Missouri & North Arkansas Railroad v. Daniels

136 S.W. 651, 98 Ark. 352, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 13, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 651 (Missouri & North Arkansas Railroad v. Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri & North Arkansas Railroad v. Daniels, 136 S.W. 651, 98 Ark. 352, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 171 (Ark. 1911).

Opinion

Frauenthal, J.

This was an action instituted by Mattie Daniels, plaintiff below, to recover damages for personal injuries which she alleged she sustained in alighting while a passenger from one of defendant’s trains at the station of Batavia, Ark. She alleged that when she was descending the steps of the coach to the depot platform the conductor in charge of the train took hold of her arm and carelessly and negligently jerked her, causing her to fall to the depot platform; that in falling she struck her knee on the edge of the platform, and twisted her body to such an extent that it resulted in a prolapsus of the uterus. The defendant denied all allegations of negligence attributed to it or its employee, and 'denied that plaintiff had sustained any fall, alleging that the condition of her womb was due to a displacement which she had sustained long prior to the alleged injury.

There was a sharp conflict in the evidence on the question of whether the plaintiff fell as she descended from defendant’s train at Batavia, and also as to the cause of the condition of her uterus. The testimony on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove that on February 27, 1909, she became a passenger on one of defendant’s trains en route from Harrison to Batavia, arriving at the latter station the same evening after dark; that while she was descending the steps of the coach the conductor stepped up on the last step and grabbed her by the arm, jerking her down so as to cause her to fall and strike her left knee on the edge of the platform. Her knee was cut, and her leg bruised, and in falling her body was twisted so that it caused her severe pains in her back and resulted in a displacement of her womb. The testimony tended to prove that inflammation set in, developing into a growth of tumors, known as polypi, whioh necessitated an operation within a few months thereafter, and that on this account she had been an invalid from the date of her injury; and there was testimony tending to prove that such injury was permanent. Dr. Fowler, a physician, was introduced by plaintiff, and he testified that he had examined her subsequent to the date of the injury, and had attended her for several months thereafter, and that she was suffering from a prolapsus of the uterus, which might have resulted from her fall; and this witness detailed the nature and extent of her diseased condition, and the consequent growth of the polypi in the womb.

The plaintiff testified that prior to the injury she was strong and in good health, and had been engaged in various kinds of hard work, such as general house work and laboring in the field.

There were a number of witnesses who testified on behalf of the defendant that they were at the station and saw the plaintiff as she was descending from the train, and they testified that they did not see her receive any fall. Defendant also introduced testimony tending to prove facts and circumstances occurring immediately after the plaintiff had left the train indicating that she 'had received no injury from any alleged fall.

The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and we think that there was sufficient evidence to sustain its finding.

Defendant does not contend that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury, nor does it contend that the amount returned by them was excessive. It urges only that there were errors committed by the lower court in the rejection and admission of evidence, and in its rulings upon the instructions.

During the progress of the trial the defendant introduced two physicians who had attended on the plaintiff about two years prior to the time of the alleged injury, and offered to prove by them that she had sustained a displacement of the womb at that time, and had suffered from that trouble long prior to the date of the alleged injury. The plaintiff objected to the admission of this testimony, and her objection was sustained by the court.

It is conceded by the defendant that the information which the testimony of these witnesses would have disclosed was acquired by them while attending the plaintiff as physicians; but it contends that the evidence was admissible because the plaintiff had waived her right to object to the introduction of any testimony relative to her condition by reason of having herself introduced the testimony of Dr. Fowler, above referred to.

It is provided by section 3098, Kirby’s Digest, that “no person authorized to practice physic 'or surgery, and no trained nurse, shall be compelled to disclose any information which he may have acquired from his patient while attending him in a professional character, and which information was necessary to enable him to prescribe as a physician or to act for him- as a surgeon or trained nurse.” This enactment was manifestly made for the benefit of the patient. Its evident purpose was to ‘throw around him a protecting ¡shield, so that he might freely and fully disclose to ¡his physician every fact relative to his ailment with the confident knowledge that the information thus obtained could not be divulged to his injury or disgrace. Being for his benefit, the provision was adopted out of reasons of public policy as a privilege accorded ¡solely to the patient; and, like any other privilege, it is one that the patient may waive. By the terms of this statute, a physician is prohibited from disclosing information obtained while treating his patient; but it has been uniformly held by the -courts of those jurisdictions having similar statutes that the provisions thereof must receive that construction which was intended by the Legislature which framed them, and that is, that -the patient himself may waive the privilege of the statute in -order to obtain the benefit of the physician’s evidence. When this privilege is waived as to any particular witness, the opposing side is entitled to the benefit of the waiver as to suoh witness. But the benefit of -such waiver in behalf of the adversary should not extend further than to the witness who has been called by the patient, or as to other physicians who may have been present upon the same occasion to wh-ic-h the witness testifies. By virtue of the statute, the patient alone is given the right to -remove the ban of secrecy. The patient -may be willing to waive the objection of in-competency as to a particular physician in whom he reposes confidence, -an-d yet be unwilling to waive this objection as to another, who treated him at a different time for the trouble complained of. The statute affords him this privilege, when the testimony of the offered witness does not relate to the -same occasion as that from which the patient has removed the seal of secrecy.

In the case of Hope v. Troy & Lansingburgh Rd. Co., 40 Hun 438, the rule is laid down that when this privilege is waived by the patient as to any particular witness, the adversary is entitled to die benefit of the waiver as to such witness, but is not entitled thereby to call another physician who had treated the patient at a different time to. testify relative to the matter. This' case was affirmed later by the Court of Appeals of New York (Hope v. Troy & Lansingburgh Rd. Co., 110 N. Y. 643).

We think this rule sound.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 651, 98 Ark. 352, 1911 Ark. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-north-arkansas-railroad-v-daniels-ark-1911.