Ehat v. Scheidt

120 P. 49, 17 Cal. App. 430, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 55
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 878.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 120 P. 49 (Ehat v. Scheidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ehat v. Scheidt, 120 P. 49, 17 Cal. App. 430, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 55 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

HART, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff to recover damages for personal injuries which the complaint alleges were inflicted upon him by the defendant.

The action was tried by the court, a jury, having been waived by the parties, and judgment was awarded plaintiff in the sum of $500.

This appeal is by the defendant from the judgment and the order denying him a new trial.

The points urged by the appellant against the validity of the judgment and the order are that certain rulings of the court respecting certain evidence were illegal and harmful to the defendant and that certain findings are not supported by the evidence.

The facts are these: The plaintiff, a man sixty-five years of age at the time he received the injuries complained of, was indebted to the defendant in the sum of $16.75. On the nineteenth day óf July, 1909, the plaintiff was working as a laborer in a box-yard in the city of Fresno. In the forenoon of that day, the defendant, accompanied by an Italian by the name of Toschi, went to the box-yard, where they met plaintiff. The defendant spoke to the plaintiff about the indebtedness referred to, asking him for payment of the same. An acrimonious discussion ensued, which was finally followed by a fight, with the result, according to the story of plaintiff, that the latter was severely beaten and seriously injured by the defendant.

The plaintiff, after the trouble ceased, was assisted by a man named Arieta to a physician’s office, where his bruises and injuries were given medical attention.

1. The plaintiff was permitted, over an objection interposed by defendant, to describe the nature of his injuries. The spe *433 eific reason urged against that testimony was that it could amount to no more than an opinion and a conclusion of the witness. We see no force in-the objection. The plaintiff, while not an expert on such matters, was competent to give in a general way an approximately correct description of the bruises and other injuries received by him. Besides, the doctor who waited on him, dressing and otherwise attending to his various wounds, gave to the court a detailed and technical description of plaintiff’s injuries, and the testimony of plaintiff on that subject harmonized, generally, with that of the physician. The testimony objected to could not, therefore, have in any event prejudiced the rights of the defendant. Nor did the court err in allowing the plaintiff to state the wage rate he was receiving for his labor up to the time he was injured. The testimony disclosed that plaintiff earned his living as an ordinary laborer; that, on account of the injuries inflicted upon him by defendant, he was confined to his home for eight days, and has, since the trouble, according to his statement, been unable to do the amount of labor he was capable of performing prior to receiving the injuries. The earning capacity of the plaintiff, prior to receiving the injuries complained of, in the business which he had customarily followed, was a proper element to be considered in the assessment of damages. (Zibbell v. Southern Pac. Co., 160 Cal. 237, [116 Pac. 513].)

The court did not err in allowing Arieta, who accompanied the plaintiff to the doctor’s office, to state what transpired at said office after the arrival of plaintiff there. The witness merely described, as well as he knew how, what the doctor did in preparing to treat plaintiff and what he did in order to reset plaintiff’s dislocated shoulder. The testimony, while practically without any force in any direction, tended, if anything, to corroborate the doctor as to the treatment to which it was necessary to subject the plaintiff for the injuries upon his body.

The objection to the testimony offered in rebuttal by the plaintiff to impeach the witness, Toschi, who testified for the defense, cannot be sustained. It appears that the witness testified with respect to the circumstances of the trouble between the parties before the police court of the city of Fresno, the defendant having been in said court prosecuted upon a *434 charge of battery growing out of said trouble. It appears that his testimony given at the trial of the case at bar varied in some particulars from that given by him at the trial in the police court.

On his cross-examination by counsel for plaintiff in the present ease, the witness’ attention was called to the disparity between his former testimony and that given in this trial, and his reply as to whether he had made the former statements was, “I don’t remember,” or “I remember not saying that.”

Hayden, attorney for plaintiff, having been present at the trial in the police court, and also the police judge, took the witness-stand in this action for plaintiff in rebuttal, for the purpose of testifying to the statements made by Toschi at the trial in the police court which it was claimed were inconsistent with his testimony in the trial of this case.

One of the objections urged here against the competency of Hayden and the police judge to testify in impeachment of Toschi is that the latter is an Italian, speaks the little English that he is capable of using imperfectly, and gave his testimony at the police court trial through an interpreter, and that Hayden and the police judge were, therefore, permitted to testify only to what the interpreter said that Toschi stated. In other words, it is contended that Hayden’s testimony, as well as that of the police judge, in the present trial was hearsay. But the difficulty about this objection -is that there is absolutely nothing in the record showing that Toschi did not testify in the English language in the police court.' Nor is there any showing that Hayden and the police judge do not understand the Italian language. It does appear, however, that Toschi could speak to some extent in the English language, though imperfectly, for he declared in the present trial in English that he understood certain language (giving it in English) used by the plaintiff in addressing the defendant. In any event, as indicated, the record is not such as to make the objection here considered available to the appellant.

But it is further objected that the matter to which the impeaching testimony was addressed was in its character collateral, and, therefore, not subject to-impeachment.

The theory of the defense was that the defendant and Toschi went to' the box-yard for the purpose of looking after some boxes which had been left there by a neighbor of the defend *435 ant, and that the latter met the plaintiff on the occasion of the affray by mere accident. .The plaintiff’s theory at the present trial, as was presumably true at the trial in the police court, was that the real purpose of the defendant’s visit to the box-yard on that day was to meet the plaintiff and secure from him a settlement of his indebtedness to defendant.

Toschi testified in the police court that he and the defendant went to the box-yard together, but that he did not know the purpose for which the visit was made.

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Bluebook (online)
120 P. 49, 17 Cal. App. 430, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehat-v-scheidt-calctapp-1911.