56 S.E.2d 799 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1949
1. The extrajudicial admission of the employee, who was not a party to the indemnity contract, nor a party to the suit, was not admissible as a part of the res gestae of the larceny; nor as an admission by a stranger to the suit bearing upon a collateral issue essential to the adjudication, as the admission was not collateral to the main issue involved, but bore directly upon it.
2. The other assignments of error are not considered, as the case must go back for another trial.
(a) Code § 38-305 provides: "Res gestae — Declarations accompanying an act, or so nearly connected therewith in time as to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought, shall be admissible in evidence as part of res gestae." The part of the section which admits "declarations accompanying an act" in evidence as a part of the res gestae is but a codification of the principle of the "verbal-act doctrine." That part of the section which admits declarations so nearly connected with the act as "to be free from all suspicion of device or afterthought" in evidence is but a statement of the "spontaneous-declaration doctrine" which is an exception to the rule against hearsay.
The admission of Bass that he had committed larceny of the beer bottles came five days after the larceny of one quantity of bottles and one day after the larceny of another quantity of bottles, and was not so related in time and space as to form a part of the res gestae of the larceny. Roach v. W. A. R.Co.,
The statements here sought to be introduced as a part of the res gestae were not in point of either time or space so closely connected to the occurrence to which they related, the thefts of the bottles, as to make the utterances the voice of human nature, speaking under the immediate and uncontrolled domination of the senses in the form of a spontaneous exclamation, and under such circumstances as to suppress the individuality of the speaker at the time he made the statements in question; and the calling of the assertions a part of the transaction cannot make it any the less hearsay testimony, no matter how inseparably interwoven they may be with the subject-matter of the suit, when they are used assertively and testimonially to prove issues not collateral to the main issue involved. Roach v. W. A. R. Co., supra;Travelers Insurance Co. v. Sheppard, supra; Thornton v.State,
(b) In Churchman v. Robinson,
Among the cases relied on by the plaintiff, his counsel particularly stresses that of Goodyear Clearwater Mills v.Wheeler,
2. In view of the fact that the case is being remanded for another trial, it is unnecessary to pass upon the assignment of error on the court's reference to the alleged "dishonesty" of the plaintiff's employee rather than to the alleged larceny, as this language will doubtless not be used on another trial; or upon the assignments of error which involve a consideration of the evidence.
The court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial for the reasons stated above.
Judgment reversed. Gardner and Townsend, JJ., concur.