City of South Bend v. Turner

Hadley, J.

Suit by appellee to recover damages for ‘ personal injuries. The facts set forth in the complaint are substantially as follows: On the 8th day of April, 1894, the appellants, being,' respectively, a municipal and private corporation, were engaged in the construction of a tfunlc sewer for the defendant city through one of its public streets, declining northward and terminating in St. Joseph river'; that at a point near its terminus the appellants constructed a manhole, circular in form, and two and one-half feet in diameter, near the center of a public street' crossing, thus constituting a means of communication with said sewer from the surface of the street to the bottom of said sewer, a'distance of twenty-nine feet; that said manhole was carelessly and negligently permitted by the appellants to be open and uncovered on said day, and was and had been carelessly and negligently permitted by the defendants to be and remain open and uncovered continuously prior thereto *420for many clays and weeks, without any signal or warning of any kind,.and without any protection to persons lawfully upon the street; that said sewer from its mouth, or terminus, to the manhole, and for some distance beyond, had been in part completed, and large piles of. sand had been piled upon the street where the sewer was completed near the manhole by-the--defendants, ancl had been-by them carelessly and negligently permitted to remain there, and were calculated to and did attract children for the purpose óf engaging in play in the sand; that the children of the neighborhood were accustomed,- -with the knowledge of the defendants, to play in'the street with'sáid sand piles; that the'plaintiff on said day,"being six and a half years of agej was so engaged at play with the said sand piles, and at the time did not know of the open condition of the manhole, and while so engaged in play, and while in the exercise of due care and caution, did, by reason of the negligence of the defendants as aforesaid, fall into said open manhole, and was precipitated to the bottom of the sewer, without fault, and without any warning by the defendants of the danger existing by reason of the o,pen, manhole, and whereby he was greatly injured. . ,

- The complaint is in four. paragraphs. The. first was withdrawn. The second and third are in substance the saíne.. .The fopr.th charges-that the manhole at the time of the. ¡accident was and had been for many days and weeks negligently suffered by the defendants to be a,nd rerpain insufficiently covered, etc. The joint- demiirrcr of the defendants and the separate demurrer of the defendant city to each paragraph of the complaint were overruled,, and a joint exception to both rulings reserved. Upon issues joined, the jury returned a general verdict for appellee and answers to divers interrogatories. The city alone appeals, and assigns for error (1) the insufficiency of the. facts stated to constitute a cause of action against it; (2), the action of the court in overruling its demurrer to each paragraph of the *421complaint; (3) in overruling its separaté motion for judgment in its favor on tlie answers fo interrogatories, and (4) in the overruling of its separate 'motion for a new trial.

No question upon the complaint is properly presented by the demurrers. The record shows that “the defendants demur to each paragraph of the complaint,” etc. Then follow three separate pápers, being the separate demurrers of the defendant city to each the second, third,, and fourth paragraphs of the complaint, and the Record then proceeds: “Which demurrers, the court overruled, to which .ruling of the court defendants except.” , 'Exceptions taken thus in gross reserve no question and an assignment of error predicated thereon by one of the exceptors is futile. Johnson v. McCulloch, 89 Ind. 270, 273; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Trissal, 98 Ind. 566, 570; Walter v. Walter, 117 Ind. 247, 249; Elliott’s App. Proc., §788.

Appellant, however, makes an 'independent assignment of error that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against it. The total absence from the complaint of any averment of some fact or facts essential to the existence of the cause of action, or the presence ‘off some averment that absolutely destroys the plaintiffs right of recovery, may be for' the first time raised in'this court by an independent assignment of errors-under .§346 of the code — §346 Burns 1894, §343 R. S. 1881 and Horner 1897, — but mere uncertainty, or inadequacy, of averment, such as might have been amended and cured upon motion seasonably made, will be deemed to h'aVe been waived by k defendant who proceeds with the' trial to final judgment without objection, and who brings his complaint for the first time, after the cause of action has been strengthened by the verdict of a jury; and the presumptions indulged in favor of the' decisions of the'trial court lipón motions for judgment, and for a new trial. Shoemaker v. Williamson, ante, 384, and authorities cited; Kinney v. Dodge, 101 Ind. 573; Smith v. Smith, 106 Ind. 43, 45. This assignment of error *422challenges the complaint as an entirety, and if any paragraph thereof is sufficient,' the assignment must fail. Buchanan v. Lee, 69 Ind. 117; Caress v. Foster, 62 Ind. 145; Miller v. Billingsly, 41 Ind. 489, 492.

