Bishop v. Town of Mansfield

80 So. 217 | La. | 1918

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, C. J.

Plaintiffs, who are the brothers and sisters of Will. L. Bishop, deceased, prosecute this appeal from a judgment rejecting their demand for damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the decedent, and to which they attribute his death, and to have been sustained by them in consequence of his death, which injuries they aver were caused by the fault of the defendants, the town of Mansfield and Bash & Grey, contractors, in leaving in a dangerous condition a certain trench, running through one of the streets of the town, in which, under contract with the town, Bash & Grey had laid the pipes required for a water and sewerage system! and which trench they had neglected, after filling, so that a crust had formed upon the top of the filling, through which a horse, ridden by the decedent, is said to have broken, and fallen, thereby inflicting the injuries of which plaintiffs complain.

It appears from the evidence that decedent was employed by B. Y. Wemple as overseer on a plantation lying some five miles to the westward of Mansfield, but that he spent his nights at the residence of his employer, in the town, going to the plantation in the mornings and returning in the evenings. The witnesses are rather uncertain as to the date of the occurrence; thus Mr. Wemple says, in his testimony:

“I think it was the first of the year that he got hurt; I think it was the 1st of January. * * * I think it was about the middle of the week, maybe Thursday or Friday; I went out there the next day. * * * I think he began [working for witness] Monday morning; what day of the week that was I don’t know; it was the first of the week; he only worked at the place one week, six days; he began Monday morning; he came up on Sunday afternoon, and went out with me on Monday morning, before he got hurt; what day he got hurt I am not sure.”

Further testifying, the witness says that on the morning of the accident decedent left the house before he (witness) was up, presumably, to go to the plantation on horseback; that his most direct route was through Gibbs street, where the trench was; that some hours later witness started to the plantation by that route; that, on his way, he came to a place where the crust upon the ridge of earth which crowned the trench appeared to have been broken through, as if by a horse, and as if the horse had fallen, the hollow between the under surface of the *111crust and the earth beneath being something like four feet deep, and it occurred to him that perhaps decedent’s horse had fallen; that, when he reached the plantation, he found the horse covered with mud, as was also the clothing, or overcoat, worn by decedent, and, asking decedent if they had fallen in the ditch, was told that they had, and that he (decedent) had been hurt in the stomach (to which it was objected that the testimony was hearsay, and not res gestee, and the objection was sustained). Mr. Smith, decedent’s brother-in-law, and husband, as we take it, of one of the plaintiffs in the case, testifies that he saw decedent on the day of the alleged accident in the town sitting down, and that he was muddy, told witness .about the accident, and showed him the place where it occurred, all of which must have happened, late in the day. The only testimony other than that of Mr. Wemple upon the question of the day or date of the accident is that given by Dr. Hewitt, who says that decedent called on him on the day of the accident, “in the morning some time,” from which we' infer that it was near midday, when decedent may have come in for his dinner, as the accident is supposed to have occurred before daylight, and if the call had been made at that time, the doctor would probably have mentioned it; that he said his horse had fallen on him; that he examined decedent and found a bruise on his stomach, but did not then think it very serious. Being asked whether he saw him afterwards, the witness answered, “I think it was, I believe; as I remember, that was Saturday morning, and I was called to see him the next Sunday, the next day, 48 hours later.” 1-Ie then found that the liver and spleen of the decedent were very much enlarged. He was asked, “This enlargement of the liver and spleen, was that a result of this fall?” to which he replied, “Tes, sir; the reason I believe it is, some several days before that, he came into my office and I made an examination; I naturally look after my patients as well as I can; and the enlargement of the liver and spleen, etc., I believe was caused by the fall.” He does not say that, when decedent called at his office, he made an examination for the purpose of finding out whether there was then an enlargement of the liver and spleen. He otherwise testifies that he had treated decedent for a well-known disease some three years before, but had learned that he had after-wards been subjected to the “Wasserman test,” with a negative result, and assumed that he was cured; that decedent was, however, suffering at the time of the accident with malaria, and had been treated by witness for that disease several times during the preceding year, and that the malaria brought about an anaemic condition, but that, in his opinion, decedent would have recovered but for his fall, which aggravated his disease. Dr. Parsons, who was in charge of the sanitarium to which decedent was sent, testified that he died of anaemia, and that the disease might have been aggravated by a fall; that enlargement of the liver and spleen may result from malaria, and also from a traumatic injury. No witness was called who saw the accident, and the testimony of those who heard of it from the decedent was objected to as hearsay, and not of the res gestie, and the objection was sustained. Putting together the testimony of Mr. Wemple and Dr. Plewitt, we conclude that the accident may have occurred on Thursday or Friday (January 7th or 8th), and it appears that decedent took to his bed on Saturday night (having attended to his duties during the interval, including the day of the accident), and died early in March.

Opinion.

[1, 2] We are of opinion that the objection to the testimony of Messrs. Wemple, Smith, and Hewitt, based upon the statements of *113the decedent, was well founded and properly sustained, since the statements formed no part of the res gestee, and, coming from the witnesses, were mere hearsay. Marler v. Texas & Pacific R. Co., 52 La. Ann. 727, 27 South. 176; Bionto v. Ill. Cent. R. Co., 125 La. 147, 51 South. 98, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1030; 16 Cyc. 1162. Without that testimony, we have nothing hut the facts, that on a particular day a hole, into which a horse may have fallen, was found broken through the crusted surface of the covering of a badly eared for trench, in a town street through which decedent may have been riding, and that the deceased and his horse were found some hours later covered with mud, and apparently suffering from recent injury. Those facts, no doubt, suggest the idea that it was the deceased and his horse by whom and which the hole was broken through, but there are other ways of accounting for the hole, and other places and other ways where, and whereby, deceased and his horse may have collected their mud and sustained their injuries. To make it merely probable that those things happened as alleged in the petition is an insufficient warrant for a judgment awarding damages.

The judgment appealed from is therefore

Affirmed.