132 Va. 24 | Va. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action for personal injuries brought by Mrs. Lillie P. Ellis against the Virginia Railway and Power Company. The jury having found for the company, the court entered judgment accordingly, and Mrs. Ellis assigns error.
There are three counts in the declaration as amended
“Q. ‘At the time that you next remember anything since the car struck you, from the time that the car struck you, did this man that picked you up make any statement to you?’
“The foregoing question propounded to Lillie P. Ellis, witness in her own behalf upon direct examination by the plaintiff, upon objection by the defendant, was disallowed by the court, and the plaintiff excepted; the answer to the question excepted would have been:
*28 “A. ‘The motorman came up and said ‘It is not my fault’ and the man who picked me up said ‘It was your fault, you hardly gave me time to get out of the way, and I was in front of her.’ ”
Looking to other parts of the record, it appears that the plaintiff testified that after being knocked down by the car she did not know anything until she was picked up by a man whom she could describe, but whose name she did not know, and that she did not “come to” until “they” had moved her over to the sidewalk. In the meantime the motorman, who did not see the car strike her (because he was on the front and she was struck by the rear of the car), had again stopped the car on an emergency signal from the conductor, had discovered the trouble, and had gone back to offer his assistance. The interval between the accident and her recovery from an unconscious or dazed condition appears to have been very brief. It was long enough, however, for the conductor to see what had happened, to give an emergency signal, and for the motorman to stop the car, alight and hurry back to where the plaintiff was.
The question and answer which the court rejected were designed to place in evidence before the jury the statement of a third party to the motorman as follows: “It was your fault, you hardly gave me time to get out of the way, and I was in front of her.”
It is insisted by counsel for the defendant that the alleged statement was a mere expression of opinion, but the question cannot be disposed of on that ground. This point might well be made as to the expression “It was your fault,” but’the residue of the statement, “you hardly gave me time to get out of the way, and I was in front of her,” is a statement of fact which the declarant as a witness might properly have been allowed to make.
The practical rule as to the admissibility of such testimony, deduced and condensed from the decisions of the courts and the text books generally, seems to be that the declaration must have accompanied the main fact or must have followed under its immediate propulsion, must bear no evidence of reflection or deliberation or calculation, and must have been a spontaneous, undesigned and illustrative incident or part of the litigated act. “These” as this court said with respect to a similar question in the case of Washington-Va. Ry. Co. v. Deahl, 126 Va. 141, 147, 100 S. E. 840, 842, “are the tests of admissibility under the res gestae rule. The rule itself is incapable of any precise definition. Its application to a particular case depends upon the circumstances of that case, and necessarily rests at last in every instance upon the discretion and judgment of the trial court. Such discretion and judgment, of course, may be the subject of review, but in doubtful cases there ought to be and is a presumption in favor of the action of the court below.”
Professor Wigmore, in the course of a very industrious examination and discussion of spontaneous declarations and of the decisions thereon, says: “Since the application of the principle thus depends entirely on the circumstances of each case, it is therefore impossible to regard rulings upon this limitation as having in strictness the force of precedents. To argue from one case to another on this question •of ‘time to devise or contrive’ is to trifle with principle and to cumber the records with unnecessary and unprofitable
There are, however, certain important differences between the character and setting of the declaration which the court admitted in the Deahl Case and that which it excluded in the instant case. In the former, it was the statement of the motorman, one of the actors, whose train had just crashed into a truck, and his exclamation was purely spontaneous and uttered clearly under the spur and excitement of the accident, and it was distinctly illustrative of what he himself had done. In the latter, the case at bar, the declaration was that of a third party, not spontaneously uttered, not an incident of the accident itself nor called forth by it, but a statement made subsequently by a third party, and in reply to one made by the motorman.
The remaining assignments of error relate to the instructions. We have given the most careful consideration to these instructions and to the criticisms urged against them in the oral argument and in the briefs of the learned counsel for the plaintiff. There are no new questions involved, and we deem it sufficient to say that the instructions as a whole fairly and fully and clearly submitted the plaintiff’s
For these reasons the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.