Cramer v. Hurt

55 S.W. 258, 154 Mo. 112, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 6, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 55 S.W. 258 (Cramer v. Hurt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cramer v. Hurt, 55 S.W. 258, 154 Mo. 112, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 160 (Mo. 1900).

Opinion

BTJEGESS, J.

This is an action by plaintiff against the defendant, a practicing physician, for damages in the sum of five thousand dollars for producing an abortion upon plaintiff’s wife, Oellantine Cramer, and in so doing using upon her body and womb certain surgical instruments, by reason of which she became greatly wounded and diseased of her body, sick, and her life endangered, and she wholly unable to perform her domestic duties, as his wife', and to give him such social companionship and to perform such social and conjugal duties as he is entitled to from her, and for moneys expended ,by him for medicine for her and for medical services.

The answer admits that Oellantine Cramer is the -wife of plaintiff; that defendant is a practicing physician; that she called upon him on the 25th day of July, 1895, for treatment, and was treated by him, and alleges that such treatment was according to his best judgment and skill, and denies all other allegations in the petition.

By reply all new matter set up in the answer is denied.

There was a verdict and judgment for defendant, and after unsuccessful motion for a new trial plaintiff appeals.

There was testimony tending to sustain the allegations in the petition, as well also as the defense set up in the answer.

During the trial Mrs. Cramer was offered as a witness in behalf of her husband, but upon objection by defendant upon the ground that she was incompetent to testify on the part of her husband she was not permitted to testify.

Over the objection and exception of plaintiff the defendant who was introduced as a witness in his own behalf was permitted to testify concerning information which he acquired from the wife of plaintiff while attending her in a professional character, by an examination of her body and from conversation with her, which was necessary according to his testimony in order to enable him to treat her, as well also as to the conversations had between himself and her with respect to her [116]*116condition and the treatment necessary in her condition, what he said to her, etc., and in this ruling plaintiff insists that the court committed reversible error.

By section 8925, Revised Statutes 1889, a physician or surgeon is prohibited from testifying concerning any information which he may have acquired from any patient while attending him or her in a professional character, if such information is necessary to enable him to prescribe for such patient as a physician, or to do anything for such patient as a surgeon and unless this statute does not mean what it says, or the necessities of the case are such as to render the testimony competent notwithstanding the statute, or the privilege accorded by the statute to plaintiff’s wife of suppressing as evidence information acquired by the defendant while attending her in a professional capacity was waived by her and her husband by the institution of this suit, or by the offer of Mrs. Cramer by plaintiff as a witness in the case, the position seems to us to be well taken.

This statute was intended for the protection of the patient against the disclosures of information obtained by a physician in course of his employment as such without the consent of the patient, and in this case unless such evidence was admissible upon the ground of the exigencies of the case, or such privilege was waived by the plaintiff, the evidence objected to was not admissible.

Under the Michigan statute upon the same subject, which is substantially the same as ours, the Supreme Court of that State in construing it in Railroad v. Martin, 41 Mich. loc. cit. 671, said: “The objection that a physician can not reveal with his patient’s consent what he has learned during his treatment, is one which if valid, would render it impossible in either civil or criminal cases to use the'only testimony which would show the nature and extent of disease. The statute is one passed for the sole purpose of enabling persons to secure medical aid without betrayal of confidence. It is [117]*117only a question of privilege, and such communications are on the same footing with any other privileged communications which the public has no concern in suppressing when there is no desire for suppression on-the part of the persons concerned.” [See, also, Groll v. Tower, 85 Mo. loc. cit. 254.]

But defendant contends that the necessities of the case are such as to render the testimony of defendant competent. In Henry v. Sneed, 99 Mo. 407, it was held that plaintiff and his wife might testify as to conversations between themselves as to the transaction in question, as part of the res gestae, and also on the ground of fraud, and this because of the necessity of the matter.

So where a husband, in furtherance of the fraud of others, prevailed upon his wife to sign a note and incumber her property, in the absence of other evidence, and in order to expose the fraud in all its details, it was held that a court of equity would because of the necessity of the matter permit both husband and wife to testify with respect to the conversations had between them in regard to the transaction. [Moeckel v. Heim, 134 Mo. 576.]

"While under the general common law rule Mrs. Henry and Mrs. Moeckel would have been incompetent to testify in these cases, their husbands being their co-parties the rulings in them are justified upon the ground of the matters testified to by them being within their own personal knowledge, and their testimony a matter of necessity. So in the case at bar, the facts to which the defendant was permitted to testify with respect to the condition of Mrs. Cramer, his treatment of her, and the facts obtained from her with respect to her condition were within the exclusive knowledge of her and himself, no other person knew of their own personal knowledge anything about them, and, while it must be understood that such evidence can not be admitted, merely because other evidence of the facts can not be obtained, yet iná suitagainst a physician by the husband for damages, where it is clear that no other person [118]*118besides himself and the wife knows anything personally about the facts, and the proof of such facts are necessary in sus-' tenance of his defense-, it is not error to permit him to testify to such facts in order to prevent injustice being done. “Eor, where the law can have no force but by the evidence of the person in interest, there the rules of the common law, respecting evidence in general, are presumed to be laid aside; or rather, the subordinate are silenced by the most transcendent and universal rule, that in all cases that evidence is good, than which the matter of the subject presumes none better to be attainable.” [1 Greenleaf on Evid. (14 Ed.), sec. 318.] There was, therefore no error committed in this regard, notwithstanding the inhibition in the statute before quoted. _

But it must for the same reason follow that Mrs. Oramer is a competent witness for her husband, notwithstanding at common law as a general rule a married woman is incompetent to testify in behalf of her husband.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W. 258, 154 Mo. 112, 1900 Mo. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cramer-v-hurt-mo-1900.