Cobb v. Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway Co.

44 P.2d 731, 150 Or. 226, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 110
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 44 P.2d 731 (Cobb v. Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobb v. Spokane, Portland & Seattle Railway Co., 44 P.2d 731, 150 Or. 226, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 110 (Or. 1935).

Opinion

*229 BEAN, J.

The doctors’ testimony tended to show that plaintiff would have gone on, at least for years, without any trouble, and probably for life, without the loss of his leg.

The theory of plaintiff is that his injury was due to defendants’ negligence and aggravated the Buerger’s disease, which, until then, had not bothered him, and made necessary the amputation.

The answer filed by defendants admitted that the plaintiff’s right foot was seriously affected, to the extent that amputation would presently be required, but asserted that the cause was an infection which could not be checked because plaintiff was afflicted with the malady known as “Buerger’s disease”, and denied that there had been any such accidental injury as alleged to have happened on October 14,1931.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in overruling defendant’s objection to the hypo *230 theti'eal questions, and in receiving testimony given in answer to such questions: The first question was as follows-:

“Assume that Mr. Cobh had Buerger’s disease before; that it hadn’t caused him any trouble, any pain in the calf of the leg, or otherwise; he had been able to carry on his work as ear inspector and do work around the house and yard without any ill effect, and that on the fourteenth day of October, 1931 at night while running in a freight yard he had- an iron brake shoe weighing about 10 pounds in his right hand, he stumbled in a hole, fell in a heap, the brake shoe coming in contact with the instep of his right foot, discoloring it; immediate pain set in and causing a pain and sore on top of his foot, leaving a scar a couple of inches or so back of the second toe, the scar that you found. Would such a trauma have any effect upon an already existing Buerger’s disease?”

The witness answered :

“Yes, sir. * * * It would damage the extremity, causing further damage to the blood vessels, and might result in gangrene; might result in causing ulcers, sores, diminished tissue resistance.”

The questions were objected to by defendants as not being proper hypothetical questions. It will be noticed that the interrogatory assumed that Mr. Cobb had Buerger’s disease before, that it had not caused him.any trouble, etc. We do not think that it was necessary to repeat in the question before each clause the word “assume”, but that the whole statement is assumed -with the exception of reference to “the scar that you found”. The whole question is framed as one sentence. It may not be perfect rhetoric, but we think the jury understood that it asked for the opinion of Dr. Bosenblatt, based on the hypothesis. It was already in evidence that the doctor found a scar on the plaintiff’s foot. Dr. Bosenblatt and Dr. Brill both testified, *231 previous to these questions, concerning their finding this scar and the condition of Mr. Cobh. It does not seem that it was possible for these expert witnesses, in making their answers, to consider matters of which the jury was not advised. We think the question was a fair hypothetical one.

The most serious objection to the hypothetical questions which defendants make “is the inclusion of an unqualified assertion that the scar observed by the doctors in their examination of plaintiff, and the condition in which plaintiff’s foot was found, were the result of the alleged accident”. We do not so understand the purport of the question, but rather, assuming that a brake shoe had come in contact with the instep of the foot, the inquiry was as to the physicians’ opinions and as to what effect it would have, assuming that plaintiff already had Buerger’s disease.

The hypothetical question propounded to Dr. Brill, and his answer, were as follows:

“Q. Assuming, Doctor, that Mr. Cobb was able to do normal manual work of car repairing and car inspecting although he had Buerger’s disease in the veins or arteries ; had been able to do that work up to October 14th, 1931 without any pain or without any ill effect and never had any pain in his legs or feet, and that on October 14th, 1931 while carrying a ten-pound iron weight in his hand, a brake shoe, he fell in a heap with part of the weight of the brake shoe at least coming on the instep of his right foot and discoloring it, causing an opening; it healed up and left a scar which you have examined, and that since that time he suffered pain and the limb and foot grew into the condition that you found it. State what part the accident had to do with the condition of this man. ’ ’
“A. I would say the accident had a very definite development upon the decaying process and the.eventual loss of the leg.”

*232 Defendants state in their brief: “Since Dr. Bosenblatt and Dr. Brill had examined and treated plaintiff they conld properly have been asked to express opinions as to plaintiff’s condition, based upon their personal observation. In snch a situation there is no occasion for a hypothetical question; the witness supplies both premise and conclusion.” This is no doubt correct as applied to the contention of defendants, after the doctors saw and treated him, but there were the other matters that occurred before, of which the doctors had no knowledge, that it was necessary to mention as the basis of the hypothetical question.

The testimony in regard to the facts assumed by the interrogatories was before the jury so that the jury could determine the truth or falsity of such facts, and all of the necessary facts were embraced in the interrogatory upon which the expert could base an opinion.

It is also urged that the hypothetical questions do not embrace all of the facts necessary for the foundation of the expert’s opinion for the reason that it does not include the development of the infections after the injury. The question, as it will be seen, assumes that after the injury “immediate pain set in and causing a pain and sore on top of his foot”. We do not think it was necessary for the question to inform the physicians whether or not this was an indication of infection or gangrene, but that it was better to describe the condition as a patient would describe the same to his physician and let the physician say whether it was infection or gangrene. The damages sought in this case were for an aggravation of the plaintiff’s existing condition, namely, Buerger’s disease, and therefore it was competent for the physicians to explain to the jury what, in their opinion, would be the effect of the injury, if they found that there was such an injury. The opinion of an *233 expert witness may properly be based on both a hypothetical state of facts and also on facts of which the witness has knowledge, if he has previously detailed those facts to the jury: Perkins v. Monongahela Valley Traction Co., 81 W. Va. 781 (95 S. E. 797, 800); Washington, Alexandria & Mt. V. R. Co. v. Lukens, 32 App. Cas. (D. C.) 442, 458; Slate v. Harris, (Mo.) 177 S. W. 362.

As quoted in defendants’ brief, from the case of Lippold v. Kidd, 126 Or. 160, 166 (269 P. 210, 59 A.

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Bluebook (online)
44 P.2d 731, 150 Or. 226, 1935 Ore. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-spokane-portland-seattle-railway-co-or-1935.