Jacoby v. Brooklyn, Queens County & Suburban Railroad

153 A.D. 352, 138 N.Y.S. 486, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9272
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 27, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 A.D. 352 (Jacoby v. Brooklyn, Queens County & Suburban Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacoby v. Brooklyn, Queens County & Suburban Railroad, 153 A.D. 352, 138 N.Y.S. 486, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9272 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Jenks, P. J.:

' The action is for negligence. The plaintiff, a passenger in the defendant railroad’s street surface car, when attempting to alight, stepped into a hole in the street and fell, to her injury. I think that the case was submitted to the jury properly, ■ and that neither the evidence nor the rulings justify disturbance of the finding that casts liability upon both defendants.

But I think that the verdict of $3,000 is excessive. The gravest injury complained of was a fracture or a partial fracture of the pelvis, permanent in its nature. If the jury considered this injury established it should not have done so; and if it did not, then the damages are far too large. The testimony germane to this feature was necessarily'medical, as such injury is occult to laymen and is somewhat a matter of uncertainty to medical men. All of the witnesses who spake to this injury were in a sense feed retainers of their respective sides, save the family physician of the plaintiff, and he doubtless had either received his professional fee or was in expectation of it. I comment upon the character of these witnesses because the criticisms and often hypercriticisms which are leveled at experts — that they are paid witnesses, chosen only after their favorable opinions are ascertained, who' testify free from the perils of perjury, secure in opinions which are essentially matters of their special knowledge — cannot obtain in this case, or at least are impartially applicable. There is no good reason why an expert whose relations to a case are purely professional, and whose competency exists perforce of his profession, should not be compensated, or why the fact of such compensation should of itself discredit him. So long as the present procedure as to expert witnesses is in force the criticism upon it should not be directed to the individuals who by it alone must be brought to the witness stand. My conclusion in. this case is not reached solely by comparison of the qualifications of these witnesses, but also [354]*354upon consideration of their testimony in articulation with the evidence.

Dr. Bogers, the attendant physician of the plaintiff,- testifies-that his examination determined that the plaintiff was suffering from a fracture of the pelvis, .which was permanent. He detailed at some length his reasons. On cross-examination he first admitted he did not absolutely determine the injury from his own observation; that he did not make such determination, and again, that from what he had found he diagnosed the case as one of fracture. He finally explained his testimony by saying that it is a matter of opinion, not of positive knowledge, and then denied that he had said that his determination was not the result of his own examination. He admitted that it was necessary to administer, an anaesthetic in order to reach a positive determination by examination, but that he had never pursued this course. He was not prepared to testify whether he did or did not say to a physician sent by the defendant railroad corporation to examine the' plaintiff, ‘ ‘ No, Doctor, there is no necessity for making any vaginal examination, because we do not claim that she is or has had an injury to her pelvic organs at all.” And, finally, in answer to the court, he testified that he. ascertained the condition of a broken pelvis when . he had the. X-ray picture before him..

Dr. Diefenbach, called by the plaintiff, testifies that in addition to general practice he is a specialist in X-ray pictures; that he examined and took an X-ray photograph of the pelvis, and the original plate was read in evidence. The first photograph was taken in December, 1909, eight months after the accident, and the second one December 2, 1910, more than a year and a half thereafter. He expresses the opinion that the photographs showed that there was a separation of the ilium, or a fracture of the upper portion, and he undertook to demonstrate from the photographs. He admitted, on cross-examination, that the radiograph is not a picture, or even a photograph, except in the sense that photographic materials are used in its production, but rather a special kind of projection, more like a slide for a microscope than a photographic view, and, therefore, that it was not wise for a layman, or even medical mentó depend too much on the lines and lights and shadows in the [355]*355X-ray picture unless they have sufficient experience. He was subjected to a very long cross-examination that tested the reasons for his opinion. He admitted that it was very difficult to tell about any of the pelvic bones.

Dr. Platt, called for the plaintiff, testifies that he had used the X-ray for his own purposes to ■ some extent; that he attempted to take an X-ray photograph of the plaintiff’s pelvis on two occasions without success, and that he made a local examination, externally and internally, to find pain and tenderness over the right hip, externally, and on the right side. He testifies that he had examined carefully the X-ray plates, and that, as the result thereof, and of his physical examination, he found a fracture of the ilium. The symptoms which induced such belief were the pain and tenderness — all that he found. Pie testifies that the usual symptoms of fracture of such bone are pain, tenderness, crepitus and abnormal mobility. He discovered no crepitus, which, he says, is difficult to find..

I will now review the medical evidence for the defendants. Dr. Williams examined the plaintiff on the 19th of April at her home, in the presence of her family physician, who gave the history of the case, and said that he thought the plaintiff had some kidney trouble on the right side, but made -no mention of a fracture. He testifies that he made a thorough examination, and details the examination. He determined that she was simulating the presence of pain, and says that he was not able to find any injury. There was no mention made of her foot, and there was no examination made of it. He .testifies that a woman with a broken pelvis would not be able to walk and do the things described by the plaintiff in her testimony, and is also of opinion that a woman could not possibly suffer a fracture of the pelvis from the accident as described by the plaintiff.

Dr. Grildersleeve, who made an examination of the plaintiff in the presence of her family ■ physician between 2 and 3 months after the accident, testifies that there was absolutely nothing the matter with her ” so far as he observed — that she had some little trouble incidental solely to childbirth. He, too, was of opinion that she was simulating, and detailed his experiments which led to this belief.

[356]*356Dr. Eastmond testified that he made a specialty of the X-ray diagnosis, and that he had made an examination of the plates in evidence, and that he was positive that neither one of the plates show any evidence of a fracture or half-fracture of the pelvis. He accounted in another way for the features of the plate upon which the witnesses for the plaintiff rested their belief of fracture.

Dr. Waterman made an examination of the plaintiff on October 4, 1909, in the presence of her family physician. He testifies that he. made a thorough examination, vaginal as well as rectal, and that he made her flex her body and move her legs; that the motions of the plaintiff were all normal, and that she was simulating.

Dr. Albee testifies that he examined the plaintiff’s photographic exhibits, and explains at'very great length that there is no indication of any fracture whatever therefrom — that he had no doubt whatever on the subject.

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Related

Cold Metal Process Co. v. United Engineering & Foundry Co.
83 F. Supp. 914 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1938)
Jacoby v. Brooklyn, Q. C. & S. R. Co.
139 N.Y.S. 1128 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 A.D. 352, 138 N.Y.S. 486, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacoby-v-brooklyn-queens-county-suburban-railroad-nyappdiv-1912.