O'Leary v. Scullin Steel Company

260 S.W. 55, 303 Mo. 363, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 736
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 22, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 260 S.W. 55 (O'Leary v. Scullin Steel Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Leary v. Scullin Steel Company, 260 S.W. 55, 303 Mo. 363, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 736 (Mo. 1924).

Opinion

*368 JAMES T. BLAIR, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment for $12,500 in an action which respondent brought for damages for injuries he alleges he suffered by reason of the negligent lowering of a section of a mold or flask by one of appellant’s crane operators.

The questions raised do not require a detailed statement of all. the facts. The immediate injury suffered by respondent was the “pinching out” of a part of the flesh of the first joint of his right thumb. This received treatment and appeared to heal. Soon after this injury a boil appeared above respondent’s right wrist. Sometime thereafter it was discovered that just below the elbow an infection had set in which subsequently involved the upper part of the ulna and necessitated a removal of the upper two-thirds of it. The principal issue seems to have béen whether the boil or the injury to the thumb was the cause of the infection of the ulna. Other facts appear in connection with the discussion of questions to which they pertain.

I. Appellant secured from the court stenographer a transcript of the evidence and made up its bill of exceptions, and delivered it to respondent’s counsel for examination. Several days thereafter respondent’s counsel served notice that they would file objections to this bill. Thereafter, counsel met with the judge, and respondent’s objections were *369 considered. After the discussion the trial judge retained the proffered bill for further consideration. A few days later he made several changes in the report of the testimony of Dr. Ross and that of Dr. Newman, and, without further notice, filed the bill as that of appellant. Subsequently appellant moved to set aside the order filing the bill. The motion was overruled. Thereafter, a second motion to set aside was filed and sustained. The proposed bill was then presented to Judge Killoren who had succeeded Judge Klene. He refused to sign it and based his refusal upon that of Judge Klene. Later, a bystanders’ bill was presented to Judge Killoren. On the ground that the trial judge had rejected it, Judge Killoren refused to sign and endorsed upon it the statutory certificated This bill was then deposited with the clerk. Affidavits in support of the bill and in opposition to it were filed by the respective parties.

The corrections of the transcript contended for by respondent and allowed by the judge affected questions asked of experts. The bill as prepared by appellant showed that these questions called for the opinions of the experts as to whether the injury to respondent’s thumb “caused” the infection and decay of the bone of his arm. The changes transformed these questions and answers so that the opinions appeared to have been given as to whether the infection could have been caused by the injury mentioned. This is characteristic of all the changes involved.

Two jurors signed the bystanders’ bill. The other signer was the official reporter of the trial court. Affidavits of the stenographer, an expert witness and of one of appellant’s counsel were filed. Affidavits of both of respondent’s counsel were filed. Judge.Klene’s affidavit was filed by respondent. The changes made were considerable’in extent and radical in character. The stenographer’s notes are shown to be of a sort that can be read by any one skilled in the shorthand system he uses. They were tendered in support of the transcript he made. The evidence makes it clear that notes which would rep *370 resent the words m the transcript as made by the stenographer could not be interpreted to represent the questions and answers as they stood after the changes wére made by the judge, either exactly or in substance. There is no contention that' the transcript the stenographer made is not an accurate interpretation or translation of the notes he made on the trial. The differences between the notes as taken and those necessary to represent even the substance of the questions and answers as changed by the judge are too radical and numerous to be accounted for on the theory that the stenographer merely erred in his taking notes of them. In fact, there seems to be no doubt that the stenographer must have deliberately written the questions and answers falsely, in shorthand at the time, if the corrections made by the judge are to be sustained. There are several other questions and answers of the same sort, open to the same objection, or supposed objection, which were not corrected or changed, and of which no complaint is now made by respondent and to which no correction was suggested by the trial judge. This weakens somewhat the force of the suggestion that the trial judge had the rule, now relied on by appellant, in mind at all times and would have sustained the objections based upon it if the questions and answers had been in the form shown by the stenographer’s transcript. This suggestion is further weakened when it appears’ that respondent’s counsel are confidently of opinion that the rule for which appellant contends is wholly inapplicable even if the questions and answers were as certified by the stenographer. Objections were made, and are shown by the transcript, which are quite inapplicable if the questions were asked in the form to which the court changed them.. The answers of Dr. Ross as shown by the transcript, and they are unchanged and unquestioned, are responsive to the questions as the stenographer shows them and are not responsive to the changed questions. As the stenographer’s transcript shows these answers, the witness gave his opinion that the injury to the thumb “caused” the infection of the fore *371 arm and that the boil on the wrist was ‘ ‘ a secondary infection, being from the injury to the thumb.” No motion to strike this out as not responsive was made. The point had been and continued to be a hard fought one. In answer to another one of the questions in controversy, Dr. Newman gave his opinion that the bone infection “resulted” from the injury to the thumb. The question, as shown by the bystanders7 bill, which follows the transcript, hypothesized certain facts and concluded: “I will ask you, in your opinion, what caused the infection to the upper arm, requiring the removal of the ulna bone?” The court changed this to the following: “T will ask you, in your opinion,” (if?) “the condition you found in the forearm requiring the removal of the ulna bone could have been caused by an infection setting in where the fleshy part was pinched from the thumb?” The witness answered: “I felt that the ease was a pure case of ascending infection, in which the infection from the lower part of the member had traveled up the arm.” “Q. And coming from where, Doctor?” Objection made and overruled. Respondent’s counsel: “The question is at what point the infection set in.” Objection renewed and overruled. Me. Fabick: “Q. To the best of your opinion, Doctor? A. My opinion is that the infection started at the injury at the base of the thumb, and that from there it traveled up and formed a slight infection above the wrist, and followed into the depths of the wrist, and getting into the bone it resulted in this condition. ” It is apparent these witnesses, at the time, understood the questions as the stenographer understood and wrote them and not as they appear in the forms to which they were changed.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 55, 303 Mo. 363, 1924 Mo. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oleary-v-scullin-steel-company-mo-1924.