Lynch v. Rosemary Manufacturing Co., 167 N.C. 98 (1914)

Oct. 17, 1914 · Supreme Court of North Carolina
167 N.C. 98

J. C. LYNCH, Administrator of ADA LYNCH, v. ROSEMARY MANUFACTURING COMPANY.

(Filed 17 October, 1914.)

1. Evidence — Witnesses—Medical Experts — Opinion—Facts at Issue — Trials.

The plaintiff sues to recover damages of tlie defendant for the death of his intestate, caused by moving her from one of its tenant-houses to another during an illness of typhoid fever. Held,, a question is competent, asked the witness, a medical expert, as to the causes of the intestate’s death predicated upon the symptoms of the patient and attendant facts, assumed to have been found by the- jury, and not objectionable as an expression of opinion upon a fact at issue to be passed upon by them; and while in this case the question asked included the question of proximate cause, it is further held that the case, if established, was so clearly the proximate cause that the error was rendered harmless.

2. Evidence — Witnesses—Medical Experts — Text-books.

Upon examination of a medical expert it is not permissible to read .extracts from medical books for the purpose of cross-examining the witness and attacking the credibility of his evidence, or asking the witness if the opinion from the text-book was true or not; for the author has not made a statement under oath, subject to cross-examination, and such practice would permit by indirection what is expressly forbidden as evidence ; but when the witness has testified as such expert, professing to have special training and knowledge from standard works of his profession, a general question of this kind may be allowed with the view of testing the value of his opinion.

3. Appeal and Error — Brief—Exceptions Abandoned — Rule of Court.

The brief of appellant must sufficiently state the assignments of error relied upon and give some reason or argument in support of them, or the assignments are deemed to have been abandoned, under Rule 34.

4. Measure of Damages — Wrongful Death — Net Value of Life — Children— T rials — Evidence.

In an action to recover damages for a wrongful death the present net value of thé life wrongfully taken determines the measure of damages recoverable, and evidence tending to show the number and ages of the children of the deceased is incompetent; and where the judge in his charge has correctly stated in general terms that the jury should award a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injury, and then si>e-cifically instruct them to find from the evidence what the earnings of the deceased would have been during the balance of his life, the instruction is held for reversible error.

Appeal by defendants from Connor, -J.,-at March Term, 1914, of Halifax.

Civil action to recover damages for the wrongful killing of Ada Lynch, deceased, formerly wife of plaintiff administrator. Plaintiff alleged and offered evidence tending to show that, on 17 October, 1912, he and his then wife, the intestate, were tenants in one of defendant’s *99■ bouses, and tbe intestate bad been for some time and was tben sick in bed witb typhoid fever, and, in violation of tbeir rights and against tbe will of plaintiff' and deceased, they were wrongfully compelled to remove to another bouse, tbe wife being carried from her sick bed on a mattress to a wagon and driven therein % mile to tbe other place, etc.; that from tbe shock and injury tbe intestate, pending or very soon after tbe removal, became unconscious and, sinking rapidly, died, as we gather from tbe testimony, in about one week; several witnesses, having duly qualified as experts, giving it as tbeir opinion, on facts submitted, as in tbe finding of tbe jury, that tbe removal and tbe manner of it caused her death.

Defendants contended and offered evidence tending to show that tbe removal was not tbe cause of tbe death; that same was done on advice of a physician, cognizant of intestate’s condition; that such-a course would produce no injury, and that tbe wife and more especially tbe plaintiff himself consented to tbe removal taking place, etc.

Tbe jury rendered tbe following verdict:

“1. Did tbe defendant Eosemary Manufacturing Company unlawfully, wrongfully, or negligently remove Mrs. Ada Lynch, tbe plaintiff’s intestate, from tbe bouse in which she was sick to another bouse, against tbe protest of her husband or against her will, and thereby cause her death, as alleged in tbe complaint? Answer: Yes.

“2. If so, what damages is plaintiff entitled to recover of tbe defendant? Answer: Twenty-five hundred dollars ($2,500).”

Judgment on tbe verdict for plaintiff, and defendant excepted and appealed.