The complaint avers that the defendants'were constructing the sewer; that they had constructed the manholé;!t'hat the defendants negligently permitted the manhole to he- and remain open and uncovered on the day of the plaintiff’s injury, and so to be and remain open and uncovered continuously for several weeks prior thereto, and negligently permitted a large sand pile, which defendants had produced, to be and remain on said day and for several weeks prior thereto near the manhole, and at a point on said sewer where the same was completed, with the knowledge that the children in the neighborhood, ineluding the plaintiff, were' accustomed to play in said sand piles. There is no suggestion in the complaint that the defendant construction company was an independent contractor, nor that it had the exclusive possession of the street; nor does it appear from'anything averred, except for the presence of the sand piles, that the public was prevented or in any -way denied the usual right of play or travel in the street. Even assuming, ¿s appellee argues, that the facts pleaded show that the street was so obstructed by the construction of the sewér as to be inconsistent with public use, and that the construction company was 'necessarily in the exclusive possession of the street,’ the city would not thereby be relieved of liability when it is shown that it had notice, or might have had notice by the exercise of proper oversight, that its licensee had 'acted in . a negligent manner and left its streets in an unsafe and dangerous condition. Staldter v. City of Huntington, 153 Ind. 354: Senhenn v. City of Evansville, 140 Ind. 675; City of Indianapolis v. Doherty, 71 Ind. 5; Elliott’s Roads and Streets (2nd ed.) §634. We are unable to see'why the complaint is not sufficient against the city if tested by demurrer, and it is clearly so when questioned for the first time in this court. *423With respect to the motion for judgment on the answers to interrogatories notwithstanding the general verdict the •rule is that all reasonable presumptions must be -indulged against the special answers and in support of t,he general verdict, and if the general verdict, thus aided, is pot. in irreconcilable conflict with the answers, it must stand. Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Creek, 130 Ind. 139, 142, 14, L. R. A. 733; British-American, etc., Co. v. Wilson, 132 Ind. 278, 283; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Schmidt, 134 Ind. 16; Consolidated Stone Co. v. Summit, 152 Ind. 297. The reason of the rule is that the jury is required to pronounce upon all the issuable facts proved in the case, while.the court in testing the force of isolated facts disclosed by answers .to interrogatories does not know, and cannot know, what other facts touching the same matters were rightfully before the jury to justify their verdict. Therefore, in conceding to the jury the presumption of right judgment, to overthrow its general verdict, the special facts returned must be.of such a nature as to exclude the possible existence of other controlling facts, provable under the issues, relating to the same subject. The answers show that the construction company had exclusive possession of the street at the manhole for the purpose of building the sewer; that said company frequently warned boys away from playing in the sand pile near the open manhole ; that the plaintiff knew that the manhole was uncovered, and that he was six and a half years of age, and from the answers it is contended that it affirmatively appears that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, and the city free from liability. If there were no. other answers supportive of the general verdict, we coqld not approve the contention. We could not assume that a boy six and a half years of age was so advanced in knowledge as to be able to know when he was in a place where he ought not to be, and to appreciate the evidences and presence of danger; Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Klee, 154 Ind. 430, nor would the isolated fact that the construction company had-, the exclusivo *424possession of the street for the purpose of building' the sewer prevail, as a defense for the cityj against the presumptions that wmld' arise under the averments of the complaint that both the construction company and city carelessly per-' mitted the manhole to remáin open and uncovered near a sand pile that 'they knew was attractive to'children, and to which they knew children were attracted for play continuously for many weeks. But by other answers it is found that the plaintiff at the time of the accident did not have intelligence enough to know the danger’of the open manhole, nor was it shown that he was ever warned of the danger by any one. It'is further shown that the manhole had been completed for four weeks; that it was within four feet of a sand pile seven feet liigh, and had -been left continuously for two weeks'uncovered, with the knowledge of both the'city and the construction company, and with their further knowledge that the sand was attractive to the-children of the'neighborhood, and that they were' attracted to "it for the p'urpo'se of play; that there were no guards or barricades about' tho manhole, nor on the street or sidewálks,' and the street from the manhole to 'the mouth of the sewer was for two weeks prior to the accident traveled by hundreds of people; that the sewer was completed from its mouth to the manhole, and for 300 feet beyond, at the time of t'he accident, except the leveling of the street grade. The motion for judgment upon the answers to interrogatories was properly overruled. '

