Court Opinion

ID: 6605918
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:12:09.735729+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:11.031283
License: Public Domain

Cassoday, J.
We think the answer, verified by the mayor of the city, denying any “knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief” “as to the matters and things in the plaintiff’s complaint alleged-and set forth,” sufficiently raised the issues for trial which were tried. But, upon a careful consideration of the whole record, we are forced to the conclusion that there has been a mistrial.
The real controversy was involved in the first and third questions submitted to the jury; which were, in effect, (1) whether the sidewalk was defective at the time and place in question; and (2) whether the plaintiff was injured by it. *343The sidewalk in question was about ten feet wide, and upon the south side of College avenue, which ran east and west; and the building at that point ran up close to the sidewalk. There appears to have been steps leading from the sidewalk up into the front door of the building, and covering about two and a half feet of the walk. Close by the steps on the west side was a window opening, three feet and nine inches long and fourteen inches wide from the building. On the evening in question, there was a large crowd of people in the vicinity of the locus in quo, and the plaintiff was among them. A horse dashed by, and the people on the sidewalk at that point stepped back. The plaintiff testified, in effect, that she stepped, supposing she was on the sidewalk, and something broke under her feet, and she went right down in the hole, and was injured. The evidence is pretty conclusive that, either there or elsewhere on that evening, she ivas bruised more or less severely on her limb between the knee and the hip. The evidence relied upon to disprove such injury was purely circumstantial and inferential. One class of such evidence consisted of medical testimony tending to prove that her internal troubles were the result of disease, and not of violence. These explanations are sufficient to enable us to consider intelligent^ some of the rulings of the court.
1. The defendant was allowed to prove by two of its witnesses, against objections, certain declarations said to have been made by the plaintiff to the effect that, with the money she expected to get from the city by reason of such injury, she was going to finish and furnish their house, get silk dresses, and dress better than they had before, get a piano and a horse and carriage, and give the friends who went for her in this suit a ride, and those who did not she would give no ride. This testimony was referred to in the charge as of particular significance, and exception thereto was taken by. the plaintiff. We must hold this class of testi*344mony to have been immaterial and irrelevant to any of the issues on trial, and presumably prejudicial to the plaintiff.
2. The court excluded the testimony of a witness well acquainted with the plaintiff, and who had often seen her before the accident and during the summer of 1884, as to her being healthy or otherwise during that time, on the ground that it called for the opinion of a witness who was not an expert. Her physical condition — whether she appeared to be in good or bad health, sick or well, suffering from disease or enjoying health — may have involved to some extent the opinion of the witness, but it was nevertheless a fact requiring no especial skill to determine, and to which any intelligent witness might testify. This seems to be well settled by -the authorities. Lawson, Exp. Ev. 410-413, and cases there cited.
3. Exception is taken because the court, in effect, charged the jury that if the plaintiff “ was injured on the street . . . by her getting pressed in a crowd of people, or by horses or carriages running against her, or in any other way except by stepping into a hole, or on a board covering such hole that broke under her. letting her into the hole and causing her injury, such an accident or injury would not” authorize a recovery in this action. The difficulty with at least the larger portion of this extract is the want of any such evidence upon which to base it, and its direct tendency to draw the minds of the jury away from the real issues on trial.
4. In view of the issues on trial, we have some doubts as to the admissibility of some of the hypothetical questions put to medical experts, but, as they will probably be so ad! justed as to more accurately fit the case on the next trial, we deem it unnecessary to consider them further.
5. The third question submitted to the jury was well calculated to mislead them, and should therefore be modified.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.