Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Hughes

1917 OK 303, 166 P. 411, 64 Okla. 74, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 581
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 12, 1917
Docket7540
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1917 OK 303 (Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Hughes, 1917 OK 303, 166 P. 411, 64 Okla. 74, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 581 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

HARDY, J.

J. L. Hughes began this action in the superior court of Pottawatomie county against the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad Company'to recover damages alleged to have been received on or about the 1st day of July, 1909. The parties will be referred to in accordance with their respective titles in the trial court. The petition alleged that plaintiff was engaged in the services of the defendant as a fireman upon an engine engaged in interstate commerce between Haileyville, Okla., and Booneville, Ark., and while so engaged, by reason of the defective condition of said engine, and the floor of the engine cab and of the water tank on said engine, he was, without fault or negligence upon his part, thrown against the wall and side of said engine and severely injured, maimed, and crippled. Issue was joined, and trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff, and defendant prosecutes error.

Plaintiff testified as to the accident and the injuries received, and specifically testified that as a result of such accident he received a rupture in the right groin, “a very bad rupture,” for which injuries he was examined and treated by Drs. Hailey and Gardner; Upon cross-examination he further testified that prior to the accident he had never had a hernia on the right side, and was ásked whether he made the statement, at the time of his examination, to said physicians ritorial Legislature, Kansas adopted a Code horn of a saddle and received a rupture at that point, to which he answered that he did not make such statement. Objection was made to this question, upon the ground that the testimony- sought to be elicited was inj competent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and upon the further ground that such statement, if made, was a privileged communication. The objection was sustained; the court expressly placing his ruling upon the ground that, until the plaintiff himself voluntarily testified to such communication, the samé was privileged. The answer of plaintiff, however, was not stricken. Plaintiff called as a witness Dr. Gardner, and questioned him as to the result of his examination, developing the fact that he had discovered a right inguinal hernia. Upon cross-examination he was asked whether plaintiff at the time gave him any history of a previous injury or inguinal hernia. Objection was made to this question upon the ground that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and a privileged communication, which objection was by the court sustained. Thereupon defendant dictated into the record the answer which it expected witness would make, from which it appears that said witness, if permitted to answer, would have testified that plaintiff told him that in 1901 he had been injured by being thrown upon the horn of a saddle, and that a rupture or hernia had resulted at that time at the same point.

Error is assigned upon the exclusion of this evidence, in answer to which assignment plaintiff urges that such questions constituted improper cross-examination, and that such evidence, if admissible, should have been reserved and offered as a part of defendant’s case in chief, and that the evidence was properly excluded, although this objection was not urged, and although the court based his, ruling upon the wrong reason. It is not seriously contended that such evidence was inadmissible by reason of being privileged, if offered at the proper time. The cross-examination of a witness should he confined to the subject-matter of his direct examination. Woods v. Faurot, 14 Okla. 171, 77 Pac. 346; C., R. I. & P. v. Beatty, 34 Okla. 321, 118 Pac. 367, 126 Pac. 736, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 984. And the limits to which counsel may be permitted to go in such cross-examination rest largely in the discretion of the trial court. Jones v. Bradford, 79 Minn. 396, 82 N. W. 651; Stewart v. Stewart, 175 Ind. 412, 94 N. E. 564; Davis v. Coblens et al., 174 U. S. 719, 19 Sup. Ct. 832, 43 L. Ed. 1147. So, also, the order in which evidence shall be *76 received at a trial must, to a great degree, be left to tbe sound discretion of tbe trial court, and unless it is made to appear that such discretion has been abused, no reversal will be bad because of a ruling with reference to tbe order in which evidence must be introduced. Ackerman v. Chappell Hdw. Co., 41 Okla. 275, 137 Pac. 349.

Plaintiff urges that, while tbe objections made to the introduction of said evidence were the general objections of incompetency, irrelevancy, and immateriality, and that it constituted a privileged communication, such objections were sufficiently broad to cover the specific objection that such question was improper, cross-examination of the witness, and relies upon section 5070, Rev. Laws 19.10, which provides that such general objection.shall be deemed to cover all matters ordinarily embraced within such objections. It has been held that the objection that certain evidence cannot be called for upon cross-examination must be taken on that specific ground, and a mere general objection that the evidence is incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial is not sufficient to present this objection thereto. Knapp v. Schneider, 24 Wis. 70; Schlencker v. State, 9 Neb. 241, 1 N. W. 857.

The court having excluded the evidence offered upon the ground that such statements were privileged communications, within the protection of the statute, its ruling cannot now be sustained on the grounds that the question asked was improper cross-examination. Phelps v. Fuchs Lang Mfg. Co., 82 N. J. Law, 474, 81 Atl. 728; McGivern v. Steele, 197 Mass. 164, 83 N. E. 405; McCarty v. Johnson, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 184, 49 S. W. 1098; 3 C. J. 825, note 50. Was the proffered evidence privileged? Such privilege was not recognized at common law, and exists in this state by virtue of the statute.

Section 5050, Rev. Laws 1910, is as follows :

“The following persons shall be incompetent to testify: * * * Sixth — A physician or surgeon, concerning any communication made to him by his patient with reference to any physical or supposed physical disease, or any knowledge obtained by a personal examination of any such patient; Provided, that if a person offer himself as a witness, that is to be deemed a consent to the examination ; also, if an attorney, clergyman or priest, physician or surgeon on the same subject, within the meaning of the last three subdivisions of this section.”

The language and punctuation of the above proviso leaves the meaning obscure and uncertain; but when its history is traced, and it is compared with the original, its meaning is made clear. This section of the Code was taken from the Kansas Code, which was originally patterned after the Ohio Code of 1853. In 1851 Ohio adopted a new Constitution, which required the appointment of a commission to revise the laws of that state as then existing and to provide a uniform mode of procedure. The commission prepared a Code, which was based upon and very similar to the Code contained in the’ report of the New York commissioners of practice and pleading, published in 1850, and the Code so prepared was adopted by the Legislature of Ohio in 1853, being substantially the same as that' now existing in that state. Section 314 thereof enumerated the classes of persons who were incompetent to testify, and also prescribed certain privileges by reason of confidential relations existing between persons therein '-specified, omitting therefrom the provision relating to physicians and surgeons. - Tlie proviso as now contained in section 5050, Rev. Laws 1910, was contained in the Ohio Code as a separate section, numbered 315, and is as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 303, 166 P. 411, 64 Okla. 74, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-r-i-p-r-co-v-hughes-okla-1917.