' The first ground urged for a hew' trial is the' refusal of the court, upon appellants’ motion, to order a physical examination of the plaintiff. Before the commencement of the trial appellant filed and presented its verified' motion- that the court select some competent, responsible, and unbiased 'physician and surgeon of the county to examine the head, leg, and eye of the plaintiff before the beginning of the'trial, for the purpose of discovering and giving testimony1 ás tó the trim character 'and extent of ■ his injuries', -and their probable effect ás to permanency upon his mind and person'; *425that the plaintiff is a child nine years of age, and was but seven years of age when he received the alleged injuries, and the defendant has had'no opportunity'and .has been wholly unable to inform itself upon the subject of said injuries; that .the plaintiff asserts in his complaint that his skull was cracked, his eyes injured, ffis leg broken, his nervous system impaired, and that his said injuries are great and permanent; that the plaintiff will produce as a witness in his own behalf the physician who attended him in his illness, and the defendant is totally unable to produce any witness wlj.o has examined the plaintiff and' who can state from medical knowledge the nature and extent' of his injuries, and the probability or improbability of their permanency; that the plaintiff’s father be permitted to be present at such examination; that such examination will be able to determine the true nature and extent and probable effect of such injuries, and may be made without pain, humiliation, or danger to the plaintiff.

The overruling of this motion presents a question of some difficulty, and upon which the courts of the country are not entirely agreed. _ It is one, too, that has but recently engaged the attention of the courts of last resort... The fundamental principle, however, is an ancient doctrine of the common law, limited, it is true, to a few classes of cases, among them mayhem and divorce cases, wherein impotency was charged; but as the sources of evidence have been extended to parties and in many other ways, its application has been expanded to meet new conditions. The doctrine rests upon the principle that justice is the object of judicial investigation, and that courts charged with' its administration, as a necessary means of attaining that end,, have inherent power to require the production of the most' 'infallible evidence. That its application to personal injury cáses is a modern practice does not disprove its commo'n law origin. As was well" said by justice Brewer in his dissenting opinion in Union, etc., Co. v. Botsford, 141 U. S. 250, 258, 11 Sup. Ct. 1000, 35 L. Ed. *426734: “The .silence of common law authorities upon the question in cases of this kind proves little or nothing. The number of actions to recover damages, in early days, was, compared with later times,-limited; and very few of those difficult questions as to the nature and extent, of the injuries, which now form an important part of such litigation, were then-presented-to the courts.- If an examination was asked, doubtless it was conceded-without objection, as one of those' matters the .right to which-was. beyond, dispute. Certainly the power of the courts and,of the co.mmon law courts to compel a personal-examination .was, in many, cases, often exercised and unchallenged. Indeed, wherever the interests of justice seemed to require such- an examination, it was ordered.” Beginning with the case of Loyd v. Hannibal, etc., R. Co., 53 Mo. 509, decided in 1873, there have followed many adjudications-upon the power of the trial court to order a physical examination of the. plaintiff in suits impersonal injuries upon request of the defendant. In this first case,- the power, upon slight consideration, was denied. In 1877, in the well considered case of Schroeder v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 47 Iowa 375, the power was affirmed. Following this lead, the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Texas, and Wisconsin, have reasserted the rule as announced in the Iowa case. Alabama, etc., R. Co. v. Hill (1885), 90. Ala. 71, 8 South. 90, 9 L. R. A. 442; King v. State (1895), 100 Ala. 85, 14 South. 878; Sibley v. Smith (1885), 46 Ark. 275; St. Louis, etc., R. Co. v. Dobbins (1893), 60 Ark. 481, 30 S. W. 887, 31 S. W. 147; Richmond, etc., R. Co. v. Childress (1889), 82 Ga. 719, 9 S. E, 602, 3 L. R. A. 808; Hall v. Town of Manson (1896), 99 Iowa 698, 68 N. W. 922, 34 L. R. A. 207; Atchison, etc., R. Co. v. Thul (1883), 29 Kan. 466; Belt Electric Co. v. Allen (1898 Ky.), 44 S. W. 89; Graves v. City of Battle Creek (1893), 95 Mich. 266, 54 N. W. 757; Shepard v. Missouri, etc., R. Co. (1885), 85 Mo. 629; *427Sidekum v. Wabash, etc., R. Co. (1887), 93 Mo. 400, 4 S. W. 701; Owens v. Kansas City, etc., R. Co. (1888), 95 Mo. 169, 8 S. W. 350; Hatfield v. St. Paul, etc., R. Co. (1885), 33 Minn. 130, 22 N. W. 176; Stuart v. Havens, 17 Neb. 211 (1885), 22 N. W. 419; Hess v. Lake Shore, etc., R. Co. (1890), 7 Pa. C. C. 565; Miami, etc., Co. v. Baily, (1881), 37 Ohio St. 104; Chicago, etc. R. Co. v. Langston (1898), 19 Tex. Civ. App. 568, 47 S. W. 1027, 48 S. W. 610; White v. Milwaukee, etc., R. Co. (1884), 61 Wis. 536, 21 N. W. 524; O’Brien v. City of LaCrosse (1898), 99 Wis. 421, 75 N. W. 81, 40 L. R. A. 831. These cases assert the doctrine that courts are instituted by the state to administer impartial justice to contending parties. In such contests it is the duty of the court to bestow upon the litigants equal and exact justice. This cannot be done without the court first •obtaining the exact and full truth concerning the matters in controversy. Hence from this duty of the court to dispense exact justice is essentially implied all power necessary to its performance, which includes the power to make subservient to its order all persons and things that will afford the most reliable evidence. In quasi recognition of this power it is the law of this State, and other- states' so far as we have observed, that the court may permit the plaintiff in both civil and criminal cases to exhibit to the jury sucli weapons, implements, clothing, and wounds upon his person, - or upon the person of the prosecuting witness, as are asserted to be the means, or effects, of the violence complained of. Indiana Car Co. v. Parker, 100 Ind. 181, 199; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Wood, 113 Ind. 544; Hess v. Lowrey, 122 Ind. 225, 232, 17 Am. St. 355; Citizens St. R. Co. v. Willoeby, 134 Ind. 563; Thrawley v. State, 153 Ind. 375.

