Wheeler v. Tyler Southeastern Railway Co.

43 S.W. 876, 91 Tex. 356, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 280
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1898
DocketNo. 600.
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 43 S.W. 876 (Wheeler v. Tyler Southeastern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. Tyler Southeastern Railway Co., 43 S.W. 876, 91 Tex. 356, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 280 (Tex. 1898).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by the appellee, plaintiff in error, against the Tyler Southeastern Railway Company, to recover damages for a personal injury received by the explosion of a boiler to a passenger locomotive owned and operated by the Railway Company. The only question presented on this application arises upon the action of the District Court in admitting the testimony of Dr. Driskill, which was at the time objected to and a bill of exceptions reserved.

That portion of the testimony objected to is as follows: “I believe that there are no other symptoms tfyat you have not asked me about, except that he complains all the time with a roaring and a dull aching pain *359 in his head, more especially in the back of his head.” The defendant objected to the testimony, (1) because it was hearsay; (2) because it was evidence with respect to the symptoms of a disease or injury not testified to by the plaintiff; which objections the court overruled. Wheeler recovered judgment in the District Court; from which an appeal was taken and the judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Supreme Judicial District on account of error in admitting the foregoing evidence.

The evidence of the witness Dr. Driskill, which was objected to by the defendant in error, upon the ground that it was hearsay, is stated in the bill of exceptions as above copied as follows: “He complains all the time with a roaring and a dull aching pain in his head, more especially in the back of his head.” We understand from this language that while the witness was engaged in examining the plaintiff at the several times named by him the plaintiff complained of a roaring and pain in his head. This indicates that the pain of which he complained was present at the time the complaint was made and that the complaint was not a recital of what had transpired nor a mere statement of existing conditions, but was the natural expression produced by the sensation of roaring and pain in the head at the time, that is, that the complaint made was induced by the roaring and the pain as it then existed and that the complaint itself was in fact a part of the res gestae and therefore not subject to the objection that it was hearsay. Railway v. Barron, 78 Texas, 421; Railway v. Shafer, 54 Texas, 641.

Upon the argument of the case in this court the defendant in error urged the objection to the testimony, that at the time the plaintiff made the complaint testified to by Dr. Driskill the latter was engaged in examining the plaintiff for the purpose of testifying in his case, the witness being employed by the plaintiff for that purpose. The plaintiff in error met and combated that proposition as if it had been properly presented. We presume that the same course of argument was pursued in the Court of Civil Appeals, and that this led the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals to place its decision upon the ground stated, that is, that, the witness Driskill being at the time the declarations were made employed by the plaintiff to make an examination of him with a view to testifying in the case and being at the time engaged in that examination, the complaints of the plaintiff made under such circumstances were not admissible in evidence. The objection presents a very interesting question, and Chief Justice James in the opinion prepared by him discusses it in a very clear and able manner, but we do not feel authorized to consider it in this case for the reason that it was not presented to the trial court and not embraced in the bill of exceptions taken to the evidence of the witness.

It is the well established rule of this court that, upon a bill of exceptions to evidence admitted, this court will consider only such objections as were presented in the trial court and as are stated in the bill of exceptions. Houston, East & West Texas Ry. Co. v. Adams, 63 Texas, *360 206; Rector v. Hudson, 20 Texas, 237; Hamilton v. Rice, 15 Texas, 385; Herndon v. Casiano, 7 Texas, 333; Waller v. Leonard, 89 Texas, 507.

In Rector v. Hudson, 20 Texas, supra, the objection presented to the evidence was that the declarations offered were made by one who was not a party to the suit. This court held that an objection based upon the fact that it did not appear that the declarations were made at the time of the transaction could not be considered under the bill of exceptions, and the court said: “If the objection had been that they (the declarations) were not made at the time, it might have been brought out by an examination of the witness to that point that the admissions of the party that he had bribed the rider, which was a material part of the declaration deposed to, was made at the time of the principal transaction or in such time as to have been plainly admissible in evidence. It has been constantly held that in revising the ruling of a court in the admission of evidence the appellate court will consider only the objections to the evidence taken at the trial.”

In Houston, East & West Texas Railway Co. v. Adams, cited above, the witness in answering the question expressed his opinion in regard to some matters, instead of stating the facts from which the jury could draw their own inferences; but the testimony was not objected to upon that ground, and that objection did not appear in the bill of exceptions. The court said: “The bills of exceptions not showing that the questions and answers were objected to on the ground of the manner in which the questions were asked and the answers given, the matter of the answers being admissible, the ruling of the court below in this respect will not be revised.” If the objection here urged had been presented to the trial judge he might have sustained it, or the plaintiff in the court below might have abandoned it, or he might have called out other facts to explain it so as to avoid the force of the objection. It would be unfair to the opposite party and unjust to a trial court to entertain objections of this character when not presented upon the trial and properly reserved in the bill of exceptions.

We conclude that upon the face of the bill of exceptions it does not appear that the court committed any error in admitting the testimony of the witness Driskill, and that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in reversing the judgment of the District Court upon that ground.

Having acquired jurisdiction of this case it becomes our duty to examine all the assignments of error made by the appellant in the Court of Civil Appeals, to ascertain if the judgment of the trial court should have been reversed upon any one of the grounds assigned. We have examined the various assignments presented in that court and find no error except in the ruling of the court upon the fourteenth and fifteenth grounds of error assigned by the appellant Railroad Company.

The plaintiff below testified that he had agreed to pay Dr. Driskill $250 as his fee for attending him as a physician, but there was no evidence offered to prove that that sum or any other sum was a reasonable *361 charge for the services rendered by Dr. Driskill to the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W. 876, 91 Tex. 356, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-tyler-southeastern-railway-co-tex-1898.