312 Ky. 547 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1950
Reversing.
The nfiited appeals are from judgments in favor of the administrators of Mrs. Elizabeth Fowler and Herman Holzknecht for $7,870 and $11,768.48, respectively, for their death and damages to Holzknecht’s automobile against the appellant Ewing-Yon Allmen Dairy Company and its driver, the appellant Elmo Shake. The loss of life and damage to the car resulted from a head-on collis:on between Holzknecht’s automobile, m wina« Mrs. Fowler was a guest passenger, and a truck belonging to the dairy company on highway No. 62 about six "miles northeast of Elizabethtown on June 28, 1948. The passenger car was entering the inside of a curve and the truck coming out of it.
As to which car was a few inches on its wrong side of the road was and is a very close question. The evidence tending to show that the truck was a few inches
The appellants insist that it was prejudicial error to admit the testimony of the little boy, Mike Fowler. Though the “he” referred to was not identified, and several suppositions are indulged in by the appellants, the circumstances leave no doubt in our mind, and probably did not in the nr'nd of the jury, that the reference was to the driver of the oncoming truck. The spontaneous exclamation of a participant, made under the stress of the moment of frightening danger, must be regarded as part of the res gestae. The res gestae rule is not limited to an explanation immediately after an event, as the appellants argue, for an utterance may be more truly a part of the res gestae when made concurrently with some condition entering immediately into the circumstances of the accident. Ballard & Ballard Co. v. Durr, 165 Ky. 632, 177 S. W. 445; Kentucky & West Virginia Power Co. v. Brown’s Adm’x, 281 Ky. 133, 135 S. W. 2d 70; Coleman v. Daniel, 292 Ky. 553, 166 S. W. 2d 978; 20 Am. Jur., Evidence, Sec. 671; Notes, 163 A. L. R. 38, 42.
William Strange, introduced by the defendants, was
Of course, we are mindful that the speed and place of an automobile on the road are extremely variable, and that at the end of five hundred yards both factors may be entirely different from what they were at the beginning. Ordinarily such testimony is inadmissible. Here, however, the witness was watching the car throughout the distance, and we think his testimony in relation to its speed and location in the road was competent. Wigginton’s Adm’r v. Rickert, 186 Ky. 650, 217 S. W. 933; Consolidated Coach Corp. v. Wright, 231 Ky. 713, 22 S. W. 2d 108; Lehr v. Fenton Dry Cleaning & Dyeing Co., 258 Ky. 663, 80 S. W. 2d 831; Home Laundry Co. v. Cook, 277 Ky. 8, 125 S. W. 2d 763.
; Argument is presented concerning the rulings of the court upon several other isolated questions and answers, but as they may be presented in a different form upon another trial, we refrain from passing upon them. Other points made by the appellants are found not to be sustainable.
For the error relating to the evidence of the witness Strange, the judgment is reversed.