De Maire v. Thompson

222 S.W.2d 93, 359 Mo. 457, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 637
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 11, 1949
DocketNo. 41092.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 222 S.W.2d 93 (De Maire v. Thompson) 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
De Maire v. Thompson, 222 S.W.2d 93, 359 Mo. 457, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 637 (Mo. 1949).

Opinion

*460 ELLISON, J.

The plaintiff appeals from an order of the circuit court of Christian county sustaining the motion for new trial of the defendant-respondent trustee of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company, in plaintiff-appellant’s suit for damages for personal injuries sustained while endeavoring, with the help of a co-employee, to close and latch the door of a sub-floor hopper on a railroad coal car at Cornell, Kansas. The jury had returned a verdict for $15,000 in favor of the appellant. Hence the appellate jurisdiction is in this court under Art. V, Sec. 3, Const. 1945.

We need not go into the details of the casualty, since only one point assigning error need be reviewed. This concerns the trial court’s action in sustaining the motion for new trial on the ground that appellant’s counsel had been guilty of prejudicial error in the cross-examination of the respondent’s witness B. F. Thomas, a car inspector,' concerning the Missouri Pacific Hospital Association, of which appellant was a dues paying member, and the practice of the hospital to disclose information concerning patients’ condition to railroad claim agents. Appellant had pleaded in his petition extensive permanent injuries to his arm, neck and general system, and also enforced expenditures of large sums of money for medical attention, hospitalization, nurse hire and drags. These cover nearly a full page of his petition as set out in the typewritten transcript here. Nearly seven pages of the transcript on his direct examination deal with his injuries.

The testimony for appellant was that his injuries consisted of severe and extensive inflammation and swelling in his right hand and arm, a lump or cyst on the back of his wrist, kernels under his arm pit indicating infection of a nerve leading to his heart, and producing fever, severe pain, sleeplessness and permanent heart trouble which probably would result fatally. He was 61 years old and had consulted *461 four physicians, all of whom he saw in Pittsburg, Kansas, where he lived. Of these Dr. Gish and Dr. Smith were railroad doctors. Dr. Newman was his family physician. He saw him first about five months after the casualty, and from then on about 100 times. Dr. Newman was the only medical witness for appellant.. He said his bill would be $225. Appellant said he had spent $25 or $30 for medicine and admitted his physician Dr. Hartman had told him it would be necessary for him to go to a hospital. But he did not go to the Missouri Pacific Hospital in St. Louis because, as he said, “they” meaning the railroad or its claim agent, did not send him.

Dr. Smith was the only medical witness for respondent. He had seen appellant twice, once in Pittsburg, Kansas, three days after the casualty, which occurred on January 22, 1947, and a second time in Springfield, Missouri, a few days before the trial, which began on May 27, 1948. He found no heart condition either time, and on the latter occasion considered appellant’s general condition much improved. His weight had increased and his blood pressure decreased, and the cyst on his hand had reduced in size about one-half.

It was respondent’s’ contention that appellant had been negligent and haphazard in procuring regular and proper treatment; that he had failed to avail himself of the facilities of the Missouri Pacific Hospital Association, of which he was a member, in the treatment of his condition; and by so doing had failed to reduce his medical and other expense. He was interrogated about that on cross-examination •and gave the answers above stated, without objection by appellant’s counsel. Neither did appellant claim the railroad hospital would not afford proper treatment, or that he preferred to entrust himself ■to the other medical care. ' His only explanation was that they did not “send” him to the St. Louis hospital. All this evidence was in refutation of the allegation in paragraph VI of appellant’s petition that he had been “forced to expend large sums of money for medicine, medical attention, hospitalization, nurse hire and drugs by reason of his injuries” (italics ours).

Later respondent called as a witness B. F. Thomas, who was a car • inspector and had been in the employment of the respondent for 26 years. Most of his testimony was about the design and structure of railroad coal cars with hoppers, the proper method of closing the hoppers, and whether the door of the particular car here involved was “sprung” or bent. But in addition to that he was interrogated concerning the Missouri Pacific hospitalization plan. No objection was made to this except that the witness had not shown himself qualified to testify on that subject. He stated he was familiar with it and the objection was overruled: Then he testified that employees paid “so much every month” and that they got “full benefits”, that is “anything necessary, they doctor you whether you are injured or *462 sick.” If any employee gets injured he could go to the hospital and receive all necessary medical attention without cost.

Under cross-examination by appellant’s counsel he said the employee would get an order to go to the hospital from his foreman. He didn’t know whether railroad doctors could issue the orders. Then he was asked: “Do you know if you went to the Missouri Pacific Hospital as an injured employee, the claim department of the Missouri Pacific received regular reports from the hospital about your condition and about how long you will stay there, and the nature of your injuries, and if you go there, the hospital doctors come to testify against you ? ”

Respondent objected on the ground that the interrogation embodied three questions in one, and the court overruled the objection. The witness asked that the question be repeated. Appellant’s counsel did so and the witness answered both as follows: “You know when you go into the Missouri Pacific Hospital for treatment as an injured employee the Claim Department of the Missouri Pacific Railroad receives regular reports from the hospital, and the attending railroad physicians report on your condition and future health, and about the length of stay you will be there ? A. I suppose they make some kind of a report on it, — yes. And you know the doctors come from the hospital and testify against you for the railroad? A. Well, I don’t know, but I suppose they do, — I don’t know.”

This time respondent’s counsel did not interpose an objection. But in the 32th assignment of their motion for new trial it was urged that the court erred in overruling the foregoing objection of respondent’s counsel to the question as first asked (quoting 'it) — “Because said question was particularly vicious and prejudicial to the defendant for the reason that the obtaining of medical attention by the plaintiff of competent medical advice was an important element in the defense of the case, and also had a tendency to discredit defendant’s medical testimony, who the evidence showed was a Doctor for said Missouri Pacific Hospital Association and had examined plaintiff in behalf of the defendant. ’ ’

In passing on the respondent’s motion for new trial, the trial court indicated a tentative view that the plaintiff-appellant’s instructions 2 and 3 were erroneous. This,, the court said, was because instruction 2 submitted only the negligence of the defendant-respondent (in failing to furnish a jack to close the hopper door).

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W.2d 93, 359 Mo. 457, 1949 Mo. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-maire-v-thompson-mo-1949.