90 Ga. 630 | Ga. | 1892
The injury on account of which the action was brought was the mashing of the plaintiff's hand while
Unless the statements attributed to the engineer could be treated as evidence of the defective condition of the engine, there was nothing in the testimony to show that such a condition existed or had anything to do with the injury, except in so far as it might be inferred from what the plaintiff testified as to the rapidity with which the train came back. Such statements, however, as the engineer may have made out of court, though they may have tended to impeach him, were not evidence as to the truth of anything he may have said. Not being a part of the res gestae, they were clearly inadmissible as declarations or admissions against the railroad company. Code, §2206; Chattanooga R. Co. v. Liddell, 85 Ga. 487(2), and cases cited; Vicksburg & Meridian R. Co. v O’Brien, 119 U. S. 99. The utmost the plaintiff could accomplish by proving such statements would be to show that the witness was unworthy of credit, and thus destroy the effect of his testimony; but the elimination of his testimony from the case would not tend in any degree to set up as evidence the contradictory matter stated by the witness out of court. Proof that statements out of court were at variance with the sworn statements in court would not tend to show that the former were true, or give any value as substantive evidence to matter which, except for the purpose of showing that the witness was unworthy of belief, would not be admissible at all. There was consequently no evidence on which the court could base
Other questions in the case are dealt with in the head-notes. As to the exception ruled upon in the first head-note, see Central R. Co. v. Mitchell, 63 Ga. 173. The charge requested, which it is complained the court refused to give, was sufficiently covered by the general charge as given. Judgment reversed,