Belle of Nelson Distilling Co. v. Riggs

JtrÓGE HAZELRIGG

delivered the opinion oe ti-ie court.

While working as a day laborer for the appellant distilling company, the appellee was injured by the falling of an elevator loaded with barrels of whisky which he was engaged in ricking. On the first trial of his suit for damages a verdict was rendered in his favor for the sum of $4,000. The trial court ordered a new trial, because it is said of the admission of incompetent evidence; and on a second trial a verdict for the sum of $4,250 resulted, from the judgment on which this appeal is prosecuted by .the company. The proof conduces to show that the appellee is almost a helpless cripple, as a result of his fall, and it is fairly established that the defective construction and condition of the elevator are responsible therefor, — a construction and condition either known to the company’s Agents or easily ascertainable by such inspection and care as the law imposes on the master when furnishing machinery for the use of the servants.

The first error complained of is that, in the opening and closing statement, counsel for appellee made reference to an accident insurance, policy supposed to have been held by the company on the life, etc., of its employes, including appellee. But, in view of the fact the statements *6themselves were indefinite, and the references in the proof to such policies were distinctly pronounced by the court as incompetent and not germane to the issues on trial, we are satisfied the court ought not, at request of counsel for appellant, to have discharged the jury by reason of such allusions. No intelligent juror could have been deceived or misled by such statement. In this connection, the objection to such testimony, allowed to get before the jury with respect to such a policy, may be disposed of. It became a matter of inquiry as to whether or not the agents of the company had' informed its president or managing officers of the accident to appellee, and, in attempting to show that such knowledge had come to them, the appellee introduced a physician, who had made a detailed written statement of appellee’s condition, and it appeared that this statement was made because of the existence of a policy of insurance held by the company. It was a mere incident of the examination of the witness, and, while counsel for appellee persisted in an attempt to get this incompetent proof in, the court, as we have already seen, announced several times that proof-as to any accident policy was not pertinent to the case.

The complaint that the appellee was permitted to prove that the elevator.was mended after the accident has no-basis in fact. The court was careful to exclude such proof, though it did allow .proof as to the manner in which the machinery might easily have been remedied, and to this-we can see no objection. Nor do we think it was a reversible error to allow the witness O’Bryan to state what one Parker said in reference to the dangerous condition of the elevator while Parker was using it under the company; yet the proof may not have been strictly competent. However, the defective condition of the machinery is so *7overwhelmingly established that Parker’s statement added nothing to the strength of the evidence in that behalf.

The most serious question in this case was the refusal of the court to require the appellee to submit to a physical examination during the progress of the trial. This request by appellant for such examination was refused, but the ground of the refusal is not stated. We have heretofore held, but since the trial of this case, The Belt Electric Line Co. v. Allen, 19 Ky. Law Rep. 1656 [44 S. W. 89], that such an examination may be required in the exercise of the sound discretion on the part of the trial court, and when it fáirly appears that the ends of justice require it, and that knowledge of necessary and material facts can only be brought to light by such 'examination. In the present case some eighteen months had elapsed from the time of the accident to the date of trial, and it was apparent to all that the appellee was a cripple. It was an undisputed fact that he had suffered extreme and excruciating pain. His right thigh was broken, his left thigh mashed, and his body otherwise bruised and injured. An examination by the company’s expert physicians, or by a commission of learned doctors, might, have informed the jury of the exact nature of the trouble under which the appellee labored, and have clothed their information in the usual technical nomenclature of the profession, but the patent fact that the man had thus suffered and was a cripple could not have been explained away. In the courts where the power to compel a submission to such an examination is upheld, — and it is denied in many, — it is not held that a defendant has an absolute right to demand such an order, but, as we have said, the motion therefor is addressed to the sound discretion of the court. We are not convinced that the trial court *8abused this discretion in refusing to make the order for such examination, under the proof and circumstances in the case. We have examined carefully the instructions, given, and believe they embrace the law of the case.

The judgment is affirmed. •