S. G. Daniel, T. M. Pittman, A. P. Kitchin, Knight, Peebles & Mid-yett for plaintiff.

George G. Green, W. E. Daniel, and E. L’. Travis for defendant.

Hoke, J.

Tbe jury, accepting tbe plaintiff’s version of tbe occurrence, have rendered a verdict that tbe defendant unlawfully and wrongfully caused tbe death of plaintiff’s intestate, and on careful perusal of tbe record we find no good reason for disturbing tbeir .conclusion on the issue fixing liability on tbe company.

It is urged for error that some of tbe expert witnesses were allowed to give it as tbeir opinion that tbe removal was tbe cause of tbe intestate’s death, and in violation of tbe rule that a witness may not express an opinion on tbe very question at issue between tbe parties, citing tbe Court, among other cases, to Summerlin v. R. R., 133 N. C., 557; but tbe position arises from a misconception of tbe decision in Summerlin’s case. In that case questions propounded to an expert witness were excluded by tbe trial court and tbe ruling was affirmed because, as inter*100preted by the appellate court, the questions called for an opinion of the witness on a fact at issue and in controversy, towit, whether a fall produced the injury, as claimed by plaintiff. Speaking to the r.atio deci-dendi of Summerlin’s case, Associate Justice Walicer, delivering the opinion, said: “There is nothing better settled than that a witness can ordinarily speak only of facts within his own knowledge, unless he is an expert, having special scientific knowledge, in which case he may give his opinion, but only on facts as they may be found by the jury.” . . . And further: “Applying these general principles to the particular questions under consideration, we think that those asked the witness by plaintiff’s counsel and which were excluded by the court were incompetent as being in violation of the fundamental principle upon which the admissibility of expert testimony rests. They require the witness not to express a scientific opinion upon certain assumed facts, but to invade the province of the jury and decide the very question in dispute as to the cause of the child’s injury.”

We are confirmed in this interpretation of Summerlin’s case by what was said concerning it by the same learned judge in the ease of Parish v. R. R., 146 N. C., 125-127. In Parish’s case, “plaintiff claimed to have been wrongfully injured by sudden and violent impact' of the engine against the car in which plaintiff was a passenger at the time, and that, as a result, plaintiff was thrown against the arm of a seat and severely injured in his back, hips, and spinal column.” The following question and answer were held proper: “If the jury find the facts to be, from the evidence, that the plaintiff was injured by falling back against the arm of a seat in the train, and struck his back in the region of the kidney, and at the time it gave him great pain, followed by faintness or nausea, and that the second morning thereafter he passed urine mixed with blood, and that several times since he has jiassed bloody urine, as late as the 5th day of this month; that his nervous system was affected, and when he makes a misstep or has a sudden jar, he has acute pain in the region of the kidney, followed by passing bloody urine, what, in your opinion, is the cause of his being affected in this way?” The witness answered: “In my opinion, the kidney was dislocated by the fall, and the dislocation is permanent, and the plaintiff will be disabled for life, unless he has the kidney removed by an operation.”

There, as here, Summerlin’s case was referred to by counsel as being against the ruling, and J-ustice Wallcer, speaking to Siommerlin’s case and its bearing on the question then presented, said: “We cannot agree with the learned counsel 'of the defendant that this case bears any resemblance to Summerlin v. R. R., 133 N. C., 550. In that case the questions excluded by the court were so framed as to require the witness to express an opinion as to the existence of a fact which was contro*101verted, and it was there said by tbe Court that this was not tbe proper form for tbe question to take, but that tbe expert’s opinion should be founded upon a hypothetical question containing a statement of facts which the jury might find from the evidence, and supposing, of course, that they will find them to be as stated in the question. The rule is stated in 3 Wharton and Stille’s Medical Jurisprudence (5 Ed..), p. 580, as follows: “An opinion that an injury resulted from a certain designated act, being the one upon which the action is based, as distinguished from an opinion that certain causes would produce certain results, is improper as usurping the province oij the jury.”

