Hickenbottom v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad

25 N.E. 279, 122 N.Y. 91, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1578
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 279 (Hickenbottom v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hickenbottom v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad, 25 N.E. 279, 122 N.Y. 91, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1578 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

Bradley, J.

In October, 1885, at ¡Newark, ¡N*. J., the plaintiff, while in the act of getting on board the defendant’s train of cars to return to the city of ¡New York where he [96]*96resided, fell upon the track and received severe and permanent injuries. He charged that they were occasioned solely by the negligence of the defendant in not giving him a reasonable time to get onto the train before it was started. And upon that subject the evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove that when he reached the train and proceeded to get aboard it was standing still at the station; that he. stepped onto the step of the car, and with one hand took hold of the front railing of its platform, when, by the sudden starting of the train with a jerk, he was thrown from it, fell under the car, and in that manner received the injury complained of. There was some conflict in the evidence on the subject, but that on the part of the plaintiff permitted the jury to find that the injury was caused by the negligence of the defendant and without any fault of the plaintiff; and that, question, as well as that whether or not the damages awarded by the verdict were excessive in amount, were, for the purpose of this review, disposed of by the court below. The injury resulted in the amputation of the plaintiff’s right arm near the shoulder. The plaintiff testified that he has since-experienced pain, seemingly in his amputated arm and hand, and that such painful sensation has continued up to the time of the trial. That -the pain he suffered has been gradually-getting less, except the sensation of a swollen hand, which constantly and still continued. Later in the trial a physician called as a witness was, by the court, asked this question: In your opinion as a medical man, following an accident such as here described, and an amputation, does it follow that the patient experiences the pain of an imaginary hand and lower part of the arm % ” which, after objection on the ground tha-t it was immaterial and incompetent was made, overruled, and exception taken by the defendant, the witness answered: It-is not the rule, but it frequently happens.” The reason urged in support of the exception is that such pain was imaginary and a mere delusion, and not the direct or natural result of the injury. The plaintiff had mentioned this as part of the painful suffering he had endured after the accident and the [97]*97amputation of his arm. And whatever was its nature, if his statement was true, the sensation was that of pain and the Vesult of the injury. His bodily pain resulting from which was properly the subject of proof and consideration. (Ransom v. N. Y. & E. R. R. Co., 15 N. Y. 415; Curtis v. R. & S. R. R. co., 18 id. 534.) And if this sensation of suffering from it actually existed and was attributable to such cause, the evidence came within the rule of admissibility. Pain is hut the sensation of .a condition which produces it," and the fact that it seemed to the plaintiff to come from or to be in the hand and the amputated arm, as if their connection with the body remained, is only descriptive of the pain he suffered. It was no less the subject of consideration because the location of it was deceptive. The pain resulting from the injury is the fact to which his evidence related. And assuming that the sensation of it was such as the plaintiff testified it was, it cannot, as matter of law, be said that, it was without some natural cause. In that view it was presumptively competent to make the inquiry that was made, of a medical witness, whether the pain as represented by the plaintiff’s evidence was the necessary consequence of the condition produced by the crushing and severance of the plaintiff’s arm. As it cannot be assumed that there was any want of good faith on the part of the plaintiff in permitting the amputation to be, as it was made, it is not, for the purposes of the question, important whether such painful sensation following the injury was to some extent attributable to the manner in which the surgical operation was performed. It may be treated as within the result of which the injury, occasioned by the alleged negligence of the defendant, was the proximate cause. (Lyons v. Erie R. Co., 57 N. Y. 489; Sauter v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 66 id. 50.) It did not appear, by preliminary examination of the doctor or otherwise, that the answer sought by the question asked him, was not • the subject, of expert evidence, and upon the objection taken the question of his competency to give an opinion was not raised. (Stevens v. Brennan, 79 N. Y. 255; In re Crosby v. Day, 81 id. 242.) The question put [98]*98to the witness was proper, and the ruling permitting him to answer it was not error, although a portion of the answer not strictly responsive may not have been competent as evidence. When the witness answered that such consequence was not the rule, he had gone as far as he was necessarily called upon by the question to speak, and what he added to that may not have been competent, as the evidence of itself did not, with any degree of certainty, relate to the plaintiff’s condition. That such may have been the effect of his injury is not proof that it was so. (Griswold v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 115 N. Y. 61; 44 Hun, 236.) But as there was no refusal of the ■court to strike out the answer of the witness, or any portion of it, the question as to competency of the latter part of it is not here for consideration. (Crippen v. Morss, 49 N. Y. 63; Planter v. Planter, 78 id. 91.)

At the conclusion of the general charge the court was requested by the plaintiff’s counsel to further charge the jury “ that the defendant was bound, under the circumstances of this case, as presented by the plaintiff, to allow him a reasonable time in which to get on the train, and is responsible for any injury resulting to him from the slightest motion of the car during the entrance of the plaintiff as such passenger in ■such reasonable time,” to which the court responded: I so charge,- subject to the qualification that I charged before. That is the law, of course, if a passenger presents himself as a passenger to get aboard the train before the conductor has actually ■signaled the engineer to start.” The defendant’s counsel ■excepted. This proposition, which the court was so requested to charge, standing alone, did not embrace all the elements of fact requisite to the responsibility of the defendant for the injury sustained by the plaintiff. But by reference to the -charge which the court had just made, it is seen that the jury were fully and correctly instructed upon the subject of negligence of the defendant and the freedom of the plaintiff from negligence, essential to charge the defendant with liability. The court submitted to the jury the question whether the plaintiff indicated to the agents of the defendant there that he [99]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 279, 122 N.Y. 91, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickenbottom-v-delaware-lackawanna-western-railroad-ny-1890.