A jury was waived in this action for negligence, and the court made a decision in the short form authorized by section 1022 of the Code of Civil Procedure, upon which the plaintiff entered judgment. As the appellant failed to take or file exception to the decision, the respondent insists that we are powerless even to review the rulings upon evidence made during the trial. Several decisions of this court in another department are cited by the learned counsel, of which some expressly sustain his contention. Examination of these authorities shows that for the most part they are based upon Otten v. Manhattan Railway Co. (150 N. Y. 395). I am not convinced that our opinion in Reiners v. Niederstein (55 App. Div. 80) did not state the true rule; that, notwithstanding the absence of the exception provided for by section 1022 of the Code of Civil Procedure, we have the power to examine the rulings of the trial court upon questions of evidence to which exceptions were then taken.
Section 1022 does not expressly prohibit such review in the absence of the exception therein described. It seems to recognize an appeal although that exception be neither taken nor filed, and, as Vann, J., says in the Otten Case (supra), the exception is not a *31substitute for the notice of appeal. It has been held that the omission to file an exception precludes an attack upon the decision. (Ross v. Caywood, 162 N. Y. 259, 265, and authority cited.) This being so, and if the failure to file this exception also precludes a review of the rulings, then the appeal would be a vain thing. I think that the full penalty of the omission to file the exception is expressed in these decisions of the Court of Appeals. The ground is acquiescence. But acquiescence in the decision does not imply acquiescence in the rulings. For the decision may be legally unobjectionable upon the evidence received, and yet, if the rules of evidence as insisted on by appellant had been observed, some of tjie essential facts found were not legally proven. The defeated party may stand upon the latter ground. He may acquiesce in the decision while consistently protesting against the rulings which made it. possible in law. In Otten’s Case (supra) the court, per Vann, J., discussing the exception provided for in section 1022 of the Code, say: “We see no reason for any difference in the meaning .of the same word, as thus used in the Constitution and the Code. It appeared in section 1022, when the Constitution was framed. Its function under that section is the general function of an exception, which is a protest against the decision of a court. (Sterrett v. Third Nat. Bank, 122 N. Y. 659, 662.) It is not a substitute for a notice of appeal, which, instead of being dispensed with, is expressly required by the same sentence that authorizes the exception to be filed. Its office is apparently the same as that of the exceptions mentioned in section 994 of the Code, which makes provision for excepting to a decision of a court or referee where the facts found are separately stated. It was by virtue of this exception alone that the Appellate Division had power to review either the facts or the law, and the order of reversal, which could not have been made if the exception had not been filed, is, as we think, an order granted on an exception. (Baldwin’s Bank of Penn Yan v. Butler, 133 N. Y. 564.)” May not some of the decisions before referred to have been made upon the authority of the final clause of this excerpt without full consideration of the context? If the function of this exception is like that of other exceptions — protest — I fail to see why it should be required to mark a protest against a ruling theretofore marked by a protest, namely, the exception taken thereto. Why should a *32protest, general in its character, be required, in addition to a special protest aimed directly at the subject-matter ? Why should the absence of a general exception be deemed to make the special exception unavailing when the office of the former seems to be for protest against the decision, inasmuch as its absence is held to show acquiescence in the decision ? If a party can logically both acquiesce in the decision and protest against the rulings of the court, I do not see why his exceptions to the rulings, standing on the record, should be disregarded. Further, if the office of the exception provided for in section 1022 be the same as that of the exception mentioned in section 994, as is said in the Otten Case (supra), we may consider the effect of an omission to take the latter exception. Such omission does not prevent a review of the rulings. (Lanier v. Hoadley, 42 App. Div. 6.)
This is not an equity decision. It is the same as a general verdict by a jury (Amherst College v. Ritch, 151 N. Y. 282, 320), and as on an appeal from a judgment entered upon a verdict the court may review the exceptions taken on the trial (Third Avenue R. R. Co. v. Ebling, 100 N. Y. 98), I do not see why the same rule should not obtain in this case rather than the rule of the Court of Chancery.
