Washington, Baltimore & Annapolis Electric Railroad v. Kimmey

141 Md. 243
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 21, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 141 Md. 243 (Washington, Baltimore & Annapolis Electric Railroad v. Kimmey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington, Baltimore & Annapolis Electric Railroad v. Kimmey, 141 Md. 243 (Md. 1922).

Opinion

TTrkver, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The derailment, in July, 1919, of a ear' of the defendant, in which the plaintiff was a passenger, resulted in an injury to the side of her body, which is claimed to have produced frequently recurring uterine hemorrhages. Upon the theory that this physical condition, to which the plaintiff was proved to be subject, was attributable to the shock and injury sustained in the accident, she was awarded $13,500, in October, 1921, by the verdict of a jury in her suit against the defendant for damages. The appeal from the judgment entered on the verdict requires us to review ruling's on certain exceptions which are concerned solely with questions relating to the real nature and effect of the plaintiff’s injuries.

There are eighteen exceptions in the record. The first, sixth, and tenth are not pressed. The second, third, fourth, and fifth refer to testimony of the plaintiff as to her medical and hospital expenses. With the aid of a memorandum, which she was permitted to use for the purpose of refreshing her memory, she testified to the following charges: for her room in the hospital, $216.80; for doctors’ services, $881; and for medicines, $190. Ho evidence was offered in regard to these bills except the plaintiff’s statement as to the total amounts incurred “since the accident,” and as to the fact that the doctors’ bills had not been paid. The objection is that, the testimony afforded ihe jury no- means of determining whether or not the expenses sought to be recovered were reasonable, and were wholly due to- the injuries described in the declaration. The evidence on the subject ivas undoubtedly too general. It presented no details whatever as to the various charges for which the defendant was proposed to be made liable. There should have been a reasonable degree of particularity in the proof of the substantial expenses 'included in the plaintiff’s claim, and the objection to the testimony on the subject was well founded.

The seventh and eleventh exceptions were taken because certain hypothetical questions, as to the- cause of the plaintiff’s [246]*246present condition, were allowed to be asked and answered. The physician, to whom the questions were propounded, had examined and treated the plaintiff at periods beginning more than eighteen months after the accident, and their opinion as to the cause of the hemorrhages from which she suffered was requested upon the basis of their observations and of the testimony attempted to be summarized in the interrogatories. There was reasonable ground of objection to the statement of the hypotheses upon which, in part, the physicians were asked for their opinions. The questions described generally the plaintiff’s injuries as being “severe” and as having been shortly followed by hemorrhages which have since occurred “almost continually” and for periods lasting sometimes as long as two weeks. This statement tended, without design but in actual effect, to exaggerate the real conditions. There was an omission to mention the fact that the plaintiff was ■able to leave the hospital four days after the accident and to resume her regular work as a stenographer about six weeks later. This circumstance might not have affected the opinion expressed that the hemorrhages were caused by the injuries received in the accident, but the interrogatories by which the opinions were elicited should have stated more fully and conservatively the testimony upon which they were to be partly founded. The rule as to the proper form and elements of hypothetical questions was not sufficiently observed. Northern Central Railway Co. v. Green, 112 Md. 487; Miller v. Leib, 109 Md. 414; Grill v. O'Dell, 113 Md. 625.

The subject of the eighth and ninth exceptions was the admission of the following testimony of one of the plaintiff’s physicians: “Q. Doctor, what organs of the body would be affected in this patient, assuming that there was a second operation to remove the existing trouble? A. Ovary. Q. Mill you be good enough to tell the Court and jury the effect of removal of the ovaries, on the question of bearing children? A. The effect of the removal of both ovaries, of course produces sterility.”

[247]*247According to tlie testimony, only one of the plaintiff’s ovaries was affected, and the necessity for its removal conlcl not he determined without an operation. There was no occasion for the admission of evidence which suggested a future condition of sterility, to be produced by the removal of both ovaries, as one of the consequences of the plaintiff’s injury for which the defendant was to be held responsible.

Xo reversible error is apparent in the rulings on tho twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth exceptions, and no point was made of them in the argument.

The fifteenth exception questions the propriety of the reference in the plaintiff’s prayer to- the medical expenses, but in view of the admitted evidence on that subject we think the objection was properly overruled.

Tlie most important question in the case is raised by the sixteenth exception. On the day of the rendition of the verdict a motion for a new trial was filed by the defendant. At the hearings on the motion, which began about two months later, affidavits were filed and evidence was adduced tending very strongly to show that the condition to which the plaintiff’s claim for damages mainly referred was not the result of the accident on account of which the suit was brought, but had existed long before its occurrence. The plaintiff had testified at the trial that before the accident she was in perfect health. The depositions in support of the motion for a new trial were directly to the contrary. One was by a woman who occupied a room with the plaintiff in Ma.y and dune preceding the accident, and who stated that the plaintiff was then in delicate health and “menstruated constantly and profusely.” This affiant quoted the plaintiff as saying that she had received injuries-, from which she had never recovered, by the collapse of a building, in Albany, Xew York, in which she liad been employed. Another affidavit was by a matron in charge of the barracks in which the plaintiff was- living at Camp Meade, where she was serving as a stenographer at the period of the accident which occasioned this suit. The [248]*248matron deposed that the plaintiff was previously delicate and freely discussed the severe injuries she had received in Albany, from which, she had not, as she said, fully recovered. A member of the firm in Albany in whose service the plaintiff is said to have been formerly engaged, made affidavit to the effect that his firm in 1909 paid $3,000 in settlement of a suit by Ella E. Kemmy (the present suit being brought in the name of Helen K. Kimmey), for injuries she suffered by the collapse of the building in which she was employed, and he produced a copy of the complaint, stating her cause of action at that time, in which her injuries were characterized as serious and permanent. A specialist in diseases of women, who treated the plaintiff at her honie in Albany during a period of several months beginning in February, 1920, deposed that his examination was negative, except for secondary anaemia, resulting from uterine bleeding, which was apparently due to an overgrowth of the lining of the uterus, .and not to any injuries sustained in the accident in Maryland which she described. The ovaries, lie said, were then normal in size and consistency. A Washington physician testified in person, at a further hearing on the motion for a new trial, that he treated the plaintiff in March, 1919, four or

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Bluebook (online)
141 Md. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-baltimore-annapolis-electric-railroad-v-kimmey-md-1922.