Fishleigh v. Detroit United Railway

171 N.W. 549, 205 Mich. 145, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 475
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1919
DocketDocket No. 88
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 171 N.W. 549 (Fishleigh v. Detroit United Railway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fishleigh v. Detroit United Railway, 171 N.W. 549, 205 Mich. 145, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 475 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

Fellows, J.

Plaintiff brings this action to recover damages for personal injuries received by her in an accident occasioned by the collision of two street cars owned and operated by and on defendant’s system in the city of Detroit, on the evening of February 14, 1916. When the cars collided plaintiff was thrown forward, her knee or knees striking the seat in front; upon the recoil she struck the back of the seat, which broke, either as the result of her body striking against it or from others falling upon it, the car being crowded, and she was struck by the broken seat or a piece thereof, an iron rod along with the wood, across the lower part of the back. She was unable to extricate herself from the position in which she was wedged with her knees against the front seat and the broken piece of the seat pressed against the lower part of her back for several minutes, but was finally taken out by a policeman and placed in an ambulance and taken home. It is not seriously controverted but that she was confined to her bed for 14 months; nor that since she has been able to leave her bed that she is only able to go a few steps at a time with the aid of crutches, or a crutch and cane; nor that her present condition is a permanent one. Defendant contended in the court below and here contends that plaintiff’s condition was and is due, at least in part, to conditions antedating the accident, and to which we shall presently refer.

The plaintiff at the time of the accident was nearly [149]*14929 years old and was employed as a saleslady by the Crowley-Milrier Company, and was earning from eleven to twelve dollars per week. By her testimony she showed that in February, 1912, she was operated on for appendicitis, from which operation she says she speedily recovered. On September 30, 1913, she was accidentally shot, the bullet lodging in the twelfth dorsal where it still remains. She claims to have recovered from this accident and to have resumed her work the following spring. Her testimony, that of members of her family, her associates at the store, and her acquaintances tend to show that after she resumed her work she was in good health, suffered no inconvenience from the bullet, was of a cheerful disposition, a good saleswoman, very active in her work at the store, enjoyed society, was a musician, danced frequently at parties, weighed 150 pounds and in fact was until the accident in question in the enjoyment of perfect health. Photographs taken the summer before the street car accident show her to be apparently a robust, healthy woman.

The testimony adduced on behalf of plaintiff tended to show that during the 14 months after the accident that plaintiff was confined to her bed she was a great sufferer from pain, required the constant attendance of nurses, frequent visits of her doctor, sometimes as high as four or five a day, and generally at least two a day; her sufferings at times being so intense as to result in unconsciousness; that administration of morphine to relieve the pain was impossible, due to its nauseating effect upon her, and on a few occasions ehloroform was administered; that she would have spasms of pain, her limbs would cramp and be drawn up; that she had frequent chills and very hot applications had to be almost constantly applied; that it was difficult to move her, due to the extreme sensitiveness of the afflicted parts, and that her intense suffering [150]*150was practically continuous. The testimony also tended to show that she continued to suffer great pain after she was able to leave her bed; that she is unable to move any considerable distance, even with the aid of crutches, and that her present condition is that of a helpless, hopeless cripple. It is undisputed that in the summer of 1916 plaintiff was operated upon, and a portion of the coccyx (the lower tip of the spine) was removed, and that in January, 1917, she submitted to another operation and her right ovary was removed. At the time of the trial she weighed 981/2 pounds. The plaintiff’s medical testimony was to the effect that her condition was the result of the streetcar accident.

The defendant does not controvert the question of its- negligence. It insists, however, that the plaintiff’s, present condition is not due to the street car accident; that the operation for appendicitis has Something to do with undermining plaintiff’s health, and that the gunshot wound together with the presence of the bullet in the spine is the cause of the trouble. Testimony was adduced tending to show that the summer following her return to the store she was not in good health, that the gunshot wound continued to affect her, and that she often consulted a physician and continued to receive medical treatment for some time after she resumed her work, and that her condition after the gunshot wound was not that of a healthy woman. The medical witnesses called by the defendant conclude that the present condition of plaintiff is traceable directly to the gunshot wound and the bullet in the spine. It should be here stated that the declaration does not count upon an aggravation of a preexisting condition. Nor does the plaintiff claim by her declaration that as the result of the street car accident diabetes developed. Defendant by its testimony insisted that plaintiff is- now suffering from. [151]*151diabetes insipidus; and claimed that plaintiff could not under the declaration recover for an aggravation of a pre-existing condition, or if her present' ailment is diabetes insipidus she could not recover therefor because not alleged. Plaintiff did not controvert defendant’s legal claims as to what could be recovered for under the declaration, and the case went to the jury upon the conflicting claims of the parties as to thfe cause of plaintiff’s present condition. The jury returned a verdict of $23,000.

In this court it. is insisted that errors committed on the trial entitle defendant to a reversal. It is further insisted that errors were committed upon the trial, which, while not of themselves constituting reversible error, so prejudiced defendant’s case as to result in a grossly excessive verdict. And, finally, it is insisted that the trial court erred in not setting aside the verdict on defendant’s motion based on the grounds that it was excessive in amount and against the weight of the evidence.

Dr. J. B. Kennedy performed the operation on plaintiff for the removal of a portion of the coccyx at Grace Hospital, and was called as a witness by her. In giving his testimony he referred to the fact that charts were kept at the hospital. Upon his cross-examination he was inquired of with reference to the chart and one was produced by plaintiff’s counsel, and the witness was quite fully cross-examined about it. Then the following occurred:

“Q. Now, doctor, these are what they call the physician’s order or instruction sheet?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Now, accompanying that is kept in the hospital a daily record by the nurse, is there not?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Is that here?
“A. I have not seen it.
“Q. Have you that, Mr. Monaghan?
[152]*152“Mr. Monaghan: No. Maybe it is the one you have no right to over there, that I would like to see, that you probably took from one of the hospitals some
“Mr. Hall: Which one?
“Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
171 N.W. 549, 205 Mich. 145, 1919 Mich. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fishleigh-v-detroit-united-railway-mich-1919.