Court Opinion

ID: 7390193
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-29 00:53:07.191917+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:21:39.727197
License: Public Domain

Curia, per Richardson,
J. Dr. Farrow was unable to assign any date to the commencement of the disease with which Ben was afflicted, from his own knowledge or observation upon the symptoms. But, he was permitted to narrate what Ben himself had said, in the course of his examination of him as a patient. And Ben fixed the commencement of the disease previous to his sale to Mr. Hunter, the plaintiff. This hearsay evidence, taken from the communications of Ben to the doctor, is objected to.
It is well settled, that what a patient has said of his own feelings, pains, &c., while afflicted with a disease which is the subject of judicial decision, may be told by the witness, and is competent evidence. Such expressions are the indications or symptoms of the disease itself; and cannot be separated from it. A dumb patient would writhe and point to the seat of his pain; while one, who spoke, would indicate the same thing in words. In such cases, the words or gestures, are equally the signs of the disease felt by the patient. They are both acts, or parts, in the detail of the disease which we seek to discover; and come within what is well understood by the res gestœ — the thing in all its exhibitions.
But when the doctor related from the lips of Ben, that the like disease had afflicted him before he was sold, we have the fact that' Ben had been sick at another time, and. when — not from the doctor’s knowledge, or the indication of the disease —but exclusively from the evidence of Ben himself.
This is incompetent; and a new trial is granted.