Packet Co. v. Hobbs

58 S.W. 278, 105 Tenn. 29
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 58 S.W. 278 (Packet Co. v. Hobbs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Packet Co. v. Hobbs, 58 S.W. 278, 105 Tenn. 29 (Tenn. 1900).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

The Arkansas River Packet Co. prosecutes this appeal in error from a judgment [31]*31for $4,000 obtained against it by B. A. Iiobbs, in the Circuit Court of Shelby County, for personal injuries, -which it is alleged to have wrongfully and negligently inflicted upon him while disembarking from one of its passenger steamers, at his logging camp on the Mississippi Kiver, about seventy-five miles below Helena, Arkansas.

The first assignment of error complains of the action of the Court in permitting the plaintiff to display and exercise his injured leg before the jury. A stenographic report of what was done and said at this point in the trial is found in the record as a part of the bill of exceptions.

It' is in this language: “Mr. McCulloch, plaintiff’s attorney: ‘If your Honor please, we wish h> introduce Mr. Hobbs again, for the purpose of' showing the jury his injured limb.’

“Court: ‘All right.’
“Mr. McCulloch, question: ‘Show your injured knee to the jury. Stand down here on the floor. Can you pull up the leg of your pants ?’
“Witness, answer: ‘Yes, sir.’ (Here the witness, rolled up his pants above his right knee, the one alleged to have been injured, showing the naked flesh.)
“Mr. McCulloch, question: ‘Is it the same size-as the other knee ?’
“Witness, answer: ‘No, it is longer and it bends in toward the other leg.’
“Mr. McCulloch, question: ‘Show how that is„ [32]*32Mr. Hobbs. Let tbe jury see bow it affects your movements.’ (Witness here moved bis leg to and fro.)
“Mr. McOullocb, question: 'Stand up, Mr. Hobbs.’ (Tbe witness did so.)
“Mr. McOullocb, question: 'Can’t you stand any straigbter on your injured leg?’
“Witness, answer: 'No, sir; it is crooked or bent, as you see.’
“Mr. McOullocb, question: 'Now stand on your left leg.’ (Witness did so.)
“Mr. McOullocb, question: 'Oan’t you stand straight on your injured leg?’
“Witness, .answer: 'No, sir. ,1 can’t bear much weight on it.’
“The defendant’s attorney declined to cross-examine on tbe matters mentioned by tbe witness, and objected to tbe whole examination, and each and every question thereof, as incompetent; but tbe Court overruled tbe objection, and tbe defendant then and there excepted and reserved tbe benefit thereof.”

The assignment made in this Court is, that “the trial Court erred in permitting Hobbs, tbe defendant in error, to strip bis right limb naked and exhibit same to tbe jury during tbe trial, and manipulate and use tbe injured knee in their presence for tbe apparent purpose of showing to them bow and to what extent be was affected by tbe injury, because this was an ex-[33]*33bibit or practical photograph two years after the alleged injury, and because the manipulation thereof could be used to a greater or less extent to exaggerate the hurt and mislead the jury as to its real and practical extent.”

It is worthy of remark at this point that, although the objection made below embraces all that the plaintiff said and did upon being recalled to the stand, and the assignment presented here challenges all of his physical acts, the defendant’s learned counsel at this bar candidly concedes that it was permissible for the plaintiff to exhibit his injured member and make oral statements about it, and criticizes only that part of the ruling which -allowed what he denominates the manipulation and use of the leg in the presence of the jury; the reason for the criticism, as .stated, being that the plaintiff was thereby, at the discretion of his counsel and without the requirement of the Court, afforded a practical opportunity to make a misleading exaggeration of the real extent of his injuries.

The ascertainment of truth is the true and ultimate object of every judicial inquiry; and, as a general rule, all evidence is competent which, according to the nature of the fact whose truth is submitted to investigation, may fairly and reasonably facilitate that object.

The particular matter for whose elucidation the [34]*34testimony now in question was introduced was tbe extent of the plaintiff’s injuries. That was the matter under investigation at that stage of the trial, and the jury, whose peculiar province and duty it was to ascertain the same, was, therefore, entitled to the advantage of all available information calculated in its nature to facilitate the ascertainment of the real truth.

ITow could that investigation have been better promoted, and the .attainment of that end better secured than by the course adopted in this instance, with the privilege of all legitimate cross-examination of the adverse party.?

In reality the method was a superior one; and, as a result, it produced a higher order of evidence than is usually attainable, in that it added physical illustration and demonstration to oral statement, and impressed the Court and jury through the sense of sight as well as through that of hearing.

It may be true that a designing witness can exaggerate the true condition of an injured limb by false and constrained movements, and yet that cannot render the performance of physical acts inadmissible as evidence any more than the equally obvious fact that he may give undue and false coloring to his oral statements, renders him incompetent to testify by word of mouth. That objection might be urged against all human testimony, but it goes only to the question of weight or [35]*35credibility, and. does not reach that of competency or admissibility.

Nor does the fact that tbe plaintiff exhibited his naked limb, and by its movement further illustrated its defects, of his own volition, upon the request of his counsel and without the requirement of the Court, affect the legal aspect of the evidence. What he did was done in the presence of the Court and by its express permission first obtained; and, besides, if there is any difference in point of admissibility between such acts when voluntarily performed and when unwillingly done by order of Court, the advantage is with the former.

There is great • contrariety of judicial opinion in respect of the power of the Court to compel the exhibition of the injured member, and about that we express no opinion, as the question is not now before us; but the authorities are practically unanimous in favor of the proposition that the plaintiff may voluntarily exhibit the member with a view of showing the nature and extent of the injury, and we think the grounds upon which that privilege is so generally justified, with like force justify the voluntary performance of physical acts which are in themselves fit and appropriate as illustrations of the same fact.

The Court held, in Selleck v. Janesville, 41 L. R. A., 563, 565, that it was competent for the plaintiff, who 'sued for personal injuries, “to ex-[36]*36bibit her actual condition to the jury” by being-carried into their presence and there giving her testimony while lying upon a lounge and being administered to by her physician.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 S.W. 278, 105 Tenn. 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packet-co-v-hobbs-tenn-1900.