Such things, when a part of the res gestae, serve-a most useful purpose in assisting the jury to a proper-application of the testimony. They are unerring exponents of the truth of the particular fact, and it may not be controverted that when the nature, extent, and effect, óf a palpable injury is *428in dispute — not involving scientific questions — the jury may arrive at a more accurate knowledge of the truth by the aid of their own senses than by a verbal description of' the observations of others. This being well known to a plaintiff he is certain to avail himself of this advantage in the trial when the truth will be beneficial to him, and if impartial justice is to be administered wé see no' way of its attainment in all cases if an important source of evidence is open to one ánd closed to the other. That the question embraces^ the exercise of scientific knowledge makes no difference. Physicians and surgeons, however ■ honest and learned, are fallible, and equally, with other honest and honorable persons, subject to the unconscious influence of friendship arid personal interest — the latter, in surgery cases,’ involving not only professional reputation, but pecuniary liability. Besides, surgeons of ’equal learning and honesty may not diagnose an injury in the same wáy. They may not be equally strong in perception, or equally accurate in observation, of in measurements, and thus form different judgments of the existing conditions, which of necessity must constitute the basis of their scientific opinions'^ ánd it may be readily seen that if a defendant must make his'defense against the expert opinions of the plaintiff’s chosen’ surgeons, without an opportunity of testing the verity of the basis for such opinions, he may be placed at disastrous disadvantage such as the láw cannot arid does not sanction.

The cases above cited" as affirming the ‘ éxistence of the power establish the following propositions: (1) "That trial courts have the power to order the medical éxáminatión by experts of the injured parts of a plaintiff who' is seeking to recover damages therefor; (2) that a defendant has no absolute right to demand the enforcement of such an order, but the motion-thetefor is addressed to the sound1 discretion of the trial court; (3) that the exercise of such discretion is'reviewable on appeal, and correctible in cases of abuse; (4)' that the examination should be applied for and *429made before entering upon the trial, and should be ordered and conducted under the direction of the court, whenever it fairly appears that the ends of justice require a more certain ascertainment of important facts. which can only be disclosed, or fully elucidated, by such an examination, and such an examination may be made without danger to the plaintiff’s life or health, or the.infliction of serious pain; (5) that the refusal of the motion, when the circumstances appearing in the record present á reasonably, clean case for the examination under the rules stated is such an abuse of discretion in the trial court as will operate to reverse a judgment for the plaintiff; (6) that such ah order may.be enforced, not by punishment as for- a contempt, but by delaying or dismissing the .proceeding. .

The discretion lodged in the trial court, as fairly deducible from the decisions, is a sound discretion based solely upon legal considerations. When serious and permanent injuries are claimed by the plaintiff, and he, or she, has submitted to examination by a chosen, physician, or surgeon, who appears, as á witness in plaintiff’s behalf, and the nature, extent, and effect of the injury is to be deduced from objective conditions, and so fully from no other source, no degree of sentiment will justify a denial of the motion. When it becomes a question of probable violence to the.refined and delieáte feelings of the .plaintiff on the one hand, and.probable, injustice to the defendant on the other, the law will not hesitate, — the court in making such orders, with respect to time, place, and persons, in every case, having such due regard for the feelings of the plaintiff and proprieties of the case as the ends of justice will permit.

