123 S.E. 78 | N.C. | 1924
The defendants were engaged in putting up a building for a furniture manufacturing company in Morganton. The plaintiff's intestate was one of the employees. He and seven or eight other men used a derrick in raising and placing heavy pieces of timber in the walls of the building. They had raised and put in position between 75 and 100 pieces, and when the plaintiff's intestate was "riding" one of the timbers the derrick gave way, the timber fell and the intestate was thrown to the ground and injured. He died within a few hours. The plaintiff alleged that the defendants were negligent in the construction and operation of the derrick, that they had failed to secure or anchor it with cables or braces, and that the intestate's death was the proximate result of their negligence.
The defendants filed an answer, and at the trial the following verdict was returned:
1. Was plaintiff's intestate injured and killed by the negligence of the defendants as alleged in the complaint? A. Yes.
2. Did plaintiff's intestate, by his own negligence, contribute to the injury resulting in his death, as alleged in the answer? A. No.
3. Did plaintiff's intestate voluntarily assume the risk of receiving the injury resulting in his death, as alleged in the answer? A. No.
4. What damage, if any, has plaintiff sustained? A. $5,000.
Judgment for the plaintiff and appeal by the defendants. The plaintiff offered in evidence the intestate's dying declarations as to the cause of his injury. Upon objection by the defendants, the judge granted their counsel a preliminary examination on this point, and in response the witness said: "He (the intestate) told me he could not get well; said a block had done it; said he could not live; told me what to do with his wife and things; said it had killed him; for me to attend to his wife and look after her, and what he had. He asked me then about these other boys, and how many of them were killed. At the time he said he could not get well Dr. Phifer was in *847 the house — in and out — when he was talking. I do not know if he was near enough to hear what he said — he was out and in — going around there. I could not tell you who was in. We were in a room this way, in the hospital. I don't know if anybody else heard his dying declaration; I could not tell you."
The following evidence was then admitted, and the defendants excepted: "He said the block and chain had hit him here (indicating); said this is what killed me — the block and chain hit him. After he told me he could not get well, he told how the accident occurred. I asked him. He told me when the derrick fell — when he realized it was falling — he said his foreman was jumping — all jumping off; and said, `That was the last I saw of them.' I said, `Mr. Abee was not there,' and he said, `Mr. Hauser was the man looking after it when Mr. Abee was not there.' I said, `I have not heard of it yet; I don't know who was hurt.' He turned his head over from me. At the time the derrick fell, he said they were lifting a piece of timber — him and the foreman was together; then spoke that Mr. Hauser was the man."
At the session of 1919 the Legislature amended section 59 of the Revisal (C. S., 160) by adding thereto the following paragraph: "In all actions brought under this section, the dying declarations of the deceased as to the cause of his death shall be admissible in evidence, in like manner and under the same rules as dying declarations of the deceased in criminal actions for homicide are now received in evidence." Public Laws 1919, ch. 29.
In prosecutions for homicide, the declarations of the deceased, voluntarily made while in extremis, under a sense of impending death, concerning the act of killing, and the facts and circumstances forming a part of the res gestae are admissible, where the deceased would be a competent witness if living. As in homicide, the declarations must be restricted to the act of killing and the attendant circumstances; so, in an action to recover damages for wrongful death, the declarations of the deceased are restricted by the terms of the statute to the cause of the death. S. v. Shelton,
The defendants excepted on the ground that this principle was ignored. They say the declarations were not restricted to the circumstances attendant upon the injury. The reference to Hauser, it will be noted, was a part of the intestate's description of the surroundings under which the injury occurred — a part of the res gestae. The language was this: "At the time the derrick fell, he said they were lifting a piece of timber — him and the foreman was together; then spoke that Mr. Hauser was the *848
man." Moreover, there was no exception to the specific declaration, "Hauser was the man looking after it when Mr. Abee was not there." Such exception was essential, for a general exception to the admission of evidence will not be considered unless all the evidence objected to is incompetent.Barnhardt v. Smith,
Exception was taken to the plaintiff's testimony that he had seen a thousand derricks, and that all, except the one used by the intestate, were equipped with guy wires; and to the testimony of Horace Moses, that the derrick, before the injury, "was shaky — it shook — shook all it could"; that "all other derricks he had seen were different, in that they had guy wires, and that this one did not conform to the rule"; and that "Mr. Dellinger says to me, `Do you want a job?' I said, `Yes, sir.' Mr. Hauser says, `I suppose you can get a job if you want it.' I says, `I don't want a job here; this is dangerous; I hain't ready to die yet.'"
The defendants do not intend, by this exception, to assail the doctrine that it was the duty of the defendants to exercise due care to provide for the intestate reasonably safe appliances with which to do his work, but they say the evidence was not competent upon the question whether they had neglected to perform their duty in this respect. They contend that the apparatus used for hoisting the timber was not such a derrick as is usually supported by guy wires, but an appliance of a different character, and that the admission of the evidence implied its unsafe condition because it was not held in position by cables or braces.
As we understand the record, the evidence was admitted on another theory. In the complaint the appliance was described as a derrick, and the plaintiff contended that even if it fell short of the technical definition, it was spoken of and treated as a derrick during the trial, and, as constructed, was not such as was approved and in general use. In Ainsley v.Lumber Co.,
On his cross-examination the plaintiff testified that the intestate, at the time of his injury, "was a strong, healthy young fellow"; and, on the redirect examination, that after being accepted by the board he served in the army four or five months. To the latter evidence the defendants excepted.
It is true that the trial judge should exclude evidence which is foreign to the issues, or insufficient for legitimate use, or illegal as tending only to excite the passion, arouse the prejudice, awaken the sympathy, or warp the judgment of the jury (Shepherd v. Lumber Co.,
Exception was noted to the testimony of Horace Moses that Hauser gave directions or instructions when Abee was absent; that he acted as Abee'salter ego. True, there is no allegation in the complaint that Hauser was vice-principal of the defendants; but there was other evidence, not excepted to, tending to show that Abee was not present when the injury occurred, and that in his absence Hauser was in control. There was also evidence that Hauser temporarily directed the work. To require the plaintiff to set out in the complaint the name of every one placed in authority during the foreman's temporary absence would impose a difficult, if not insuperable, task. Whether Hauser was serving in the capacity of foreman while Abee was absent was a question of fact, and was properly submitted to the jury, under the circumstances disclosed by the record.
His Honor gave this instruction: "The fact that the derrick fell and injured and killed the intestate, if you find that it did fall and injure and kill him, is a circumstance from which you have a right to find or infer that the derrick was in some way defective or insufficient or insecure, and that its fall was due to or caused by some negligence on the part of the defendants."
The defendants excepted, on the ground that the instruction not only withheld from the jury's consideration any evidence of negligence on the part of the plaintiff's intestate or of a fellow-servant, but declared, in effect, that "the thing speaks for itself." They now challenge the application of the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, and contend that it obtains only where injury is sustained under such circumstances as logically tend to establish negligence.
In Saunders v. R. R.,
We have given careful attention to the remaining exceptions, and have been unable to find any error which entitles the defendants to a new trial.
No error.