Tompkins v. West

16 A. 237, 56 Conn. 478, 1888 Conn. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 7, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 16 A. 237 (Tompkins v. West) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tompkins v. West, 16 A. 237, 56 Conn. 478, 1888 Conn. LEXIS 37 (Colo. 1888).

Opinion

Loomis, J.

This is a suit to recover damages for a personal injury to Mary Tompkins, wife of the plaintiff John Tompkins, caused by the negligence of the defendants’ servant in the management of a horse and baggage-wagon while being used in the business of the defendants.

• Upon the trial of the case to the jury the plaintiffs claimed that Mrs. Tompkins had been internally injured in the chest, and that the injury produced frequent and serious hemorrhages, and that before the accident she had been generally healthy and strong.

On the part of the defense one of the most prominent claims was, that she could not have been internally in[484]*484jured as she claimed, because there were no visible external marks of injury on her person. To sustain this claim the defendants offered Dr. Paddock as a medical expert. On his cross-examination he was asked this question:-—“In your opinion as a medical man, can or cannot the tissue of the lungs be broken by outside pressure, strong, violent and sudden, if at the time the lungs were inflated with air, so as to produce hemorrhage without extravasation or visible external cause ? ” To this question the counsel for the defense objected, on the ground that it was leading, and was not legitimate cross-examination of anything as to which the witness had been inquired of or had testified, and because the testimony should have been offered in chief, and also because it was a merely hypothetical question, not based on proved or admitted facts. The plaintiffs’ counsel thereupon offered to make the witness his own. In the exercise of its discretion the court overruled the objection that the question was leading, and was not proper cross-examination, and that the testimony should have been offered in chief, and allowed it to be put, on the ground that it called (and the court found that it did) for an opinion upon facts admitted or claimed to have been proved in the case. The answer of the witness was in the affirmative.

This finding of the court would seem to remove the foundation of every objection made by the defendants’ counsel. The only objection urged in the argument before this court was that no evidence had been actually offered to prove that the lungs of Mrs. Tompkins were at the precise moment of the injury inflated with air. This was undoubtedly true, for the formal introduction of any such evidence would have been not only absurd but practically impossible. The question objected to could not have been understood as referring to any special or artificial inflation of the lungs, but only to such inflation as would occur during the regular process of respiration. As matter of common knowledge it was proper to assume as a fact that the lungs must have been so inflated :at intervals of a few seconds only, and it would follow from this that Mrs. Tompkins’s lungs might have been inflated [485]*485at the precise moment of the collision. The question having been answered in the affirmative tended directly to impair the defendants’ claim that she could not possibly have been injured as she .claimed in the absence of external marks of violence upon her person.

The other ruling as to the admission of evidence which the defendants complain of, is stated in the finding as follows :—The plaintiffs called in chief, partly as an expert and partly as one of the physicians who professionally attended,. Mrs. Tompkins after her injury, Dr. Nelson of New London, and asked him certain technical medical questions, reading them from a standard medical authority in order to make the question cl early intelligible to the witness. The defend- ' ants’ counsel objected to that mode of inquiry. The plaintiffs’ counsel withdrew the questions and answers, and verbally and from memory put them in substantially the same language. The counsel for the defendants objected, but the c.qúrt overruled the objection.

It does not appear what the objectionable questions were other than that' they were “ medical and technical.” The book read from was a “standard medical authority.” The-motive was to “make the question more clearly intelligible.” It is to be presumed that the question was relevant to the issue, inasmuch as the only objection mentioned was to the mode of inquiry. As that mode was altered by the counsel for the' plaintiffs in deference to the objection, we think the counsel for the defendants ought to have acquiesced. But had the mode been adhered to, we see no well founded objection to it under the circumstances. If a question is in itself .proper in form and relevant to the issue, it is not of the slightest consequence how it was suggested to-the mind1 of the interrogating counsel, and whether it was read from, a book or drawn from the storehouse of memory, and whether’, it-had reposed in the memory five minutes or five years-would seem equally immaterial.

- To require of counsel a learning in the technicalities of all the sciences, ample enough, without special preparation, to conduct intelligently a technical examination of an expert. [486]*486in such science, would not only practically deny his.right to conduct an examination or cross-examination, at all, but would virtually deny to a party the assistance of counsel .in many scientific matters.

The remaining question for our consideration relates to the charge of the court to the jury on the subject of the damages which the plaintiffs were entitled to recover. After stating to the jury that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover just damages for the injuries which Mrs. Tompkins received, the court added:—“And in estimating these you are to consider her peril and-danger, the nature and extent .of her injuries, her physical and mental pain and. suffering, the expenses of her sickness, the duration of her illness and disability, and any other circumstances tending to prove the direct loss and damage she has sustained or must sustain from that negligence.”

The alleged error consisted in telling the jury that in estimating Mrs. Tompkins’s damages they should consider the expenses attending her sickness.

Had she been unmarried and had she sued as a feme sole, the charge would have been entirely correct. • The ordinary rule of damages for an injury of this kind was accurately stated, but by mere inadvertence'the court failed to modify that rule so as to adapt it to the ease of a suit by a married woman for her personal injury. In such oases it is clear that the right of action, so far as the expenses are concerned, is in the husband alone. It was his duty to pay such expenses and the presumption is he did so. It was error therefore to- include them as part of her damages. Fuller and Wife v. Naugatuck Railroad Co., 21 Conn., 557. For this error a new trial must be granted, unless we can say that it did not .prejudice the defendants. - If the instructions were heeded and the jury included these expenses it was a material error, for the defendants would still be liable to an action in favor of the husband alone for the same items.

But the counsel for the plaintiffs cites sundry eases showing how astute courts have often been and ought to. be in sustaining verdicts regularly obtained, and to this end he [487]*487invokes the benefit of certain principles laid down in those cases. While confessing a hesitation and reluctance to disturb the verdict in this case, we think the principles involved in behalf of the plaintiffs are not fully applicable.

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Bluebook (online)
16 A. 237, 56 Conn. 478, 1888 Conn. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-west-conn-1888.