I. The evidence established that the muscles of plaintiff’s right arm and shoulder were wasted and shrunken. The theory of the defense was that the injury was simulated, and that the appearance of the arm and shoulder was the result of long continued disuse. The plaintiff at the suggestion of the physicians visited Dr. Andrews of Chicago, and was examined by him.
*277Against the objection of defendant, plaintiff was permitted to testify as follows:
“ The doctor prescribed that I should keep the weight of my arm off of my shoulder as much as possible; that I should give it rest. And he prescribed a liniment that I should use. The only prescription he gave or advised was to carry the weight of the arm on the shoulder as little as possible; the use of the liniment, rest for the arm, and the wearing of flannel on the arm. That was the only medicine he gave me, and those were the directions that he gave to Dr. Rouse. Dr. Andrew's made an examination of my arm and shoulder at that time. I think that' Dr. Andrews made an examination of my collar bone. I think there was no appearance of the bruise at that time. I followed Dr. Andrew’s directions.” The objection urged to this testimony in argument is that it is hearsay. We are very clear that it is not vulnerable to this objection. Any person may testify that a thing was said oran act was done who is cognizant of the fact. The only question is w'hetlier it is competent to show at all that the thing was said or the act done. If it is competent to establish the fact, it may be done by one who was present, just as w'ell as by the person who did it. In this case the propriety, necessity, or reasonableness of the direction does not necessarily arise. The material question is, was such direction given? We think it can scarcely be questioned that if Dr. Andrews had himself been on the stand he might have testified that he directed plaintiff to carry his arm in a sling.
i.. evidence : limitation of instruction, The testimony would be admissible, not for the purpose of showing that the doctor thought the injury was so serious as to require such treatment, but for the purpose of . *• 1 repelling the claim of the defendant that the plaintiff had acted in bad faith, and had carried his arm in a sling to create a false impression as to the extent of the injury. And if this fact could have been proved by the doctor, it may be proved by any one else. See 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, section 101.
If evidence is competent and admissible for any purpose, it cannot be rejected because it may be considered by the jury *278for an improper purpose. Under such circumstances a party must guard himself against prejudice by requesting an instruction limiting .the testimony to its legitimate objects. Appellant claims that by the introduction of this testimony plaintiff was enabled to place before the jury the opinion of Dr. Andrews as to the serious nature of his injury, without the sanction of an oath, and without subjection to a cross-examination. The defendant, however, might have guarded against the consideration of the testimony for such purpose, by requesting the proper instructions.
2.--: en-or without prejudice. II. Plaintiff testified that he could earn $2,000.00 a year before he sustained the injury complained of, and that he is now entirely disabled. Defendant entered upon .. „ r „ a line ot cross-examination for the purpose of showing that plaintiff had accumulated no property, and had shown where plaintiff was born, how long he lived there, where he moved to when he came to this State, the number of his family, when he went into business, how long he followed it, and what property his father gave him, when the plaintiff objected “ to this style of examination,” and the objection was sustained. The abstract shows that, notwithstanding the sustaining of the objection, the defendant afterward pursued the same line.of cross-examination, and elicited fully all the facts respecting plaintiff’s business, employments, and accumulations. If it should, therefore, be conceded that there was error in checking defendant in the proposed cross-examination, it was error without prejudice.
III. After a very full and searching cross-examination, plaintiff was asked upon his re-examination to state fully how he conld earn $2,000.00 a year. ■ Plaintiff answered as follows: “ During the last year that I ran the farm I had a shingle mill and made with it at the rate of $2,000.00 a year.” The same fact was substantially stated in his cross-examination, and we are unable to see how a repetition of it in his re-examination conld have worked any prejudice.,
*2793.___: admissibility corroboration. *278IY. There was evidence pending to show that the ears were precipitated from the track by reason of the breaking of ties from rottenness. One Hawkins was introduced as a witness, *279and amongst other things testified as follows: “ I was not there when the smash-up took place, but I was‘there the next morning. The wreck was off the track and the new track down when I saw it. I did not notice much about the old ties, or the new ones either, only I saw there were new ties there. I did notice rotten ties-and loose ties all along the road. I noticed them while walking along the track at that time and after that. I never was there before that. I think it was on this side that I noticed the ties. I did not notice any rotten ties until I got west of the wreck. I think where the ties had been put in they were part old and part new ties.” This testimony was received without objection. Plaintiff then asked the following question, to which defendant objected as immaterial: “Did you notice any rotten ties west and in the immediate vicinity of the accident?” Witness answered: “ I don’t remember of seeing any ties that were very bad that were close to the wreck. They had perhaps put in seven or eight new ties, and perhaps more than that; there were ties laying around there but I did not notice them particularly. I did not notice any of the old ties.” Upon cross-examination the witness stated: “ I noticed four ties that were not over good there. There are more or less poor ties all the way from there to Carroll City. I walked on the track that fall all the way from there to Carroll City. It was somewhat wet there at that time. There were a good many loose ties on the track. The road was not all ballasted. The ties are apt to get loose in wet weather on a rbad built on prairie soil. I don’t remember seeing any ties within twelve or fifteen rods of the accident that were unfit for use.” The defendant thereupon moved that the evidence of the witness as to rotten ties west of the accident be excluded. The motion was overruled and defendant excepted. It will be observed that the testimony of the witness respecting rotten ties west of the wreck was admitted without objection. If it is to be excluded it must be because of matters elicited upon the cross-examination. The cross-examination shows merely that these ties were not within fifteen rods of the wreck. For aught that appears they were within sixteen rods of the place of ,the *280accident. It was shown by this witness that at the place of the wreck new ties had been put in and the old ones had been discarded. Another witness testifies that at the place of the wreck, and in the immediate vicinity of it, there were poor ties and rotten ones. In connection with this testimony, and as corroborative of it, it was not error to admit testimony showing the condition of the road within sixteen l’ods of the place of the accident.
