Blake v. City of Bedford

170 Iowa 128
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 20, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 170 Iowa 128 (Blake v. City of Bedford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. City of Bedford, 170 Iowa 128 (iowa 1915).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The plaintiff alleges that the defendant city negligently permitted one of its sidewalks to become defective, out of repair and unsafe for public use, and that by reason of such defective condition of said walk the plaintiff, while lawfully using the same, was tripped or thrown down without fault or negligence on his part, thereby sustaining serious bodily injuries for which he asks a recovery in damages.

Answering the petition, defendant denies all allegations of negligence on its part and further avers that at the time of the alleged injury plaintiff knew, or should have known, that he was in such physical condition as to render it unsafe [131]*131for him to travel on any sidewalk and his injury, if any, is chargeable to his own negligence.

There was a trial to a jury and verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $2,750.

There was evidence tending to show that plaintiff was about sixty years old, was a resident of- Bedford, and the injury of which he complains occurred on or about July 6, 1912. Prior to that date, on September 29, 1911, plaintiff had fallen from a ladder and received more or less injury. He is a laborer and when well had an earning capacity of $2.00 to $2.25 per day. The evidence further tends to show that in the fall from the ladder plaintiff sustained what the surgeons call an impacted fracture of the neck of the femur, a fracture in which the broken parts of the bone are driven or forced together. From this injury he appears to have been disabled for several months, but prior to the time of the injury in this ease there is evidence that he had so far recovered as to be able to walk with crutches and then with crutch and cane and to perform some work in the garden and various kinds of other light manual labor. The expert evidence fairly sustains the conclusion that a union of the broken bone or a fibrous union by which the bones were held in position had taken place and that plaintiff was making progress •toward a more or less complete recovery, though such progress was necessarily slow, and plaintiff’s restoration to the full measure of strength and physical capacity which he had enjoyed before his injury was perhaps doubtful. On the day mentioned in the petition, he was walking with the aid of crutch and cane in company with another person, when one of the sidewalk boards flew up or tipped in such manner as to catch his foot or crutch, throwing him down. Being unable to walk, an automobile was called and he was carried home. The next day he was taken to a neighboring town to consult a doctor. He continued to complain of the alleged results of his last fall, and .tried different remedies, until the following February, when a surgical operation was performed in which [132]*132an incision was made through, the flesh to the joint and a nail driven up through the neck of the bone in an attempt to join the broken parts and set up an irritation which it was hoped would stimulate the growth of new bony substance and provide a more or less complete union. The examination then had disclosed a fibrous union which to some extent compensated for the loss of the use of the bone, but the extent of the benefit, if any, to be derived from the surgical operation appears still to have been a matter of doubt at the time of the trial. Plaintiff’s damages were assessed by the jury at $2,750.'

The errors assigned by appellant are entirely too numerous for separate consideration and discussion, but we shall endeavor to so group them that nothing of a material character will be omitted.

1. Evidence: expert or opinion testimony: facts11- when not necessary. I. A physician who was shown to have personally examined and treated plaintiff for his injuries was asked for his opinion whether a union, bony or fibrous, of the broken bone had taken place prior to the plaintiff’s fall 0n the sidewalk. In this question the witness was among other things, to speak from examination and observation of the patient, and over the objection of the defendant he' was allowed to answer. It is said in support of the objection that the physician should not have been allowed to answer until he had first detailed to the jury all that he had learned or discovered in his examination and treatment of the patient. But such is not the rule as we understand it. If a witness is testifying purely as an expert, pronouncing an opinion solely upon a hypothetical state of facts, then, of course, it is the right of the opposing party to insist that the question shall disclose all the facts upon which the opinion is to be pronounced; but if the witness be a physician who professes to speák from his personal observation, examination and treatment, he may properly express an opinion based thereon, it being, of course, the privilege of counsel on the other side by cross-examination to test its accuracy and reasonableness. [133]*133As to the other objection, that the interrogatory assumed the existence of facts not shown, we think the question as stated is not without support in the record. It is moreover to be said that the answer given by the witness was of a very indefinite character and not calculated in any way to prejudice the defendant. It was in substance that in his opinion either a bony or fibrous union nf the broken parts had taken place. This was disputed by no one, and the subsequent surgical examination disclosed a fibrous union.

2. Evidence : conclusions: when harmless: detail of fact. A witness upon the condition of the sidewalk described it as in “bad shape.” In the same connection, he proceeded to tell what he observed of its condition — that . for a long period the' boards were loose, strcngers rotted ánd boards were frequently out of place. This fully explained what the witness meant by “bad shape,” and even if that expression should have been stricken out (which we do not decide), its -retention in the record was not prejudicial.

3.'Municipal corporation : sidewalks: second-hand material: notice of defect. Plaintiff’s son testified to a conversation with one Humphreys, in which he called the attention of the latter to the fact that when this walk was put in or replaced it was done with second-hand material, and upon the admission of this evidence error is assigned. It is shown, however, that Humphreys was a member of the city council and a member of the committee on streets and the testimony was competent as tending to show notice to the city.

4. Evidence : negligence: defective sidewalks: repairs • subsequent to wilatypurpose admissible. Testimony was admitted tending to show that the sidewalk at the place in question was repaired or renewed soon after the plaintiff’s fall thereon. The same fact had already been voluntarily brought out by defendant . . upon cross-examination o± one o± the plaintiff’s witnesses.- It had also been testified to ^y same witness on direct examination without objection. The fact was not necessarily incompetent or irrelevant. Under the rule which has been applied in this state, proof of subsequent repair does [134]*134not imply any admission by the defendant of the alleged defect; bnt ordinarily it is competent to show, if such be the case, that the walk as it exists at the time of trial is not in the same condition as when the alleged injury occurred. Had the appellant requested it, the court would doubtless have instructed the jury properly limiting the use to be made of this testimony, but such request was not made and the exception to its introduction cannot be sustained. Frohs v. Dubuque,

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170 Iowa 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-city-of-bedford-iowa-1915.