A reading of the opinions in both Ross’ Case (supra) and the case cited therein (Hecla Powder Co. v. Sigua Iron Co., 157 N. Y. 437) shows that in each case the court assumed that the exceptions to the rulings could have been considered despite the absence of an exception to the decision.
The complaint alleged that plaintiff, “ by reason of said fall, suffered serious and permanent injuries to his head and body, and nervous and physical shock, * * * has suffered, and will continue to suffer, grievous pain in the head and body, loss of sleep and loss of memory, has been permanently weakened in the head, and incapacitated for arduous physical or mental labor.” Evidence of impaired hearing was admitted, although objected to as not pleaded. I think that the exception was well taken. If impaired hearing was not the necessary result of the accident, the question is whether under the pleading a defendant could reasonably expect proof of deafness. It is to be noted that the plaintiff, after the general allegations of injury, went on to specify that he has suffered pain in the *33head and body, loss of sleep, loss of memory and permanent weakening of the head. And thus the precise question is not like- that presented in Ehrgott v. Mayor (96 N. Y. 264), whether a general allegation was broad enough to admit evidence of deafness, but whether the general allegation, as explained and limited by the said specifications, warranted such evidence. The distinction is made in Kleiner v. Third Avenue R. R. Co. (162 N. Y. 193, 201). A general allegation may put the defendant on inquiry, but a general allegation with specifications may throw even a prudent defendant off his guard so that he limits his preparation to meet such damages as must result, or as are specified to have resulted, from the accident and the injury inflicted. Where the injuries, though alleged in general terms, are thereafter specified and defined, it is not entirely just to a defendant to say that he should have asked for further specifications at his peril, or where they seem to be particularized, that he must pay the penalty for not asking for a bill of particulars. In Cibulski v. Hutton (47 App. Div. 107), though the peculiar circumstances there controlled, the court, per Landon, J., say: Special damages which, although a natural result of an injury, are not the necessary result, ought to be pleaded, and deafness has been placed in this class. (Hergert v. Union Ry. Co., 25 App. Div. 218; Stevens v. Rodger, 25 Hun, 54.)” It seems to me that it should be so. Deafness is not a necessary result of an injury to the head or body. Indeed, even though within the general terms of the allegation it may be an injury to the head, certainly it is excluded from the general allegation of nervous or physical shock, -and the specifications of pain in the head and body, loss of sleep and memory and permanent weakening of the head. (See, too, Geoghegan v. Third Avenue R. R. Co., 51 App. Div. 369.) In Sealey v. Met. St. R. Co. (78 App. Div. 530), Hirschberg, J., collects numerous authorities upon the general principle, and justly says that the court has gone far in following Ehrgott's Case (supra).
In Quirk v. Siegel-Cooper Co. (43 App. Div. 464) the injury was to the eye and proof was held competent under the allegations of internal and other bodily injuries.” But there was no specification -of injury beyond the general allegation, as in this case, and the court * *34said : “ I think the evidence was properly admitted, but even if it was not, the reduction of the recovery * * "" has remedied all the injury which the defendant can possibly have suffered by its admission.” In Place v. City of Yonkers (43 App. Div. 380) the allegation was general, “injury to my head.” In Radjaviller v. Third Avenue R. R. Co. (58 App. Div. 11) the allegation of injury to the left foot, left arm, left side of the head was held broad enough to permit evidence of injury to the ear. In Mullady v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (65 App. Div. 549) the allegation under which evidence of impaired eyesight and impaired hearing was admitted was “ injuries to his head, limbs and nervous system.” But in none of these cases did the pleader amplify the general allegation by more specific statements of injuries. In Dixson v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (68 App. Div. 302) the complaint was serious, and lasting bodily injuries, and injuries to her head, limbs and nervous system, as well as internal injuries, and the evidence was received without objection and only subjected to a motion to strike it out.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial be ordered, costs to abide the event.
Hirschberg and Hooker, JJ., concurred ; Bartlett, J., read for affirmance, with whom Woodward, J., concurred.