4. contract: actíon!eity' Y. The defendant in cross-examination of plaintiff sought to elicit facts to show that a champertous agreement respecting the suit existed between plaintiff and his attorney. The proposed examination was, upon plaintiff’s objection, prevented and this action of the court is assigned as error. It is claimed that if the questions which were put had been answered, the case would have been brought within Boardman & Brown v. Thompson, 25 Iowa, 487. We are unable to perceive upon what principle a defendant can, as a defense, avail himself of the fact that a champertous contract has been entered into between the plaintiff and his attorneys for the maintaining of the suit. Such champertous contract is against public policy and void. Neither party to it can enforce it against the other. By the Roman law such contracts were severely condemned, and by the common law they were punished as misdemeanors. But how can a party exonerate himself from his agreements, or escape the consequences of his torts by showing that the opposite party is prosecuting his remedy through such agreement? If he could do so an unheard of effect would be given to a void agreement. Suppose a suit upon a promissory note is prosecuted under a champertous arrangement between the plaintiff and his attorney, does this avail the defendant to defeat an otherwise just liability? Will not the law rather compel the defendant to perform his undertakings, and then leave the question of champerty to be determined between the plaintiff and his attorney? Besides, in this case no issue as to the question of champerty was made, and the proposed evidence was for this reason irrelevant and -was properly rejected.
*2815. DAMAGES: recovery: previous in jury. *280YI. The defendant insists that the court erred in refusing *281the eighth instruction asked, as follows: “If you find from ^ie evidence that plaintiff’s arm had been broken at Moingona and set, splinted and bandaged by Dr. Grosvenor, you will then consider whether plaintiff would have received any injury by reason of the accident on the freight train but for the previous injury at Moingona. In other words, if yon believe from the evidence that if plaintiff’s arm had been well and sound he would not have received any injury by the accident on the freight train, he cannot recover on his second count, although the pain in his broken arm may have been increased -and a cure delayed thereby. Such damages are remote and not recoverable.” In support of this position appellant cites 3 Parsons on Contracts, 177, where it is said that “if a slight bruise has been so ill-treated by a surgeon that extensive inflammation and gangrene has supervened and a limb is lost, the defendant is not answerable for this. Nor, on the same principle, ought lie to be held responsible if the same consequences follow from a slight bruise by reason of the peculiarly unhealthy condition of the plaintiff, if the defendant had no means of knowing this.” No adjudicated case in support of the text is cited, and it would seem from the language employed that the author was aware of none. It is further apparent that the instruction asked presses the doctrine much beyond that stated in Parsons. The case there put is one where a slight bruise results in the loss of a limb, because of the peculiarly unhealthy condition of the subject, of which the party inflicting the injury had no means of knowledge.
6____. —: railroads, But the instruction asked denies recovery for any injury, however directly occasioned by the negligence of defendant, and however rough and violent the shock to which plaintiff was subjected, if the jury should find that plaintiff would not have been injured, if his arm had been sound and well. If this doctrine has ever been recognized by any court, the sooner, in the interest of humanity, it is abandoned the better.