The questions objected to in the present ease are clearly within the rule for the reception of such evidence, being opinions of medical experts as to the cause of intestate’s death predicated upon the symptoms of the patient and attendant facts, assumed to have been found by the jury and are in accord with the authorities referred to and others of like kind in this jurisdiction. Beard v. R. R., 143 N. C., 136-139 ; Jones v. Warehouse Co., 137 N. C., 338; S. v. Jones, 68 N. C., 443.

In one or two of the questions the counsel, in zealous concern for their client’s interest, asked if it was the "proximate cause of intestate’s death” — an addenda to the usual formula that might well have been objectionable if the facts permitted. any distinction between the two, but in this instance the cause, if established, was so clearly the proximate cause that the term may properly be considered as harmless error. Beard v. R. R., 143 N. C., at page 139.

Again, it was contended that error was committed to defendant’s prejudice in permitting the following question: “I ask you if all recognized medical authorities do not teach that typhoid fever patients must not be moved, if possible to do without it?”

The question by plaintiff was allowed on cross-examination of a medical expert who had treated the intestate in this case and testified for defendant, in effect, that the removal, in his opinion, had not unfavorably affected the patient in this instance, and that, on the facts of the case, it would likely increase her chances for recovery.

It is very generally recognized that extracts from medical books are not admissible in evidence, and for the very sufficient reason that the author does not write under the sanctity of an oath and has not been subjected to cross-examination, and the decisions of this State are to the effect that statements from these books may not be presented as such in the arguments of counsel nor introduced by means of questions put on cross-examination, as by reading an opposing opinion from a text-book and asking the witness if it is or is not true, for this would have the effect of putting the statement in evidence and thus accomplish by indirection what is expressly forbidden. Butler v. R. R., 130 N. C., 15; *102 Huffman v. Click, 77 N. C., 55; Melvin v. Easeley, 46 N. C., 386; for, as said by Bynum, J., in Huffman’s case: “If tbis practice were allowed, many of our cases would soon come to be tried not on tbe sworn testimony of living witnesses, but upon publications not written under oath.”

The principle, however, is not as exigent in case of cross-examination, and when a witness has testified as an expert, professing to have special training and knowledge from standard works of his profession, a general question of this kind may be allowed with a view of testing the value of his opinion. Sale v. Eichberg, 105 Tenn., 333; Brodhead Wiltse, 35 Iowa, 429; 17 Cyc., p. 273. It was suggested on the argument that there was error in the charge of the court, in effect, “That though J. C. Lynch did consent, if Ada Lynch, the intestate, did not, then her removal would be a wrongful act, and if the proximate cause of her death, the first issue should be answered 'Yes.’ ” But such an exception is not open to defendant on the record, the same not having been sufficiently stated in the brief, within the meaning of Rule No. 34, “That exceptions in the record, not set out in appellant’s brief or in. support of which no reason or argument is stated or authority cited, will be taken as abandoned by him.” The exception No. 20 in the record is stated in connection with exception No. 19, and the only mention made of it or which has any relevancy to it is that the same “is relied upon for error,” and-must therefore be taken as abandoned.

"While we find no cause for disturbing the verdict of the jury on the first issue, we must hold that there was error in the charge of the court on the second, that as to the amount of damages. On this issue his Honor, although correctly stating to the jury in general terms that they would award what is a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injury, in giving more specific direction, instructed them that they would “take all the evidence and say about what her earnings would have been during the balance of her life, about how long you find she would have lived.” In this charge we think his Honor failed to observe and note the rule established by our decisions for the admeasurement of the damages for this kind of an injury, “That it is the present net value of the life which has been wrongfully taken.” Speight v. R. R., 161 N. C., pp. 80 and 86; Ward v. R. R., 161 N. C., at page 186; Mendenhall v. R. R., 123 N. C., pp. 275 and 278; Pickett v. R. R., 117 N. C., 616.

In this connection we deem it not amiss to call attention to the case of Bradley v. R. R., 122 N. C., 972, as to the incompetency of evidence touching the number and ages of the intestate’s children.

For the error indicated, defendant is entitled to a new trial of the issue as to damages, and it is so ordered.

Partial new trial.