133 Ky. 762 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion o.f the Court by
Affirming.
Appellee, while driving a wagon along one of the streets of Covington, was thrown from the wagon by a lurching as the front wheels dropped into a deep
The injury occurred in November of 1905. The suit was brought January of 1906. The trial was had in March of 1909. In the affidavit filed on behalf of the city for a continuance, the absence of two witnesses is relied on. One of them was a boy who was on the wagon with the plaintiff when the accident occurred. As to him the affiant said he was a resident of Covington, and had been confined in the State School of Reform near Lexington, but had escaped therefrom and left the State; that the affiant did not. know where he was or what he would testify to if present, but that he knew facts material to the city concerning the case. The trial ought not to have been postponed in order to allow the defendant to locate a refugee from justice and ascertain what he knew about the case.
The affiant said the other absent witness would testify that the plaintiff was driving at “fast and
A witness offered by the plaintiff upon the trial was objected to by the defendant in this way: “Q. State your full name to the jury. A. Peter ’William Eichman. Mr. Shepard: Is Mr. Eichman competent to testify? Mr. Simmons: Yes, sir; of course he is. Mr. Shepard: I object to the witness testifying; he is not qualified, because of having been declared of unsound mind and never restored. (Objection overruled, and defendant excepts.)” The witness testifying was coherent, and his answers as direct and responsive, and apparently as sensible, as those of any other witness in the case. He was also corroborated in every material particular by two other witnesses whose competency was not questioned. Eichman ’s testimony was as to the condition of the street at that point a month before this plaintiff was hurt there. Eichman’s wagon was stalled in the same mudhole, he said. After the plaintiff had closed his case, the defendant introduced a record of the Kenton Circuit Court to show that Eichman had been adjudged a lunatic in the spring of 1905. It was conceded that the judgment had not been set aside, and that Eichman had not been- adjudged by any court to have been restored to his right mind. Every man is presumed to be sane un
Judgmen’t affirmed.