Judges: Hendrick
Filed Date: 3/14/1907
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The appellants’ contention is based upon three propositions: Eirst, that the amount of damages is excessive; second, that the court erred in the admission and exclusion of evidence; and, third, that' the judgment was against the weight of evidence.
On the second proposition, namely, that the court erred in the admission and exclusion of evidence, an examination of the exceptions ■does not disclose error. The question asked the doctor was as follows:
“Q. From the examination which you made of this plaintiff, and from observations that you have made, can you state with any degree of certainty as to whether the injuries which the plaintiff was suffering from were painful in their nature? A. Yes.”
Bare proof of a badly sprained ankle, of lacerations, and of such injuries as were testified to in this case, were sufficient, together with the proof of special damages, to sustain the verdict. Moreover, the question and answer do not constitute testimony by the doctor that the injuries were painful. They only go to the extent of stating that the doctor could state whether the injuries were painful in their nature. He was not asked,- and did not testify that the injuries were painful.
One of the defendants, S. M. Kurshan, being examined in behalf of the defendants, was questioned on the direct examination in relation to the manner in which he had secured the horse. He said he tied the horse with a weight, and was then asked this question:
“Q. What kind of a weight is that? A. A regular weight; about 25 to 35 pounds.”
On motion of plaintiff’s attorney the words “about 25 to 35 pounds” were stricken out as being a conclusion, and the defendants’ attorney excepted. I think the proof was competent and should not have been stricken out. The error, however, was harmless. The principal complaint of the plaintiff was- not in regard to the weight, but in regard to the strap by which the weight was attached to the horse, and the proof shows that it was the breaking of that strap, because it was rotten and in a broken condition, that enabled the horse to run away. If the strap had not broken, the breaking being evidently caused by the ■sufficiency of the weight, the runaway would not have occurred.
The third of appellants’ points, that the judgment is against the weight of evidence, is disposed of by the fact that on all material points
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.