This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the administratrix of a deceased railway employee, in an action instituted under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (45 USCA §§ 51-59). The action was based on alleged negligence of the defendant in placing a car on a siding in a position dangerously near a lead or “ladder” track, the contention of plaintiff being that her intestate was knocked from a car passing on the “ladder” track and killed as a result of this negligent placing of the car. Three questions are raised by the assignments of error: (1) Whether the trial judge erred in admitting as a part of the res gestas a declaration of decedent made shortly after the injury which resulted in his death; (2) whether verdict should have been directed for defendant either because the evidence failed to establish negligence or because it did establish assumption of risk; and (3) whether there was error in the charge relating to the measure of damages.
On the first question it appears that, when deceased was last seen prior to his injury, he was walking on a train of ears which was being moved on the “ladder” track to place two of the ears on a storage track of defendant’s Newport News yard. Deceased was the conductor in charge of the movement; and, shortly before reaching track 3, he instructed the witness Mills to drop the two ears and come back to track 3 where deceased would be cheeking out some ears. When Mills returned about ten minutes later, he found deceased lying near track 3 with both legs cut off above the knees and rapidly bleeding to death. One leg had been completely severed from the body and was lying between the rails of the “ladder” track; the other was hanging to his body by mere shreds of flesh. Mills asked what had happened; and deceased, pointing to the car on track 3, replied, “That ear knocked me *292 off.” Defendant duly objected and excepted to the admission of this declaration of the deceased; but the court admitted it as a part of the res geste.
We think that this-ruling of the court was correct. There is some authority for the position of defendant that the declaration of decedent should be excluded as a mere narrative of a past transaction; 'but we think that the better rule, and that supported by the weight of modem authority, requires its admission as having been made under the immediate influence of the occurrence to which it related and so near the time of that occurrence as to negative any probability of fabrication. See 31 Yale L. Journal 229, 35 H. L. R. 447; Wigmore on Evidence (2d Ed.) § 1747 et seq. and eases cited. As pointed out by Professor Wigmore, it is not necessary to render such declarations admissible that they be strictly contemporaneous with the occurrence to which they relate and admissible under what it called the “Verbal Act” doctrine. They are admissible, not because they fall without the hearsay rule, as in the case of “verbal acts,” but because they fall within an exception to that rule; it being considered that there is a sufficient guarantee of the trustworthiness of such declarations to render them admissible, if they are made under the immediate influence of the occurrence to which they relate. “The circumstantial guarantee here consists in the consideration * *' * that in the stress of nervous excitement the reflective faculties may be stilled and the utterance may become the unreflecting and sincere expression of one’s actual impressions and belief.” To render them admissible what is required is: (1) There be some shock to the feelings sufficient to render the utterance spontaneous and unreflecting; (2) “the utterance must have been before there has been time to contrive and misrepresent, i. e. while the nervous excitement may be supposed still to dominate and the reflective powers to be yet in abeyance”; and (3) it must relate to the circumstance causing the shock to the feelings. Wigmore on Evidence (2d Ed.) § 1750.
Defendant places great reliance upon the decision of the Supreme Court in Vicksburg R. R. v. O’Brien,
In Cross Lake Logging Co. v. Joyce (C. C. A. 8th)
In Peirce v. Van Dusen,
One of the leading eases upon the subject is Commonwealth v. McPike, 3 Cush. (Mass.) 181,
While a logical basis is not always given far the decisions, the eases almost uniformly hold that a statement made by an injured person as to the cause of his injury is admissible if the time -which has elapsed since the injury is so short that he is still under the influence of the happening and his statement presumptively a spontaneous expression growing out of it and not the result of reason and reflection.
1
****&As said in Louisville, N. A. & C. R. Co. v. Buck,
*294
Coming to the second question, we think that there can be no doubt as to the sufficiency of the evidence to establish actionable negligence on the part of defendant, when the declaration of decedent as to the cause of the injury is considered. There was evidence on the part of plaintiff which, if believed, established the fact that the ear on track three was placed too near the “ladder” track for safe clearance; and the statement of decedent shows that he was knocked from the train by this ear. This is certainly some •evidence to establish the negligence alleged and that this negligence was the cause of the injury whieh resulted in decedent’s death. See Director General v. Bennett (C. C. A. 3d)
Defendant contends, however, that verdict should have been directed in its favor on the ground that decedent assumed the risk of his injury, this position being based upon the testimony of the witness Graham to the effect that, several hours before the injury occurred, he called the attention of decedent to the fact that the car on track 3 was too close to the “ladder” track and that decedent replied, “It will clear ears.” Defendant’s argument is that the testimony of Graham, not being contradicted, must be taken as true. It is true that in the federal courts the uncontradicted testimony of a witness to a plain and simple fact capable of contradiction if untrue, whieh is not impeached or contradicted in any way and which, from any reasonable point of view, is not open to doubt for other reasons, is to be taken as establishing such fact and not merely as raising an issue with regard to it to be submitted to the jury. Chesapeake & O. R. Co. v. Martin,
But on the third point, we think that defendant is.entitled to a new trial. On the question of damages the court gave the jury the following instructions: “The court further charges the jury that in this ease if they should conclude the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages, such damages, if any, should be equivalent to compensation for deprivation of the reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefits that would have resulted from the continued life of the decedent. The jury should therefore consider the wages of the decedent at his death, the probability of increase or decrease of his wages, the probability of unemployment, as might be expected to occur during the life expectancy of the decedent and his wife and children, so long as the children would have been legally dependent upon him for support. You will recall that the evidence tends to show that he was an industrious man in good health. And, after deducting from such life earnings such sum as you believe the decedent would have applied to his own use, award the plaintiff the balance. Such an award to the plaintiff would under the act under whieh this suit is brought, be a pecuniary compensation for the loss the widow and three children sustained in the death of her husband and their father.”
This instruction was erroneous, in that it told the jury that the measure of pecuniary compensation whieh the dependents of the deceased were entitled to recover was the amount of the probable life earnings of decedent less such sums as decedent would have applied to his own use. Plaintiff was entitled to recover, not the future earnings of decedent less his expenses, but a fair recompense for the pecuniary loss whieh the jury might reasonably conclude resulted to his dependents from his death (Gulf, etc., R. Co. v. McGinnis,
The rule laid down in the Didricksen Case and quoted with approval in the McGinnis Case is: “The act, in case of the death of such an employee from his injury, creates a new and distinct right of action for the benefit of the dependent relatives named in the statute. The damages recoverable are limited to such loss as results to them because they have been deprived of a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefits by the wrongful death of the injured emploj'ee. The damage is limited strictly to the financial loss thus sustained.” And the rule of the Kelly Case, quoted with approval in the Moser Case, is: “In computing the damages recoverable for the deprivation of future benefits, the principle of limiting the recovery to compensation requires that adequate allowance be made, according to circumstances, for the earning power of money; in short, that when future payments or other pecuniary benefits are to be anticipated, the verdict should he made upon the basis of their present value only.”
Our conclusion is that the testimony as to the declaration of decedent was properly admitted and that the motion for a directed verdict was properly overruled, but that a new trial must be granted because of the error in the instruction as to the measure of damages.
Reversed.
Notes
See cases cited in note in 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) p. 952 et seq. and particularly Travelers' Protective Ass’n v. West (C. C. A. 7th)
