6 Colo. App. 429 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
Samuel Watson was the owner of a stallion, which was injured about the 17th of September, 1892, on tbe'line of the
Manifestly the objection was well taken. Edmunds v. Curtis, 8 Colo. 605; New York & Colo. M. S. Co. v. Rogers, 11 Colo. 6; T. & H. Pueblo Bldg. Co. v. Klein et ux., 5 Colo. App. 348.
There is no doubt respecting the admissibility of the declarations of an agent made at the time he is engaged in the business of the principal and about the time of the happening of the matter which is the subject of inquiry. To bring the declarations within the rule and make them admissible, it must always appear that they were made at the time and under circumstances which bring them within the tolerably well defined rule as to the necessity of the concurrence of the act and the declaration. We are referred to no case which would make the declarations of the engineer given at the time of the first trial of the case admissible on this ground. Had the engineer been produced as a witness and had he given testimony in opposition to what he had stated on the former hearing, then this might have been introduced for the purposes of contradiction. It was not admissible as the declaration of an agent made at the time of the event. The court committed an error in admitting it, which may have largely affected the jury and determined them in the verdict which they rendered. No other serious error occurred or requires discussion.
The admission of this testimony over the objection of the company compels us to reverse the judgment and to send the case back for another trial.
Reversed.