Eollowed to its logical results the doctrine of this instruction would practically deny protection to anyone traveling by *282stage coach, steamboat or railway who is possessed of less than ordinary health and physical endurance. For if a broken arm places a party beyond the pale of protection against injuries which he would not have sustained if his arm had been sound, the invalid cannot recover for injuries which he would not have received if he had been well; and this, notwithstanding the negligence of the defendant. A party is not to be denied the right of locomotion because he is not blessed with a robust constitution. Tie has a right to expect and demand in his transportation the exercise of the highest degree of care; and he has a right to be compensated for all injuries to which his own negligence has not contributed, and which would not have been.sustained if such care upon the part of the defendant had been exercised. It is incumbent upon common carriers to take notice of the fact that invalids frequently travel for the purpose of regaining health, or impelled by necessity, and they must be h.eld to a strict accountability for all injuries which result from a failure to exercise proper care.
YII. It is urged in the next place that the court erred in refusing to give the third instruction asked by defendant. Appellant, in this respect, misapprehends the record. The record does not show that the third instruction was refused. The abstract impliedly shows that it was given.
7 practicesistcnf with" instruction, VIII. It is claimed that the verdict is contrary to the third instruction of the court, as follows: “If you believe -k’om evidence that such injury as the plaintiff claims he has sustained could not have resulted without leaving such marked traces of deformity as would manifest itself to medical experts, so as to enable them to detect the cause of his present physical condition, ¿side from the mere wasted and shrunken condition of the muscles of his right arm and shoulder; and if you further believe from the evidence that the wasted and shrunken condition may have resulted from simple disuse without injury, and no such, nor any traces of deformity can be discovered, as would account -for the wasting of the muscles, then you are bound to attribute it to disuse.” It is claimed the evidence *283shows that there are no traces of deformity, and that the condition, of the arm can be traced only to disuse. Let this be conceded. What follows under the instruction? That the defendant must have a verdict? Defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that if they found such facts to exist they must find for the defendant. But the court refused to so instruct the jury, and gave as a substitute the third instruction, which is almost a literal copy of that asked, omitting the direction that if they found the facts to so exist they must find for the defendant. The only consequence which the court attached^to the finding of the existence of the fact stated is that they should attribute the wasting of the muscles to disuse.
The jury found specially that the present condition of plaintiff’s arm is not due to the substantial disuse of it for the past two years and a half. It must be admitted that this special finding is contrary to this third instruction, if it be conceded that the evidence shows the shrunken condition of the arm can be traced only to disuse. But the jury also found specially that plaintiff’s arm was broken on the freight train October 1st, 1870. Defendant’s theory is that plaintiff sustained no injury. The jury have found he did. An erroneous finding that the shrunken condition of the arm wás not occasioned by disuse could only affect the amount of damages, and not the right of plaintiff to i’ecover. But it is not claimed that the verdict is excessive, if. plaintiff' is entitled to recover at all. This finding, therefore, worked no prejudice, and becomes immaterial.
8. verdict: timony. IX. It is next urged that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence. The case is the ordinary one of a conflict of evidence. The evidence is voluminous, and a review of it would be neither desirable nor profitable. It may be conceded that the preponderance of the testimony shows that the injury of plaintiff is much less than he claims. Yet this is the second verdict for the plaintiff. The amount is not large. The former verdict was for $2,000.00. The evidence is not of such a character as to- bring the mind irresistibly to the conclusion that the verdict was not the result *284of a free, sound aud unbiased exercise of judgment on the part of the jury, and that manifest injustice will result if the verdict is permitted to stand. We cannot, therefore, disturb the verdict. See Hammond’s Digest, 615 and cases cited.
X. Lastly it is claimed that the verdict should be set aside because of misconduct of the jury. An affidavit was filed showing that during the night of the 16th day of August and on the 17th day of August, up to the time the jury agreed on their verdict, individual members of the jury were allowed to separate and retire from the jury room repeatedly without the attendance and out of sight and hearing of the bailiff, and that a member of the jury threw a paper with something written thereon, which an attorney of plaintiff picked up, and refused to show to defendant’s attorney or to a bailiff of the court. Appellant seems to concede under the authority of Cook & Owsley v. Walters, 4 Iowa, 77, that the mere separation of the jury without some showing of prejudice will not be sufficient to set aside the verdict. And see, also, Boggs v. Chicago & Northwestern R’y Co., 29 Iowa, 577. It is claimed, however, that an unwarranted' communication on the part of the jury with plaintiff’s attorney has been shown. The affidavit of this attorney, however, shows that the paper was not probably intended for him, that his attention was directed to it’ upon hearing it fall, and that he immediately carried the paper to the judge and exhibited it to him in the presence of two other parties; that he never in any manner had any communication with any member of the jury, and that he has the original paper in his 'possession, ready to exhibit either to the curious or to legal observation. Under this state of facts there is no ground for holding that the jury held improper communication with any one, from which prejudice could possibly result.
We have examined seriatim all the objections urged, and we find no error in the record. Aeeibmed.