Smart v. Kansas City

91 Mo. App. 586, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 317
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 20, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 91 Mo. App. 586 (Smart v. Kansas City) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smart v. Kansas City, 91 Mo. App. 586, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 317 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

ELLISON, J.

— This action is for personal injury, caused to plaintiff by reason of her falling on one of defendant’s sidewalks. The cause of the fall is alleged to be a defective iron covering to an opening made in the sidewalk for the purpose of getting coal into the basement of an abutting building, whereby she stumbled and fell. The particular injury claimed as a result of the fall was a fracture of the right knee which resulted in the amputation of her leg about seven weeks thereafter. The judgment in the trial court was for plaintiff.

I. It is contended by defendant’s counsel that there was no evidence in the cause connecting the amputation of plaintiff’s leg with her fall on the walk. On this question, the record shows that the accident happened on the twenty-sixth of February, 1899. That for several years prior thereto plaintiff had been afflicted with tuberculosis in her right knee. That she had been in the city hospitals of Kansas City, Kansas, and Kansas City, Missouri, on that account several different times (sometimes remaining for a number of months), where she was treated for that disease by the city physician and examined by several surgeons attending on the hospitals; and at one time while there, in 1894, her knee was operated upon. That in consequence of this disease she was very lame. Her last discharge from the hospital, before the accident, was in September, 1898. She was still lame at the time of the accident. In short, there was much evidence at the trial tending to show that the amputation was made necessary by the disease of the knee. The only evidence connecting the amputation with the accident was the opinion stated by a physician in answer to a hypothetical question of plaintiff’s counsel. He stated in answer to that question that the injury [592]*592made the amputation necessary. But while the opinion of a physician based upon a hypothetical state of facts of which he has no knowledge himself, may be given in evidence in proof of the ultimate fact in question; yet if the matters assumed in the question to be facts are not true, the opinion is, of course, worthless, for the simple reason that it is based on a false assumption. In this case much of the material matter assumed in the question which elicited the physician’s opinion, turned out not to be true. The question assumed as true that for two years before the accident plaintiff “had the absolute, normal and free use of her limb.” The whole of the testimony for either party including that of plaintiff herself, showed that assumption to be untrue. So it was assumed in the question that immediately after the accident plaintiff was taken to a room and her leg examined by a doctor who found a dislocated and fractured knee cap. There was nothing upon which to base this. She was examined by a woman who stated she was not a doctor and that she could not tell whether there was a fracture. There were perhaps other assumptions not justified by the facts, but those mentioned will suffice to destroy all probative force of the physician’s opinion.

There was, then, no evidence connecting the injury with the amputation of the leg. But it may be truly said that a condition of injury may exist which, when shown, certain results may be inferred as flowing from it. But in this case, allowing, to the limit, the rule of legitimate inference of consequences following an injury, the most that can be said for plaintiff is that the whole evidence, taken together, shows that the amputation resulted either from the injury received by the fall, or from the diseased knee. Which of these two conditions was the cause can be only a matter of conjecture. When the injury complained of may have resulted from either of two causes, for one of which the party sued is liable and the other he is not, it is for the plaintiff to show with reasonable certainty that the cause for which the party is liable [593]*593produced tbe result. Searles v. Railroad, 101 N. Y. 661; Cotton v. Wood, 8 C. B. (N. S.) 568. If tbe state of tbe evidence is sueb as to leave it to be determined only by conjecture or surmise, tbe plaintiff must fail. Bond v. Smith, 113 N. Y. 378; Pauley v. Steam Co., 131 N. Y. 90; Linkbauf v. Lombard, 137 N. Y. 417.

Tbe Supreme Court of Massachusetts used the following language in disposing of a similar question: “There being several inferences deducible from tbe facts which appear, and equally consistent with all those facts, tbe plaintiff has not maintained tbe proposition upon which alone he would be entitled to recover. There is strictly no evidence to warrant a jury in finding that the loss was occasioned by negligence and not by theft. When the evidence tends equally to sustain either of two inconsistent propositions, neither of them can be said to have been established by legitimate proof. A verdict in favor of the party bound to maintain one of those propositions against the other, is necessarily wrong.” Smith v. First Nat’l Bank, 99 Mass. 605, 612.

So in the same line is the language of Judge Rombauee in Smillie v. St. Bernard Dollar Store, 47 Mo. App. 406, viz.: “That the evidence of such a connection may rest upon inference, we freely admit; but as we have repeatedly said, there is a wide difference between legitimate inference and bare conjecture. The mere concurrence in time of two facts does not legitimately give rise to the inference that- one is the result of the other.”

It was, therefore, error to give plaintiff’s instructions which permitted the jury to consider the fact that plaintiff’s leg was amputated. It is proper to state further that the record shows this not to be one of those cases where ample and direct evidence on a necessary issue, or subject, could not be had. It appears that several surgeons assisted in the amputation and had theretofore examined plaintiff’s knee. These [594]*594perhaps know the cause of the condition which made the amputation necessary.. They are accessible, and in such case there is no good reason why the case should be left so uncertain as to require conjecture to reach a conclusion.

II. A witness was permitted to testify that he had fallen over the same defect in the sidewalk, complained of by plaintiff. It has been determined by the Supreme Court that evidence of accidents to other persons at the same place, and caused by the same defect, could not be heard in support of the complaining party’s case. Goble v. Kansas City, 148 Mo. 470. It was therefore error to admit the evidence.

In Golden v. Railroad, 84 Mo. App. 59, we held that where lumber piled in the highway near the traveled track had frightened the horses attached to a vehicle in which plaintiff was riding, so that they ran away and injured her, it might be shown that other gentle horses had taken fright at the same object. That case is distinguishable from the one at bar and the Goble case, supra. The question in that case was whether the lumber, situated as it was, was an object likely to frighten horses, and we held that the fact that it did frighten horses was good evidence on that head. We likened the case to those in this State where the question was whether a particular engine had set fire to the complaining party’s property and it was held proper to show that that engine set other fires on the same trip. Patten v. Railroad, 87 Mo. 117; Campbell v. Railroad, 121 Mo. 348. But in cases like this and the Goble case, the question is not so much whether a defect is such as that one could fall over it, as it is whether in the particular instance complained of, the injured party would have fallen over it if exercising ordinary care in the particular circumstances in which he was placed.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Mo. App. 586, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smart-v-kansas-city-moctapp-1902.