she had frequent fainting spells. The plaintiff says she has not walked nor stood upon her feet since the injury, and that at times she suffered from pain and numbness in her left arm and limb. It appears that she has been confined to her bed most of the time up to the trial, and has suffered considerable pain. The jury gave a verdict for $7,000 damages, which, it is claimed on the part of the defendant below, is disproportionate to any injury proven, and should be set aside as excessive. We are inclined to sustain this position as sound.

We have stated the material testimony given on the part of the plaintiff as to the nature and extent of her injury. To our minds it fails to show that she .sustained any permanent injury by the fall. She is a large woman, weighing about 200 pounds, and doubtless received a severe shock or jar when thrown upon the floor of the car. But the medical testimony offered on her side does not satisfactorily show that she suffered any permanent injury to the spine by the fall. The probability that she did sustain any such injury is greatly weakened, if not fully disproved, by the [69]*69medical testimony given on the part of the defendant. These physicians were of the opinion that, if there had. been any concussion of the spine, there would be some indications of paralysis resulting from it, and none such was shown. They thought all the real pain which the plaintiff suffered was caused by the disease and laceration of the womb; and all the physicians agreed that this womb difficulty was not produced by the shock or fall in the car. Dr. Hosmer says the plaintiff was getting better of her nervous symptoms, and Dr. Madden thought there was probably.no organic trouble of the nervous system. The physicians on the part of the defense were of the opinion that her pains were largely imaginary or feigned. But the evidence is so unsatisfactory and inconclusive as to whether there was any injury to the spine resulting from the fall, that it does not warrant giving damages on that ground; for, unless we are prepared to say that the whole matter of damages, in a case of personal injury by a railroad company, rests entirely in the judgment and discretion of the jury, it is obvious there should be some basis for damages in the proof offered. The learned circuit judge charged the jury that if they found the plaintiff had an injury to or disease of the womb prior to the accident, they ought to take into consideration the nature and extent of that injury or disease, and whether any or all the pains which she claims to have suffered proceeded from, or were caused by, this injury or disease of the womb. If so, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover damages for such pain and suffering. Notwithstanding this direction, we are unable to account for the verdict, except upon the theory that damages were actually given for a supposed permanent injury or disabilit_y of the spine, of which there was no satisfactory proof. We have, in a number of cases, set aside verdicts where the damages awarded exceeded all fair compensation for injuries proven. In the present case we think the jury must have been mis[70]*70led, or were influenced by some improper bias, in giving so large a verdict, which is quite disproportionate to any injury proven.

See note to this case in 36 N. W. Rep. 623.— Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.W. 622, 71 Wis. 64, 1888 Wisc. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbot-v-tolliver-wis-1888.