Whiteside v. Adams Express Co.
Whiteside v. Adams Express Co.
Opinion of the Court
This action was instituted by plaintiff against the defendant, the Adams Express Company and the secretaries of the state board of health for damages alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff by reason of the loss of his medical diploma issued to him by Harvard college in the year 1882. Separate answers were filed by the secretaries and the express company. The secretaries, by their answer, admit plaintiff’s graduation from Harvard college,
At the close of the testimony, the court, on motion of defendant secretaries, instructed the jury to return a verdict in their favor, which was done, to which plaintiff excepted, and which is now assigned for error. We' are not prepared to say that this instruction should not have been
As would naturally be expected, the defendant company denied having received the diploma, and sought to maintain this defense. Plaintiff sought to show that the diploma was property of intrinsic value, and that the loss thereof was a real damage to him, while the defendant company sought to minimize that value. It appeared that a certificate had been made by the college certifying that, on the date shown in the records corresponding with the date of the issuance of the diploma, such diploma, showing the graduation of plaintiff, had been issued. Aside from the instruction directing the jury to return a verdict in favor of the secretaries, the court gave the following instructions to the jury:
No. 2. “You are instructed that if you find by a preponderance of all the evidence that the diploma in controversy was contained in the package which was delivered to the defendant, the Adams Express Company, on August 6,1903, at the time of such delivery, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff and against the Adams*434 Express Company. If you do not so find, then your verdict should he for the defendants.”
No. 3. “You are instructed that if you find for the plaintiff you may assess his recovery, under the pleadings and proof in this case, at an amount merely nominal, and that your verdict should he for five (5) cents only.”
The verdict of the jury was a general finding for the defendants.
The last of the above instructions is sharply criticised, and we think with reason. There was some evidence showing that such a document in the possession of one who had earned it does have an actual intrinsic value. This would seem to be especially true since it is made clearly to appear that it is an inflexible rule of the college never to issue a duplicate under any condition. But we do not see that this instruction is before us for examination, for the reason that under the first of said instructions the jury found in favor of the defendants, which was, in effect, that the diploma was not lost by the express company, and therefore the question of its value and the amount of damages becomes an immaterial one.
The bill of exceptions is quite a volume and abounds in objections to offered evidence, rulings thereon, and exceptions to such rulings. The assignments of error filed in this court are that (1) the judgment is contrary to law; (2) it is contrary to the evidence; (3)- is not sustained by the evidence; (4) the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial; (5) error in instructing the jury to return a verdict for nominal damages; (6) in dismissing the case of each defendant; (7) “the court erred in each instance it sustained objections to evidence offered by defendant.” The seventh assignment is too vague and indefinite to merit any attention here. Such has been the law of this state during its whole history. 1 Neb. Syn. Digest, p. 180 et seq. In the brief of plaintiff a page is headed “Assignment of Errors,” in which the first, second, third, sixth and seventh of the assignments filed with the record are omitted, and the following added: (1) The
The letter referred to in the first above was written to the college by one of the attorneys for the express company seeking the issuance of a duplicate diploma. It was written after the suit was commenced, in which it is said the plaintiff had sued the company for $20,000, copying some of the averments of the petition, and stating that the diploma had been delivered to the company, and that plaintiff “claims he has never received it,” that the attorney understood how such a diploma might be an asset to a practicing physician, that the company is asking for a duplicate, that it had a moral right to do so, etc. This letter was introduced as an admission of the fact of the delivery of the diploma to defendant for its transmission to plaintiff, its loss, and that it was of value. It was not written for the purpose of use on the trial, nor in any way giving direction to the procedure or influencing the action of plaintiff, nor was there any statement that the attorney had knowledge of the truth of what plaintiff claimed, nor was it made for the purpose of dispensing with formal proof of the facts claimed by plaintiff to exist. In 1 Greenleaf, Evidence (16th ed.) sec. 186, it is said that admissions made by an attorney must be distinct and formal, or such as are termed solemn admissions, made for the express purpose of alleviating the stringency of some rule of practice, or of dispensing with the formal proof of some fact at the trial. Other admissions which are mere matters of conversation with an attorney, though they relate to the facts in controversy, cannot be received in evi
As to the second ground, the deposition of one Dr. Charles M. Green, in charge of the college of medicine at Harvard, was taken, and the question of the value.of a diploma was presented to him when he was asked, in substance, if a diploma was of any value to a physician? In the course of his answer of some length he stated that some liked to display their diplomas in their offices, when lie volunteered the remark (possibly to show his wisdom): “In the west they do; but in this part of the world a man of any prominence would be ashamed to display his diploma in his office; would consider it a piece of poor taste.” This would no doubt have been stricken out as an immaterial, voluntary statement displaying “poor taste;” but, instead of adopting that course, plaintiff took the deposition of Dr. Joseph G. Green, of Marblehead, Massachusetts, .a city of near 40,000 population, for the purpose of disproving the statement of the other Green that such was not the practice in that part of the world. The witness interviewed a great number of physicians in Marble-head, and found that many of them did display their diplomas, giving the names and street number of those who exhibited the “poor taste” from the ill effects of which the other Green had exonerated them. This was a collateral question of no moment, and the court did right in refusing to admit the deposition in evidence. Had plaintiff objected to the “poor taste” part of the deposition of the other Green, his objection doubtless would have been-sustained.
While to the mind of the writer the result of the trial was probably a miscarriage of justice, yet, no sufficient
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George H. Whiteside v. Adams Express Company
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- 1 case
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- Published