Roenbeck v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad

123 A.D. 606, 108 N.Y.S. 80, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 128

This text of 123 A.D. 606 (Roenbeck v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roenbeck v. Brooklyn Heights Railroad, 123 A.D. 606, 108 N.Y.S. 80, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 128 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Rich, J.:

The action is to recover damages for a personal injury sustained, as alleged, through the negligenqe of defendant’s servants in the operation of one of its cars, which the plaintiff was endeavoring to board. The main contention presented by defendant’s counsel is that plaintiff’s tubercular condition, which developed subsequent to the accident, was not shown to be due to the accident, and that the trial court erred in admitting proof of this condition over defendant’s objection and exception. The record discloses that the plaintiff’s wife died from consumption about one year before the accident. Prior to his exposure by contact to the infection of consumption, with which disease she was infected, the general condition of plaintiff’s health had been good, and he was a strong, healthy man; he testifies that shortly after her death he began to run downj developed a cough, had night sweats, did not feel well and lost several pounds' in weight. About four months after the death of his wife his condition. became such that he consulted Dr. Shepard, who had attended Mrs. Boenbeek during the latter part of her illness, who, knowing that she died with consumption, made a careful physical examination of plaintiff, and especially of his lungs, using 9, stethoscope in addition to the other means employed. He testifies that the only objective symptoms of an affection of the lungs that he found were moist rales in the upper part of one and a difficulty in respiration, which, considered with the plaintiff’s statement to him that he had night sweats and a cough, and was losing flesh, caused him to suspect incipient phthisis, and he prescribed creosote and malt, which is the first remedy usually prescribed and used in incipient consumption. Dr. Shepard treated the plaintiff about a month, during which period he saw and examined him three times. He was greatly improved on the occasion of his last visit, and his recovery had been such that it does not seem to [608]*608have been necessary to continue treatment longer. Hr. Shepard testified that he acted on his judgment as a medical man that plaintiff had tuberculosis, and gave him creosote as a remedy; that he regarded his suspicion that incipient- tuberculosis existed well founded, or he would not have given him a medicine like creosote. The plaintiff testified that after his treatment by Hr. Shepard he felt better in every way, and his cough disappeared. About a month before the accident he had a bilious attack and called on Dr. He Waltoff, to whom he stated that his wife died of consumption the previous year, following which he developed a cough and consulted a physician who gave him creosote ; that the cough had disappeared, but he had been feeling sick to his stomach and suffered from headaches and wanted to be examined. The doctor' made a careful and thorough, examination, and fohnd everything normal except a coated tongue indicating biliousness. He used a stethoscope, sounded his lungs by hammering the chest over them, took his temperature," gave him medicine for biliousness and-directed him to call again in about- two' weeks, at which time lie made another equally careful examination. The biliousness had disappeared, and the doctor discovered nothing not normal. From that time to .the time of the accident the plaintiff testifies that he . was feeling perfectly well. He was injured. by being thrown to the pavement, striking on his face, while' attempting to board one of defendant’s cars, bruising his knees and chest. The same Dr. De Waltoff who had examined him first a month before and again two weeks before the accident, was called to the drug store to which plaintiff had been carried after being' injured, where- he dressed his wounds, after which plaintiff was taken home. ' About midnight he was again called and found the plaintiff suffering from a chill and complaining of a pain in the chest over his right lung, for which condition he prescribed; he" called again the next morning, when l^e found plaintiff’s temperature 102 degrees, which denoted fever, and a pleuritic condition which the doctor described as “ pleurisy with probably localized pneumonia in some spot of the lungs, but my diagnosis was pleurisy. The man had' an acute-attack of pleurisy.” He spit blood, which on the first visit the doctor attributed to his broken teeth, but on this visit ascertained did not Come from the condition of the teeth, and he decided that [609]*609it came from the lungs. During the next two weeks plaintiff developed a hacking cough, and the- physician resorted to creosote preparations. From this time the plaintiff gradually grew worse until on September 25, 1906, when he applied for admission to a sanitarium in the Adirondacks, an examination by Dr. Miller, the examining physician, disclosed that he was . suffering from tuberculosis affecting both lungs.

This evidence- being in the. case, the plaintiff called as an expert Dr. J. Sherman Wight who, in response to a carefully prepared hypothetical question, stated that plaintiff’s condition prior to his injury and at the times he was examined by Drs. Shepard and De Waltoff, established an arrested incipient tubercular invasion-with a latent focus of disease still residing in the chest; that the existence of incipient tuberculosii, was established by plaintiff’s condition when examined by Dr. Shepard, and its arrest by his condition when examined just before the accident by Dr. De Waltoff, and that the effect of the blow received upon the chest when thrown to the pavement was to light up and start anew the latent tubercular condition, with the final result shown by the plaintiff in this respect at the time of the trial; that in the. absence of such blow upon the chest, or-some other active agency interfering to excite-and start the latent tubercular condition, the plaintiff would have continued in his ordinary pursuits without exhibiting any symptoms of pulmonary or lung trouble.

It is not disputed that incipient consumption of the lungs may be arrested in its progress and remain dormant during a man’s life, unless excited into activity by some active caus.e, nor that a blow upon the chest over a lung, in which such disease has .been arrested and lies dormant- may excite and start such disease anewbut it is urged that no proof sufficient to warrant the assumption of the' existence of incipient tuberculosis at .the time of Dr. Shepard’s examination, which it is insisted was included in the hypothetical question asked Dr. Wight;-'had-been made by plaintiff; -and for that reason the evidence sought o£ him as an expert was incompetent and his answers speculative. - .

. -We do not concur with the learned-counsel in this contention. A careful examination of the hypothetical question discloses no fact [610]*610not warranted by.the evidence. The terms “incipient tuberculosis ” and pneumonia ” were carefully excluded, and the condition óf the plaintiff as' testified to by himself and his physicians who examined him,’ w:as stated- in their own language. Its assumptions were supported by the evidence, and the testimony of Dr. Wight based thereon was competent, and, considered with the other evidence in the case, sufficient to sustain the conclusion of the jury that the consumptive condition of plaintiff at the time of the trial was the proximate result, of the blow on the chest, received when he was thrown from the car of the defendant, for the. result of which the defendant was liable. . . .

The complaint alleged that as the result of the injury the plaintiff was made sick, sore, lame and.

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Bluebook (online)
123 A.D. 606, 108 N.Y.S. 80, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roenbeck-v-brooklyn-heights-railroad-nyappdiv-1908.