27 Minn. 435 | Minn. | 1881
The statute (Gen. St. 1878, c. 73, § 7,) provides: “All persons, except as hereinafter provided, having the power and faculty to perceive, and make known their perceptions to others, may be witnesses.” Section 9 provides: “The following persons are not competent to testify in any action.or proceeding: First, those who are of unsound mind, or intoxicated, at the time of their production for examination. ” At common law the rule of exclusion, so-far as it related to such persons, was: “All persons who are examined as witnesses must be fully possessed of their understanding, — that is, such an understanding as enables them to retain in memory the events of which they have been witnesses, and gives them a knowledge of right and wrong; that, therefore, idiots and lunatics, while under the influence of their malady, not possessing this share of understanding, are excluded;” and it was the same with intoxicated persons. Hartford v. Palmer, 16 John. 142.
The rule of qualification under the statute is more liberal and less exclusive than at common law. It admits to be witnesses many who, at common law, would be incompetent. It would be contrary to the general tenor and spirit of the statute to construe the first subdivision of section 9 as intending-to exclude, on account of mental unsoundness or intoxication, those who, at common law, would be competent. The terms “of-unsound mind” and “intoxicated” are very indefinite. It
If a person offered as a witness must be tested by this rule, it is evident the test must be applied by the trial court at the time of offering him. His condition at that time must determine his competency. This cannot be established by the allegations of the pleadings. It is not the purpose or office of pleadings to ascertain or make or present any issue on the competency of witnesses to be sworn on the trial. The trial court may take into account the allegations and admissions in the pleadings bearing on the mental condition of any person offered as a witness, as it may resort to any other evidence to ascertain the fact; but they are not to be taken as conclusively determining such condition. The court below did not err in overruling defendants’ objection to plaintiff as a witness, based on the allegation in her complaint that she at one time became insane. It was not the duty of the trial court to examine plaintiff as to her mental soundness, merely because defendant alleged her to be unsound, unless it saw in her some indication of unfitness to testify. It must be pre
Two of the defendants’ exceptions may be decided together. Both were to the overruling of objections to questions put to Dr. Dorsey, a witness for plaintiff. Plaintiff had testified to blows inflicted by defendants on one of her arms, without specifying whether the right or left. Other witnesses had testified to marks and bruises, after the alleged striking, on one of her arms, without specifying which arm. At the trial she exhibited both arms to the jury. One of them seems to have attracted notice from its having apparently sustained some injury. The question to the witness was, “Will you state to the jury what is the matter of that arm ?” This was objected to as incompetent and immaterial. The specific objection to its materiality here is that it does not appear from the evidence that the arm referred to was the one struck by defendants. There being evidence that, soon after the alleged ill-treatment of plaintiff by defendants, she became subject to hysteria, and Dr. Dorsey having testified that he had heard all the testimony in the case, plaintiff’s counsel asked him this question: “Assuming the testimony given here to be true as to the treatment of this plaintiff by the defendants, would that have any tendency to produce the hysteria ?” The objection on the trial was that it was “incompetent and immaterial.” The specific objection made here is that the question includes all the “treatment,” good and bad, — some acts of which, such as boarding, lodging and clothing plaintiff, are not complained of as wrongful, — and that the cause of the hysteria was immaterial, unless it was defendants’ wrongful acts. This objection, had it been expressed at the trial, would have been rather hypercritical. The objection made below' to each of the questions, that it was “incompetent and immaterial, ” was not sufficiently definite to present to the court below the precise point of objection made here.
In the ease of each question thé specific point made here presents a point which we are satisfied was not presented to the mind of the court below, nor of the plaintiff’s counsel,
The questions as to the apparent physical condition of plaintiff, and as to whether she acted like a sane or insane person, were such that any witness, though not an expert, might answer if he knew the facts. That a person appears to be well or ill, or that he acts sanely or otherwise, are things open to the senses and observation, and do not require scientific or special knowledge to determine. The evidence as to plaintiff’s ailments offered by plaintiff, and objected to by defendants, even if objectionable, could not have done any harm, for there does not appear to have been any controversy as to the fact. The defendants’ witnesses testified to it as fully as plaintiff’s witnesses, so far as regarded the ailments. The only controversy appears to have been as to what caused them.
Order affirmed.