Missouri, K. T. R. Y. of Texas v. Smith

172 S.W. 750
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 24, 1914
DocketNo. 1365. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 750 (Missouri, K. T. R. Y. of Texas v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri, K. T. R. Y. of Texas v. Smith, 172 S.W. 750 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

WILLSON, G. J.

(after stating the facts as above). [1] By his own testimony and that of his wife appellee proved that, as a result of injuries he received, he was rendered impotent and incapable of sexual intercourse. 1-Iis testimony was admitted without objection, but appellant afterward moved to strike same out, on the ground that the pleadings did not authorize it. The testimony of the wife was objected to when offered, on the same ground. It is insisted that the court erred when he refused to strike out the testimony of appellee and when he overruled the objection made to that of his wife.

The allegations in the petition relied upon as a sufficient basis for the rulings made are set out in the statement above. It will be noted that appellee averred that the injuries he suffered had caused “progressive degenerative diseases of 'the spinal cord to set in” and had “set up a degenerative pro *752 cess and condition in the plaintiffs brain and •other organs, causing plaintiff to have, among other afflictions and troubles, a partial paralysis oí his left side,” and, further, .that the “injuries among other things have caused a degeneration of the central nervous system to the impairment of his mental capacity,” etc. No effort was made by exceptions interposed to the petition to have ap-pellee to specify the “other organs” than the brain affected, nor the “other afflictions and troubles” than the paralysis suffered, as charged, because of the “degenerative process and condition” caused by the injury to the spinal cord, nor to specify the “other things” beside impairment of his mental capacity, alleged to have been caused by the “degeneration of the central nervous system.”

The rule, as settled in this state, is:
“That a general’ allegation of damages will let in evidence of such damages as naturally and necessarily result from the wrongs charged; but, to admit proof of damages which do not necessarily result from the injury alleged, the petition must set up the particular effects claimed to have followed the injury.” Campbell v. Cook, 86 Tex. 630, 26 S. W. 486, 40 Am. St. Rep. 878.

In the application of this rule in the case cited, the Supreme Court held that allegations charging the injuries suffered by the plaintiff to be the “breaking and crushing the bones of his hip and thigh, tearing, cutting, and lacerating his flesh, bruising, wounding, and injuring him in his back, bowels, hips, legs, and other parts and members of his body,” were not sufficient as a basis for testimony that the plaintiffs “capacity to have sexual intercourse with his wife was greatly impaired.” The court said:

“There was no injury alleged to .have been inflicted upon any organ or member of the body from which ‘impairment’ would naturally, not to say necessarily, follow.”

In the application of the same rule the Supreme Court held in the later case of City of Dallas v. Jones, 93 Tex. 38, 49 S. W. 577, 53 S. W. 377, that allegations that the head, body and limbs of plaintiff’s wife “were terribly injured and bruised, whereby her brain was affected, and her spine injured and rendered diseased, and whereby she was permanently and seriously injured, and caused to suffer great pain, mentally and bodily, and her nervous system was shocked and her health destroyed, and whereby he sustained loss of services of his wife to him and her children and family, and plaintiff was compelled to incur large sums of money for medicines and doctor’s bills, and lost the comfort and services and society of his wife, who has been rendered a hopeless invalid, requiring constant service and attendance of her husband and others,” were broad enough to admit testimony that the wife “could not stand sexual connection, and that, as it caused her pain, plaintiff did not enjoy it.”

In the Jones Case, as in the Cook Case, there was no allegation of an injury to any organ or member of plaintiff’s wife’s body which one unacquainted with the relation and dependency of one part of the body on another or other parts thereof could say would either naturally or necessarily result in her incapacity to endure sexual intercourse. The practical difference between the two cases, we think, lies in the fact that in the Jones Case a physician testified that an injury to the spine, if it did not cause complete paralysis, frequently had the effect to “lower the nervous system,” and, when suffered by the wife, “would be apt to cause conjugal relations to be unpleasant to her,” and another physician testified that he thought the “sexual act would throw her. into spasms.”

If the ruling in the Jones Case was based upon that point of difference, then it ought to be regarded as justifying the ruling made by the trial court in this case, for on the trial a physician (Dr. Wheat) testified as follows:

“This condition of impotency we find in this man (appellee), in my opinion, is due to the same trouble I have recited in the other cases; that is, damage to that part of the spinal cord that controls the power of erection. When a man has erection, that is controlled by a certain part in the spinal cord, and when you damage certain parts in the cord it destroys that altogether. The power of erection is not in the spinal cord, but the control of the power of erection is there. Yes; an injury to the central nervous system of sufficient severity will cause the loss of the power of erection. Yes; impotency is one of the natural things to follow an injury of that kind.” '

Appellant insists, however, that the allegations should not be considered in the light of such testimony, and in support of its contention argues as follows:

“Suppose that a pleader, in alleging an injury to the brain, should aver ‘that the concussion totally destroyed the function of the fissure of Rolando.’ The works on anatomy and surgery teach that such an injury must with absolute certainty result in the complete paralysis of all the extremities, and to the mind of one versed in those sciences such an allegation would convey the fact of such paralysis as a natural and necessary consequence of such alleged injury. That such would be the consequences of the injury is a matter of scientific knowledge, and not of general or common knowledge, and we submit that under our rules of pleading, liberal though they be, evidence of paralysis of the extremities would not be received. The legal inference of a fact from a given one only obtains where the laws of nature, as commonly understood, make it impossible for the one fact to exist without the other.”

It seems to the writer that in the case supposed the evidence should be received as within the rule, if it was made to appear by expert testimony or otherwise that the paralysis was the “natural and necessary” result of the injury alleged. As'he understands the rule, it is the fact that a given consequence naturally and necessarily follows an injury alleged that renders testimony that that consequence followed the injury admissible, and not the court’s knowledge thereof. If the-rule means that it must be a matter of common knowledge that a given consequence-will naturally and necessarily follow an in *753 jury alleged before testimony is admissible to prove sucb consequence, then it is a useless one, for it is never necessary to prove matters of common knowledge. Railway Oo. v. Qurry, 64 Tex. 88.

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172 S.W. 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-k-t-r-y-of-texas-v-smith-texapp-1914.