Dewitt v. Johnson

1935 OK 60, 41 P.2d 476, 170 Okla. 625, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 786
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 29, 1935
Docket22785
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1935 OK 60 (Dewitt v. Johnson) 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
Dewitt v. Johnson, 1935 OK 60, 41 P.2d 476, 170 Okla. 625, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 786 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Beulah B. Johnson, a minor, sued to recover damages for personal injuries on account of being struck and knocked down by an automobile owned and operated by the defendant, Ernest Dewitt. Damages were claimed for pain and sxiffering, impairment of strength, injuries to her leg and stomach, and permanent injuries. The jury awarded a verdict to the plaintiff in the sum of $2,000. From the judgment rendered, after motion for new trial was overruled, the defendant Dewitt appeals. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the court below.

From the record it appears that plaintiff, a young child of seven years, was struck by a Hudson sedan being driven by the defendant on October 1, 1929, at the intersection of Second street and Keeler avenue in the city of Bartlesville. At the time of the accident defendant was driving west on Second street, and plaintiff was attempting to go from the north side of the street to the south side of Second street. She was traveling in the lane or space marked off for use of pedestrians; and was a little more than half way across at the time she was struck by the defendant’s car. The plaintiff’s eyewitnesses testified that the rear wheel of the car ran over plaintiff’s body. Defendant and the young lady riding with him at the time could not say whether the car ran over plaintiff or not. The evidence, however, amply sustained plaintiff’s charge of negligence, the defendant himself testifying that he did not see the plaintiff or know he had struck her until “Daisy,” the young lady riding with him, “hollered that he had struck a child.”

The defendant first contends that the trial court erred in permitting the mother of the plaintiff to testify concerning expressions of pain and suffering made to her by the plaintiff, some of them occurring long after the accident.

The plaintiff is a child of tender years, and there was no showing at the trial that these complaints were not spontaneous and natural, but the defendant urges that plaintiff’s testimony concerning the same is hearsay and inadmissible. In support of this contention, defendant cites several cases from New York, one from Georgia and a federal court ease from the Ninth Circuit, holding that unless made to a physician or as part of the res gestae, evidence of complaints of pain and suffering are not admissible.

The general rule is well stated in 64 A. L. R. 557:

“It is a well settled general rule that, where the bodily or mental feelings of a person are to be proved, the usual and natural expressions and exclamations of such person which are the spontaneous manifestations of pain and naturally flow from the pain being suffered by him at the time, are competent and original evidence which may be testified to by any party in whose presence they are uttered.”

And in support of this rule, cases are cited from Alabama, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Kansas, Kentucky, and many other states. In the same annotation it is said:

“The facts that expressions of present pain are made long after the injury is received will not render them inadmissible.”

AYigmore on Evidence (2nd Ed.) vol. 3, pp. 684, 687, has the following to say concerning the admissibility of pain statements:

“The general requirement (as the pre *627 ceding quotations indicate) is merely that the statements shall be the spontaneous and natural expressions of the pain or suffering. This principle has in some cases been applied with extreme liberality. The main difficulty here has arisen over the question whether the rule is to be restricted to accounts of symptoms given by a patient in consultation with a physician for the cure of the illness. The origin of this supposed limitation seems to have been the language of Chief Justice Bigelow in a much cited Massachusetts opinion having some difficulties of interpretation. Barber v. Merriam, 11 All. 322. (Quoting therefrom.)
“***Such has been the construction of the language in Massachusetts: and a general limitation to physicians is today not recognized in that state, nor in most jurisdictions, as having anything to do with ordinary present pain statements.
“But in New York and a few other jurisdictions following the New York rulings, the doctrine has been established (apparently by a misconstruction of the widely quoted language in Barber v. Merriam) that all pain statements whatever are subject to the general limitation that they must have been made to a physician during consultation.* * *
“The truth seems to he that the New York limitation is inconsistent alike with precedent, with principle, with good sense, and with itself. Unfortunately, however, its place as a local, anomaly has not always been perceived, and courts in several other jurisdictions have accepted the physician-limitation of the, modern New York cases as if they represented the orthodox rule. Tn a few other jurisdictions the limitation has been expressly or impliedly repudiated; in the remaining jurisdictions the orthodox rule, making no such limitation, would presumably be perpetuated.”

In the ease of Strudgeon v. Sand Beach, 107 Mich. 496, 65 N. W. 616, it was expressly held that' exclamations of pain made by a child In his own home, even though during the pendency of suit, were admissible, the court saying:

“In the present case, the exclamations were made by a child of tender years, in Ills own home, and not in the presence of any medical attendants, and under circumstances which indicated that they were natural and ordinary exclamations -of jpain culled out by the suffering of the plaintiff, and not- by any motive of making testimony for himself.”

Under the authorities cited in Wigmore and 65 A. L. R. 557, supra, as well as the cases referred to in vol. 22 of Corpus Juris, at page 267, the general rule seems to be that evidence of complaints of pain and suffering if spontaneous and natural are admissible whether made to a physician or any-' one else. We prefer to follow the general rule rather than the New York physician-limitation rule, and accordingly hold that the trial court did not err in admitting the testimony of the mother of plaintiff concerning the complaints made to her by the plaintiff tending to show pain.

The defendant next contends that the trial court erred in giving to the jury instruction No. 8, relating to contributory negligence. That instruction is as follows:

“You are instructed that the defendant has interposed, as one of his defenses in this case, what is known in law as contributory negligence. And, in connection therewith, you are instructed that contributory negligence in this case is an act or omission on the part of the plaintiff amounting to a want of ordinary care, which concurring or co-operating with the negligence of the defendant, is the proximate cause of the injuries of the plaintiff. If, therefore, you find that the plaintiff was negligent, which directly and proximately contributed to her Injuries, and you find that such negligence directly or proximately contributed to plaintiff’s injuries, then the plaintiff cannot recover.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 60, 41 P.2d 476, 170 Okla. 625, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dewitt-v-johnson-okla-1935.