Consolidated Traction Co. v. Lambertson

36 A. 100, 59 N.J.L. 297, 30 Vroom 297, 1896 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 36 A. 100 (Consolidated Traction Co. v. Lambertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Traction Co. v. Lambertson, 36 A. 100, 59 N.J.L. 297, 30 Vroom 297, 1896 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 34 (N.J. 1896).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Magie, J.

It is first argued that error appears in the-refusal of the trial judge to nonsuit the plaintiff below.

The claim is that upon the evidence given by Lambertson,. he was so clearly guilty of negligence contributing to his injury that the case should have been taken from the jury. Lambertson’s narration of the occurrence may be summarized thus: He was driving in a public street on which the trolley cars of the traction company ran, and turned his horse to cross one of the company’s tracks, although he saw a car coming toward him “ as fast as it could ” upon that track, the car being, when he started to cross, about three hundred feet away. Although he had but a short distance to traverse and his horse was going on a “little trot,” the car struck his wagon between the front and hind wheels.

The contention is that Lambertson, before attempting to cross the track, must have seen that the ear was being driven recklessly and at an excessive and illegal rate of speed, and that it was as imprudent to attempt to cross in front of it as it would have been to attempt to cross in front of a team of runaway horses. But the comparison is inapt, and it is plain that if the jury believed Lambertson’s story of the occurrence there was a question for them in respect to his prudence or imprudence in crossing the track.

The rights of Lambertson and the traction company to use the street for the passage of their respective vehicles were-exactly the same with a single exception. Because the cars of the company cannot deviate from the tracks, other vehicles must give way to them when there is occasion for them to-pass. But neither Lambertson nor the company could drive their vehicles at a rate of speed incompatible with the safe and customary use of it by other vehicles or by foot passengers.

[299]*299Whether or not it must necessarily be inferred from Lambertson’s statement that the car was moving “as fast as it could,” that he must have known it was being run in an illegal manner, may, perhaps, be doubted. But assuming such an inference must be drawn, it does not necessarily follow that he should have concluded that the car would continue to be driven in the same way. He who puts himself in the way of runaway horses who have escaped from the driver’s control, must know that he is taking a risk. But a jury may well, say that he who crosses in front of a trolley car provided with a motorman, may assume that it is furnished with the means of stopping or reducing speed. Then there was a question for the jury in this case whether a prudent man, upon such an assumption, might not judge it safe to cross in front of a trolley car three hundred feet away, although coming at great and illegal speed. Upon the assumption of the existence of means to reduce speed and to stop, and of a servant employed to make use of such means, it would be absurd to say that one was bound to refrain from crossing for fear the servant would not make use of the means.

It is next argued that the trial judge erred in refusing to give such instructions as were requested in respect to the evidence of two medical experts who were witnesses in the cause.

It was not contested that these witnesses were qualified to testify as experts. They were called by Lambertson and permitted to express an opinion in respect to the probable duration of the suffering and disability which he claimed resulted from his injury.

It appears from the bills of exception that each of these witnesses made a separate personal examination of Lambert-son, with a view to forming an opinion upon that subject. Both admitted that their opinion was in part based upon statements made to them by Lambertson, respecting his pain and its locality and what is called in the argument his past and then present symptoms.

The case does not show any exception sealed to' the admis[300]*300sion of this evidence, nor does it appear that the trial judge was asked to strike it out of the case. But the counsel of the traction company requested him to direct the jury to ignore the evidence of the experts in respect to their opinion as to the probable duration of Lambertson’s suffering and disability, if they believed that opinion was based wholly or in part upon his statements of his past or present symptoms or upon statements of his present sufferings, not instinctive exclamations or ordinary and natural expressions of pain.

The trial judge refused to charge in those respects otherwise than he had charged. On this subject he had charged that the evidence was admissible, but its weight was for the jury, and that in determining its weight they might consider whether Lambertson’s statements, on which the experts’ opinions were partly based, were otherwise shown to be true.

That this direction of the trial judge was not erroneous to the injury of the traction company cannot be questioned in this court.

In the case of State v. Gedicke, 14 Vroom, 86, this subject was considered by this court. Evidence of the opinion of a physician, an expert witness, as to a woman’s pregnancy, was held to be admissible, although that opinion was in part founded upon her statement of her feelings. And it was further held that such an expert witness might be permitted to tell what such statements were.

This decision obviously precludes any discussion of the subject in this court. In saying this I do not intend to intimate any doubt as to the propriety of the conclusion reached in that case. All I intend to indicate is that it would, be a waste of time and labor to review it here.

It is true that it is argued that the Gedicke case is distinguishable from this, in that in the former case the statements upon which the expert’s opinion was based were made by a person not a party to the suit, while in this case they were made by a person who was a party to the suit and deeply interested. But obviously this objection is effective, not as to the admissibility of the evidence, but as to its weight when admitted.

[301]*301Whether the trial judge erred in his direction to the jury that in determining the weight to be given to the opinions of 'these experts, they might consider whether or not the statements of Lambertson, on which those opinions were in part based, were shown to be true by other evidence, need not be-considered, because if such direction was erroneous it was-not an error injurious to the traction company, the present plaintiff in error.

It was lastly argued that it was erroneous in the trial judge to refuse to charge certain requests respecting the condition of the motor power of the car which came into collision with the wagon of Lambertson.

There is nothing in the bills of exception to indicate that it was claimed that the collision could be attributable to the bad condition of the motor power of the car. In the course of the trial the motorman was called as a witness, and, upon cross-examination, denied that he had stated to certain persons that the motor was out of order. Those persons were afterward called in rebuttal and testified that he did make such statements to them. But the trial judge was careful to direct the jury that such evidence could not be used to establish the fact that the motor was out of order, but only to-affect the credibility of the motorman as a witness. In this we think he did all that was required of him, and was not bound to charge as requested on this subject.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 A. 100, 59 N.J.L. 297, 30 Vroom 297, 1896 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-traction-co-v-lambertson-nj-1896.