This was an action brought by Hattie A. Randall and her husband, to recover damages, against the Augusta and
It appears in this case that, after Mrs. Randall was precipitated from this car upon the ground, and immediately after she had gotten up, picked up her bundles and brushed herself, the first thing she did was to secure the name of the driver of the car. According to her testimony, she knew him very well by sight, having ridden in the same car with him often before ; but after this occurrence, the first thing she did was to inquire his name. She then went to her house, which was a block and a half off- — 150 or 200 yards; entered her house, and deposited her bundles. She then left and went across the street to where Mrs. Shellman, her sister-in-law, lived, and while there made a statement to Mrs. Shellman as to how she was hurt. When Mrs. Shellman was introduced to prove what Mrs. Randall said to her, objection was made to her testifying on that subject. She testified in this way (Mrs. Randall having testified first): that when Mrs. Randall came into her house, she was greatly excited; and in reply to Mr.s. Shellman’s inquiry as to what was the matter, she told her she had been thrown off the car and was hurt, and how she came to be hurt. Thereupon Mrs. Shellman got her a glass of brandy, made some tea and gave it to her, and put her to bed. It does not appear at what particular time she made this statement to Mrs. Shellman. Mrs. Shellman went on to testify that what Mrs. Randall stated to her at her house on that occasion was what she (Mrs. Randall) had sworn to on the trial of this case; but how long after the occurrence she made this statement to Mrs. Shell-man, does not appear in the record. Mrs. Shellman merely testified that what Mrs. Randall had stated in her testimony was the same thing she told her; but did
As we understand it, res gestae are things connected with a transaction, taking place and stated at the time of the transaction. But that doctrine has been somewhat extended by our courts. Our code declares (§3773) that ‘•'declarations accompanying an act, or so nearly connected therewith in time as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought, are admissible in evidence as part of res gestae.” Declarations not connected with the transaction, nor bearing upon it or serving to illustrate it, although made at the very time the act was committed, are not admissible in evidence; they must be connected with the main act. And it is the duty of the court, when testimony of this sort is offered, to determine, before it goes to the jury, whether the declarations were connected with the main act, or so nearly connected in point of time as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought. The court must determine this before admitting the testimony to the jury; and after it goes to the jury, they may also consider it and determine what it is worth, under a proper charge from the court. Under the facts as they appear in this record, were these declarations connected with the transaction? They were not made at the time of the act complained of. But were they so nearly connected with this main fact in point of time as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought ? Upon recovering herself, after this occurrence, the first thing she did was to inquire the driver’s name. What for? What was her object? What was her purpose in inquiring the name of this driver, whom she knew well by sight and with whom she was personalty acquainted, having ridden with him frequently on the car ? Is that free from all suspicion that she had an ulterior purpose or design in making this inquiry ? Does it not give rise to the suspicion that she was fixing for a case against this street railroad company?
We are aware that what has been said may appear to be in conflict with some of the former decisions of this court; but a careful examination of those decisions will show that they differ from the present case in their facts. The case of the Augusta Factory vs. Barnes, 72 Ga. 217, was much relied on by counsel for the defendants in error in this case. That case must rest alone upon its own peculiar facts, and will not be extended beyond them ; but it differs widely from this case in all respects except in point of time in which the declarations were made. The proximity of time in which declarations are made to the main transaction is not the only test of their admissibility in
We think the court did right to refuse that charge. We do not see where any remote damages are claimed in this case. If a person is injured by the negligence of a railroad company, the extent of the injury is a proper subject-matter of inquiry. How was she hurt, did she have a miscarriage or abortion in consequence of the injury, did she suffer great pain in consequence'of the injury? — -all these are legitimate matters of inquiry, and are not consequences too remote. And the testimony offered in this case did not authorize the court to charge these two sections of the code.
This presumption that, where the plaintiff has shown that he was a passenger and was hurt or damaged by the running of the railroad company’s trains or machinery, the company was negligent, is a common law presumption. It is no new thing because it was not enacted in this State until the act of 1855. It obtained at common law, and had been the law of England and of this country all the time. It puts no greater hardship upon this railroad company than upon anybody else engaged in the same or any other business.
If this clause of the constitution were to be interpreted as insisted upon by counsel for the plaintiff in error, it would prevent the requirement that a man should obtain license in order to sell spirituous liquors; for why should he be required to obtain license any more than the merchant who sells dry goods, meat, etc., and who is not required to have one ? Such a construction is clearly not contemplated by this fourteenth amendment. It refers to classes, and means that you shall not impose a different rule upon a man whose color is black from that imposed upon one whose color is white. That was the purpose of the amendment; that is why it was put there; and it was
This case is reversed, therefore, on the assignment of error in the 4th ground of the motion for new trial, viz. the admitting in evidence of the statements of Mrs. Randall to Mrs. Shellman, as a part of the res gestx.
Judgment reversed.