Yellow Cab Transit Co. v. Bethel

Citation1938 OK 431,81 P.2d 667,183 Okla. 219
Decision Date28 June 1938
Docket NumberCase Number: 28384
PartiesYELLOW CAB TRANSIT CO. et al. v. BETHEL
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
(Syllabus)

¶0 1. EVIDENCE - Expert Testimony as to Personal Injuries - Basis - Subjective and Objective Symptoms.

A physician who has examined the patient (so far after the accident that his statements to the physician cannot be said to be a part of the res gestae) for the purpose of testifying as an expert can base his opinion on the subjective, together with the objective, symptoms of the patient, relying on a history of the case, including the fact of the accident, as a circumstance upon which he came to his conclusion.

2. APPEAL AND ERROR - Sufficiency of Evidence to Sustain Recovery and Lack of Showing That Verdict Is Excessive.

Where there is evidence to sustain the verdict, as to the amount, and nothing appears in the record tending to show that the minds of the Jury were inflamed so as to induce the belief that the jury was actuated by passion, prejudice, partiality or corruption, the verdict will not be set aside, upon appeal, as excessive

Appeal from District Court, Creek County; J. Harvey Smith, Judge.

Action by Ethel Lee Bethel against Yellow Cab Transit Company and Guy Hartley for damages for personal injuries. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendants appeal. Affirmed.

Rogers, Stephenson & Dickason, for plaintiffs in error.

Walker & Lewis and Willis D. Smith, for defendant in error.

CORN, J.

¶1 This is an action for damages for personal injuries.

¶2 The plaintiff in the court below recovered a verdict and judgment for the sum of $3,500, from which the defendants appealed. The parties are referred to herein in the order of their appearance in the trial court.

¶3 The injuries complained of were sustained in an acident upon a public highway, which is alleged to have happened as follows: The car in which the plaintiff was riding met a large truck of the defendant transit company, driven by Guy Hartley, an employee of the company, and the truck was over the center line of the pavement on the wrong side of the road so far as to crowd the car off the pavement onto the shoulder of the road grade and into the ditch, the car overturning and the plaintiff sustaining a fractured skull and other injuries.

¶4 The defendants first contend that the court erred in refusing to exclude from the jury the testimony of Dr. Schwab.

¶5 It appears that Dr. Schwab examined the plaintiff, not for the purpose of administering treatment, but rather for the purpose of qualifying himself to testify as a witness on behalf of the plaintiff, and the court permitted him to testify as to opinions based upon the history of the case as given by the plaintiff. In many jurisdictions such evidence is excluded as self-serving declarations and the physician is permitted to testify only to objective symptoms disclosed by his examination of the injured person, but in this state the contrary rule prevails St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. v. McFall, 63 Okla. 124, 163 P. 269; Quality Ice Cream Co. v. Jones, 155 Okla. 197. 8 P.2d 751; Bartlett-Collins Glass Co. v. Washabaugh, 166 Okla. 90, 26 P.2d 420; and Sutherland Lumber Co. v. Roberts, 107 Okla. 646, 31 P.2d 581.

¶6 In the McFall Case, supra, in paragraph 4 of the syllabus, we held:

"A physician who has examined the patient (so far after the accident that his statements to the physician cannot be said to be a part of the res gestae) for the purpose of testifying as an expert can base his opinion on the subjective, together with the objective, symptoms of the patient, relying on a history of the case, including the fact of the accident, as a circumstance upon which he came to his conclusion."

¶7 In the Jones Case, supra, in paragraph 3 of the syllabus, we held:

"The testimony of physicians as to medical conclusions based, in part, on statements made by a patient at the time of the examination by the physician, are not incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and may be considered by the State Industrial Commission, although they are not entitled to the weight and credence given to conclusions based on a history given by the patient at the time of the injury or for the purpose of procuring medical treatment."

¶8 In cases where the physician who...

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