Birmingham Electric Co. v. Farmer

36 So. 2d 343, 251 Ala. 148, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 690
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1948
Docket6 Div. 632, 720.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 So. 2d 343 (Birmingham Electric Co. v. Farmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birmingham Electric Co. v. Farmer, 36 So. 2d 343, 251 Ala. 148, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 690 (Ala. 1948).

Opinion

STAKELY, Justice.

Mrs. Lucille Farmer (appellee) recovered a verdict and judgment against the Birmingham Electric Company (appellant)- in the amount of $5000.00. Oscar W. Farmer (appellee), husband of Mrs. Lucille Farmer, also recovered a verdict and judgment against The Birmingham Electric Company in the sum of $700.00. The cases were tried together in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County. Following the overruling of a separate motion for a new trial in each case, separate appeals were taken to this court. By agreement of the parties sanctioned by this court the two cases on appeal have been submitted on one record. The suit by the wife is to recover damages allegedly sustained by her through the negligence of the defendant. The suit by the husband is for expenses incurred and loss of service and companionship arising out of the same occurrence.

On February 28, 1945, Mrs. Lucille Farmer with her son four years old boarded a street car of the defendant at Rugby Avenue and 80th Street in the City of Birmingham. After the car stopped at 82nd Street the operator (it was a one-man car) alighted from the car and took his handles or controls with him. He went to and entered a house on Seventh Avenue. The street car then started moving, increasing its speed as it went toward a curve two blocks away. It turned the curve and passed Seventh, Sixth, Fifth, Fourth, Third, Division and Underwood Avenues before reaching First Avenue. Mrs. Far *150 mer went to the back end of the street car and sat down on the step on the back platform with her little'boy between her knees. She put her coat around him for protection. The track on which the street car was travelling ended about fifty feet before reaching First Avenue. As the street car rolled off the track its wheels caught in another street car track which ran into First Avenue, with the result that the street car curved to the left and travelled about 200 feet over the pavement to the west. As it made the turn it practically demolished an automobile parked on the north side of First Avenue. Tendencies of the evidence showed that the street car at the time was moving at about 25 miles per hour. As the street car lunged around the curve, a Negro woman who was standing to the rear of Mrs. Farmer fell over her and the child. According to her testimony Mrs. Farmer remembered nothing from the time the woman fell over her until she came to lying on the floor. She was still dazed when she was given some coffee. The boy was not hurt at all. She was carried to St. Vincent’s Hospital in an ambulance. She stayed there about two hours and was then taken home by her husband. That night she began suffering with a backache. Two days later she went to a doctor.

Reversal is sought on assignments of error predicated on rulings on the evidence, the action of the court on a written charge requested by the defendant and the action of the court in overruling a motion for a new trial based on excessiveness of the verdict.

Assignment of error 4. It is claimed that the court was in error in overruling the defendant’s objection to the following question propounded by the plaintiff to the witness Dr. T. L. Smith, who had qualified as an expert.

“Q. Now, Doctor, if you assume prior to 1945, — February the 28th, 1945, she was a woman weighing 150 to 170 pounds, and that she had not before that time suffered from pain, except such discomfort that comes with her periods, in her back and the kidneys and stomach, and further assuming she was a passenger in a street car and that the street car ran off the track and struck a car, and the street car curved or gave a lunge to the left after colliding with an automobile, and at the time the car swerved to the left, it jerked her while she was seated on the step of the street car, and further assuming that before the car came to a standstill, a negro woman who was standing by her, fell over against her, and assuming that on the 2nd of March you found the bruises and contusions that you found on her, and assuming that she gave the complaints she gave you from 1945 until July, 1946, and further assuming that you examined her and gave her the treatment that you said you gave her during that time; and further assuming that in July, 1946, an X-ray showed one of Mrs. Farmer’s kidneys dropped approximately two inches when she stood erect, and the other kidney dropped approximately one inch when she stood erect; and further assuming since the experience in the street car, — since she had the experience in the street car, she suffered frequently with pain in her kidneys and back, and she suffered with pain when voiding her bladder, wherever the pain came from, would you say, in your opinion, that the floating kidneys were probably due to traumatic injury that you found on her when you first examined her?”

According to appellant the error lies (1) in the assumption that Mrs. Farmer had floating kidneys when no evidence had been introduced to that effect and (2) the question seeks to elicit evidence which would invade the province of the jury. It seems to us that the question and objection can be better understood if we give a brief recital of certain tendencies of the evidence and show the circumstances under which the question was asked.

When Mrs. Farmer went to the office of Dr. Smith after the accident on March 2, 1945, she had "multiple bruises, contusions and blue spots or eccymosis over the left arm and back and left side and the lower part of the chest. Eccymosis is bleeding under the skin and is caused by trauma.” She appeared highly nervous. She returned to see Dr. Smith on March 9, 13, 16, 20, 26 and 30th. The doctor advised her to stay in bed for some time and not to be on her feet any more than she *151 could help. On March 20th the doctor made the following notation on his record of Mrs. Farmer’s treatment: “Pain left kidney region,' will x-ray for ptosis left kidney.” In the meantime she had visited several other doctors. She came back to see Dr. Smith in 1946. She visited him on five occasions in May of that year and three in June. She was complaining of pain in her right kidney region, pain across the small of her back, left shoulder and left side of the head. The doctor gave her ten shots of penicillin during these 1946 visits. The doctor saw her on June 7, 8, 10 of 1946 and gave her more penicillin. At that time she was complaining of pain in both sides of her back. On June 7 she' was suffering with some fever. Mrs. Farmer came back on July 11, 12 and 13 complaining with pain over her left kidney and the left lower quadrant of the abdomen. This time the doctor gave her five hundred thousand units of penicillin. That was the last treatment of the plaintiff by Dr. Smith.

At about this time Dr. Smith sent Mrs. Farmer to Doctors Meadows and Kesmodel for what he termed an intravenous injection pyelograph, that is, an injection through the kidneys preparatory to make an x-ray of the kidneys. This was done in order to find out if there had been any dislocation of the kidneys. Dr. Kesmodel was an X-ray expert. He got a report from Dr. Kesmodel.

After the foregoing evidence had been introduced- Dr. Smith gave the following answer to the following question:

“Q. What is a movable or a displaced kidney? A. Well the kidneys are placed between two layers of fascia resting on a pad of fat to keep them in position. They do not have anything except this pad of ' fat to hold them there, and the fascia, and they sometimes slip down between the layers of fat.”

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Bluebook (online)
36 So. 2d 343, 251 Ala. 148, 1948 Ala. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-electric-co-v-farmer-ala-1948.