Friedler v. Hekeler

The motion to set aside the verdict as against the evidence was properly denied. Defendant's claim is that the plaintiff darted suddenly and unexpectedly in front of the car, but on this issue the evidence is conflicting, and the jury might reasonably have found that the plaintiff and two other children were playing together within the defendant's vision as he drove down the street, and that after two of them had run across in front of his car he ought to have looked to see whether the other one would follow.

The motion to set aside the verdict as excessive was also properly denied. The plaintiff's injuries were severe, and there was evidence of permanent facial disfigurement. The jury saw the plaintiff and, being properly instructed, their estimate of what amount of money would fairly compensate a girl of that age for that permanent disfigurement, must stand. It does not appear from the record that the verdict was so excessive as to indicate that the jury were controlled by passion, prejudice, partiality, or corruption.

The evidence of the witness Halprin, as to the distance within which a Ford car could be stopped if moving at ten, eight, or five miles an hour, was properly admitted. Defendant's car was a Ford delivery wagon, and he claimed that he was keeping a proper lookout and driving it under full control at a rate not exceeding five miles an hour.

The only other assignment of error is that the court *Page 32 erred "in permitting the plaintiff's attorney to exhibit the plaintiff before the jury and question her and direct her, she not being under oath and incapable of taking oath." The finding shows that the incident occurred while a physician was on the witness-stand testifying as to the extent and character of the plaintiff's injuries. He had already testified, in substance, that the scar above her left eye tended to pull the eyelid upward so that the lid did not cover the eye completely, especially during sleep; but added that the child could close her eye with forcible constriction fairly well. Thereupon the plaintiff's counsel called the little girl to him and asked her to show the jury to what extent she could close her eye, and the following objection was made: "If the court pleases, we don't object to the witness demonstrating the injuries, but we object to the counsel questioning the child." After some discussion the objection was overruled and an exception noted. It will be observed that the assignment of error is broader than the objection made. The mere exhibition of the plaintiff before the jury was not objected to, but only the questioning of the plaintiff by counsel, or, at most, the fact that the demonstration was conducted by counsel instead of being conducted by the expert witness who was then testifying.

The physical demonstration before the jury of alleged muscular limitations is permissible within the limits of sound judicial discretion. When the demonstration amounts only to the use of the injured party as an exhibit to display some relevant fact or condition already testified to, whose existence or nonexistence is apparent on inspection, no oath is required. But where the demonstration is carried to the point of using the injured party as a witness to prove the truth of a material and disputed fact by inarticulate muscular *Page 33 contractions instead of by words, it ought to be conducted under the sanction of an oath. Where, as in this case, it may be doubted whether the injured party is a competent witness, the necessary sanction may be provided by causing the demonstration to be conducted by a properly qualified witness, who thus makes it a part of his own testimony.

In the present case no disputed fact appears to have been subjected to the test of demonstration. The physician had just testified that the child could close her eye fairly well when asked to do so, and she was then asked to do it. Presumably she did so. As the record gives us no information on that point, we may assume, in aid of the ruling, that the performance by the child amounted to no more than the exhibition of a fact already testified to and apparent on inspection, namely, that the child could close her eye.

But if we take the other view, and assume that it had an evidential value due to the conduct of the child herself, she being too young to understand the nature of an oath, we think the demonstration may be regarded as a part of the physician's testimony and under the sanction of his oath. It was claimed and admitted on that ground, and properly so, for if the child's conduct before the jury did not correspond with the physician's testimony as to her physical capacity, the insincerity of her performance could have been developed on his cross-examination.

There is one other aspect of this matter which deserves comment, and it involves an application of the rules of this court to the special facts presented by the evidence. The appellant has brought all the testimony before us on appeal from the denial of the motion to set aside the verdict; and, on reading the testimony at the appellant's invitation, we learn that the finding which we have just discussed is incomplete, in that it *Page 34 omits to disclose the fact that immediately after the offending ruling was made the trial court suggested that it would be better to let the doctor demonstrate, and thereupon the doctor took the child in hand, and without further objection proceeded to demonstrate her control over the muscles of her eye. If, therefore, it be assumed that the original performance was evidential and not under oath, any error in failing to direct the jury to disregard it was cured by the immediate repetition of the same performance under oath and without objection.

In this connection we repeat, what we have often said, that we will not look into the printed record of testimony to see whether the trial court has erred in a ruling on evidence; that assignments of error for rulings on evidence must refer to and be supported by a finding made in accordance with § 5 of the rules of this court (Practice Book, 1908, p. 266); and that in the preparation of such findings both court and counsel should take care to include all facts necessary to a proper understanding of the legal effect of the ruling.

On the other hand, when the appellant himself has asked us to examine all the testimony on an appeal from the denial of the motion to set aside the verdict, we must in common fairness be at liberty to use the information thus acquired in supplementing a manifestly incomplete finding.

There is no error.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.