So far as our researches have revealed the federal Supreme Court, Justices Brewer and Brown dissenting, now stand alone in denial of the power. Union, etc., Co. v. Botsford, 141 U. S. 250, 11 Sup. Ct. 1000, 35 L. Ed. 734.

The decisions of New York were confused, and the rule both affirmed and denied in inferior courts, until established *430by legislative enactment in 1893. Chap. 721 Laws 1893, §873 Code Civ. Prac.

The power was first denied in the state of Missouri in Loyd’s case, supra, in 1873, but affirmed by the same court iii -Shepard’s case, supra, in 1885-, and affirmance has been adhered to in many .subsequent cases.

• In 'Illinois the Supreme Court in 1882 in Parker v. Enslow, 102 Ill. 272, disposed of the question in. a single ■ line as follows: - “The court had no power to make or enforce such an order”; and in subsequent decisions, while not expressly overruling .the Parker case, recognize the existence of the power, when properly and timely invoked. See Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Holland (1887), 122 Ill. 461, 13 N. E. 145; St. Louis Bridge Co. v. Miller (1891), 138 Ill. 465, 28 N. E. 1091.

The decisions in Indiana, in the words of the majority opinion of the, federal Supreme Court in the Botsford case, supra, “are conflicting and indecisive.” In the first appear-, anee of the question before this court in any. form, in 1885, in Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Falvey, 104 Ind. 409, 416, 417, in ruling upon the competency of evidence touching'the details of a physical examination of the plaintiff under an order of court, made upon the defendant’s motion, the right of the trial court to make filé order is not questioned.

Kern v. Bridwell, 119 Ind. 226, 12 Am. St. 409, was an action for slander for charging the plaintiff with .lewdness. The'court refused to order the plaintiff to submit her person to examination by medical experts. The question related to a collateral matter and not- to the subject-matter of the suit, — to a source of-evidence not shown to be reliable nor useful to the defendant in his answer of justification, and should not be accepted-as an. authority in a suit by a plaintiff to recover damages for a particular injury to his person.

The question came before the court in Hess v. Lowrey, 122 Ind. 225, and the request for an examination denied because *431untimely made. The court,-by Mitchell, J., said: “It is undoubtedly true that the court may in its discretion in a proper case,-if application is seasonably made-, require the • plaintiff to submit his person to- a reasonable -examination-by competent physicians and surgeons when necessary- to ascertain the nature, extent and permanency- of injuries.

The case of Terre Haute, etc., R. Co. v. Brunker, 128 Ind. 542 presenting a like question was ruled by Hess v. Lowrey, supra.

In Pennsylvania Co. v. Newmeyer, 129 Ind. 401, 409, the question we have here came before the court for decision, and it was there held that the power of the court to order an examination did not exist, the court regarding what was said in Hess v. Lowrey as obiter. Upon -further, and perhaps fuller, consideration of the question, we are satisfied that the decision in the Newmeyer ease, upon this-point, is .refuted by the great weight of authority,-and it is therefqre disapproved. It is insisted that the .question should be ruled by the decision of the federal.Supreme Court, but .adopting as our own the language used by Montgomery, J., in Graves v. Battle Creek, 95 Mich. 266, 54 N. W. 757, with respect to the Botsford decision: “This decision is entitled to very great weight; but in view of the manifest justice' of a requirement that the plaintiff in case of personal injury shall produce the- best evidence attainable we think this- case should not'be permitted to-stem the otherwise-almost un-, broken-current-of authority upon the subject.”

In the ease at bar the motion -of the defendant was timely; the injuries were alleged to be serious and permanent, -as affecting both the body and mind of the plaintiff ;-the plaintiff would produce in his own behalf his attending - physician ; the defendant had no opportunity to inspect the injufiés, or in any way inform itself- as to their nature, extent, and effect, and was wholly-'unable to- contest, if- it should-be contested, the testimony of the plaintiff’s expert witness; ■ that an: examination by skilled and unbiased-surgeons would *432enable them to determine the .nature and extent of the injuries, and, at least in a degree, to determine tbeir effect and permanency, and could be made without danger or pain to the plaintiff. The application was made before the trial began, more than two years after the infliction of the injuries, and clearly presents a case where the trial court, should have pxercised its discretion in favor of the .motion. Por. error of the court in overruling the motion, the appeal must be sustained. Judgment reversed, with instructions to grant appellant’s motion for a new trial.