Jones v. President of Portland

16 L.R.A. 437, 50 N.W. 731, 88 Mich. 598, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 572
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 16 L.R.A. 437 (Jones v. President of Portland) 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
Jones v. President of Portland, 16 L.R.A. 437, 50 N.W. 731, 88 Mich. 598, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 572 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Champlin, C. J.

This action was brought to recover compensation in damages for a fall caused by a defective cross-walk in the village of Portland, which the village authorities neglected to keep in repair. The plaintiff recovered judgment, and the defendant brings the case here by writ of error.

The injury was received on July 20, 1888, about 9 o'clock in the evening. This was on Friday; and on the evening of Tuesday, which was the 24th, Dr.. Grant and Dr. Logan, of Ionia, came to see plaintiff. She had not at that time employed them, but they were employed by .her husband, who was a lawyer. He engaged these physicians for the purpose of prescribing for his wife, and for the purpose of preparing them as witnesses to testify in a suit which was to be brought to recover damages against the village. The latter purpose would seem to be the principal one. Both of them understood that to be the object when they took the case and first went to see Mrs. Jones. During the summer previous Mrs. Jones had been ill, and she then had employed Dr. Alton and Dr. Ilugg to attend her. Although she did not send for nor employ the Ionia physicians in the first place, she ratified what her husband had done, and submitted to an examination by and treatment from them. This suit was brought September 15, 1888, and some of these examinations were made before and some- after suit brought. The physicians were allowed to testify to her complaints and to her statements of pain made during the examination made by them; also as to tenderness and [600]*600pain in the region of her back, hip, and genital organs. They discovered a slight discoloration on the left hip, and a fullness at her right knee, which were the only indications which they found of any ailments, and which, independently of her assertions that she had been injured, they would have attributed to rheumatism.

The questions presented by the assignments of error upon this branch of the testimony are:

1. Is it competent for a physician to testify to exclamations of pain made by a party who is being examined by such physician, when such party contemplates bringing a suit to recover for the injury which she claims to suffer, and when such physician is employed with a view and for the purpose of giving testimony in such suit so-to be brought?
2. Is it competent for such physician to testify to such ■exclamations and statements of the party upon examination made after suit is brought, and for the purpose of giving the same in evidence?

The plaintiff claims that such testimony is admissible, under the following authorities: Hyatt v. Adams, 16 Mich. 180; Johnson v. McKee, 27 Id. 471; Elliott v. Van Buren, 33 Id. 49; Mayo v. Wright, 63 Id. 32.

Hyatt v. Adams was an action on the case against a physician for malpractice in treating the plaintiff’s wife, causing her death within four days. All thez-e is in the ■opinion upon this subject is found in a single paragraph upon page 200, and reads as follows :

“The court did not err in admitting the evidence of exclamations of pain and suffering uttered by the deceased, and her complaints as to the natuz’e of her suffezdng duzúng and after the opezution, though some of them were in the absence of the defendant. This is the natural and ordinary mode in which physical pain and suffering az’e made known to others, and the only mode by which their natuz’e and extent can be ascertained. Such exclamations and statements are therefore original evidence. But it was, of couz’se, open to the defendant to show, or to raise an inference, if he could, that they [601]*601•were feigned, or intended to deceive. They were clearly admissible as tending to show the malpractice of the •defendant, though not for the purposa of aggravating the damages.”

It will be noticed that the admission of the evidence ■was confined to a single fact to be proved, and that was the malpractice of the defendant; and it was expressly stated that it was not admissible for the purpose of ■aggravating the damages. That case is not analogous to this. The exclamations of Mrs. Jones to her physicians, made four days after the accident happened, could in no manner tend to prove that she met with a fall upon a •sidewalk through the negligence of defendant. It would ■not be competent testimony to prove the main fact in this way from statements of the party. ' The only bearing it could have legitimately would be to aggravate the damages, and the 'case cited is authority that it is not admissible for that purpose.

Johnson v. McKee, 27 Mich. 471, was not a ease of negligence, but of assault and battery. Testimony was received showing the statements by plaintiff at various times concerning his pains and bodily sufferings. These •were objected to as- hearsay statements, and as declarations in his own favor. It was held by the Court that,—

“So far as they were not narrations of past as well as present sufferings, it has been well settled that such statements of present feelings are facts which furnish the best, and often the only, evidence of such physical con-ditions as are not open to discovery by the sight or other .senses of witnesses.”

The question was no further considered.

Elliott v. Van Buren, 33 Mich. 49, was an action for .an assault and battery, and the Court said:

“The declarations of a sick person, made from time -.to time, concerning, present sufferings and sensations [602]*602(not being relations of past occurrences), are the usual' means of evidence where third persons testify on the-subject.”

Mayo v. Wright, 63 Mich. 32, was an action brought against a physician for malpractice in setting a broken-leg, in which the same principle was asserted and applied..

None of these cases were actions for negligence, but the causes of action were the direct act and misfeasance of the defendant, and the testimony was admissible as-bearing upon the wrongful act alleged. In each of them, also, the exclamations were at a time when motives to-, make testimony favorable to the party in a suit such party had brought or contemplated bringing were absent.. In this case it must be borne in mind that the witnesses were employed with a view of a suit to be brought, so-far as was' connected with two at least of the examinations made by them, and after the suit was brought, as to the other testimony relating to her exclamations or statements of pain and suffering made to them.

In Grand Rapids & Indiana R. R. Co. v. Huntley, 38 Mich. 544, this Court had occasion to pass upon the-competency of testimony of physicians employed as “a. mere auxiliary to a lawsuit.” Chief Justice Campbell,. in giving the opinion of the Court, said:

<cIt has been held several times by this Court that statements of pain and of its locality were exceptions to-the rule excluding hearsay evidence. * * * These-statements are admitted only upon the ground that they are the natural and ordinary accompaniments and expressions of suffering. It would be impossible in most cases-to know of the existence or extent or character of pain without them. They are received, therefore, as acts, rather than declarations, and admitted from necessity.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Zimmerman
189 N.W.2d 259 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1971)
Kobmann v. Ross
133 N.W.2d 195 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1965)
State v. Clarkson
265 P.2d 670 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1954)
Rockafellow v. Streeter
51 N.W.2d 249 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1952)
Pearce v. Rodell
276 N.W. 883 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1937)
Degroot v. Winter
247 N.W. 69 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1933)
De Haan v. Winter
241 N.W. 923 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1932)
Herter v. City of Detroit
222 N.W. 774 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1929)
Ross' Case
126 A. 484 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1924)
Ginsberg v. Burroughs Adding Machine Co.
170 N.W. 15 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1918)
Matthews v. Lamberton
165 N.W. 748 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1917)
Texas & N. O. R. Co. v. Stephens
198 S.W. 396 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)
Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. Jackson
1917 OK 45 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1917)
Granger v. Farrant
146 N.W. 218 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1914)
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Co. v. Williams
158 S.W. 494 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1913)
Marshall v. Wabash Railroad
137 N.W. 89 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1912)
Drake Coal Co. v. Croze
130 N.W. 355 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1911)
People v. Tomalty
111 P. 513 (California Court of Appeal, 1910)
Gilbert v. Ann Arbor Railroad
125 N.W. 745 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1910)
Mississippi Central Railroad v. Turnage
49 So. 840 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 L.R.A. 437, 50 N.W. 731, 88 Mich. 598, 1891 Mich. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-president-of-portland-mich-1891.