GORDON v. ROBINSON et al. (Gordon, third-party defendant)
No. 11015
United States Court of Appeals Third Circuit
Decided Jan. 13, 1954
Reargued Dec. 23, 1953
210 F.2d 192
Argued Oct. 9, 1953.
William F. Illig, Erie, Pa. (Gifford, Graham, MacDonald & Illig, Erie, Pa., on the brief), for appellee.
Before BIGGS, Chief Judge, and MARIS, GOODRICH, McLAUGHLIN, KALODNER, STALEY and HASTIE, Circuit Judges.
McLAUGHLIN, Circuit Judge.
This is an appeal by Fletcher J. Gordon and Esther M. Gordon, his wife, from the district court‘s denial of their motion for a new trial and the entry of judgment on a verdict for defendant, George W. Robinson, D.C.W.D.Pa.1952, 109 F. Supp. 106. The litigation arose out of a collision between Gordon‘s automobile and Robinson‘s truck north of Union City, Pennsylvania. Jurisdiction is based on diversity, the Gordons being residents of New York, Robinson of Pennsylvania. Originally both Gordons were parties plaintiff. However, on motion of defendant a severance was granted as to Fletcher J. Gordon and he was joined as third-party defendant. For convenience both Gordons will hereafter be referred to as plaintiffs.
The two questions raised on this appeal relate solely to the admission of certain evidence, that of Michael Signorino, a Pennsylvania state police officer, and of Homer T. Eaton, an attorney. Signorino, defendant‘s witness, testified on direct examination that he arrived at the scene of the accident about forty-five minutes after the event. His counsel, still on direct, asked him to explain in his own words “* * * as to where the debris was with respect to the position of the truck at the time of the impact.” That was objected to as calling for a conclusion and the objection was overruled. On redirect examination this officer was allowed to testify where the accident took place; that there was a violation of (presumably) the Pennsylvania Motor Vehicle Act; that plaintiffs’ automobile was on the
In Smith v. Dreer, 1838, 3 Whart., Pa. 154, an action by a gas fitter to recover the amount of a bill for work and labor done, defendant called a witness to testify that the work was done in an unworkmanlike manner. On cross-examination plaintiff adduced testimony that he, plaintiff, had made gas fittings at other places besides defendant‘s establishment. On redirect defendant‘s counsel sought to establish that the work done at those places was defective, to which plaintiff objected, whereupon the court disallowed the witness to be so examined. On appeal this was assigned as error. In affirming, the Supreme Court said:
“The principle of Griffith v. Eshelman,3 that cross-examination to irrelevant matters shall not bring it into the issue, is decisive of the point here. The defendant might
have excluded the evidence of the plaintiff‘s agency in putting up gas-fittings at the exchange and other places; and prejudice from his omission to do so, can certainly not entitle him to draw the inquiry still further from its course. The issue is, whether the particular work for whose price suit is brought, has been done in a workmanlike manner; and the plaintiff‘s engagements on the one hand, or his fulfilment of them on the other, cannot be suffered to affect it.”
An analogous situation was presented in Swank v. Phillips, 1886, 113 Pa. 482, 6 A. 450, where it was held error to permit incompetent witnesses to testify on the same matter as to which the opposing party, also an incompetent witness, had given testimony, the court saying that one error could not be corrected by committing another. See also Griffith v. Eshelman, 1835, 4 Watts, Pa., 51, supra, note 5; cf. Sherwood v. Titman, 1867, 55 Pa. 77 and Commonwealth v. Kauffman, 1944, 155 Pa.Super. 347, 38 A.2d 425.
In the instant case defendant did not limit himself to correcting errors in the admission of testimony on cross-examination. The manifest purpose of his redirect examination was not to discredit or explain the cross-examination that being on the whole very favorable to defendant, but to bring out new matter in the form of other opinions and conclusions of Signorino relating to the accident.
We do not see that the above substantial error can fairly be ignored on the ground that it was not called to the attention of the trial judge in accordance with
“Mr. Wolford (Counsel for plaintiffs): If it please the Court, we are again getting back to conclusions. If he is going to reach conclusions, I want the full explanation for it. Here is an officer that arrives at the scene of the accident forty-five minutes late, looks at the debris and testified in Court that what he found was the result of that observation.
“Mr. Illig (Counsel for defendant): If the Court please, the officer has been attempting to testify to the best of his knowledge as to his investigation and Mr. Wolford has been given full latitude to cross examine with regard to this report, Your Honor permitted him full use of it, so that I think, in fairness, if there is anything else in the report of the officer, it being understood that it is his report, that we should have the right to bring it out.
“The Court: You do, I agree with you.”
It should not, in our opinion, be decisive that counsel failed to use the word “ob-
Due to the intervening death of the trial judge the motion for a new trial was passed upon by a district judge strange to the case who was in the difficult situation of making his decision from the bare record. He ruled that Signorino‘s testimony had been rightfully admitted into evidence under the
The legislative history of the
While the decisions interpreting the Act, including our own, are somewhat at variance with each other9 we do think that there is no real conflict over its avowed purpose and that a record, to be admissible, should derive from an efficient clerical system and should be of such a nature that it would be competent evidence if testified to by its maker.
The defense called Eaton who, it developed, was attorney for Gordon‘s liability insurance carrier. Over plaintiffs’ objection Eaton was permitted to testify that he took a signed statement from Gordon at the hospital, in the presence of Eaton‘s stenographer and Gordon‘s stepson, in which Gordon said the highway curved to his left. The basis of the objection was the claimed attorney-client relationship between Eaton and Gordon which, it is asserted, made the testimony privileged.10
Defendant argues that no error was committed in permitting Eaton‘s testimony to go in because there was no offer of proof that Eaton was Gordon‘s attorney. We agree that the attorney-client privilege may not here be invoked in favor of Gordon merely because Eaton represented Gordon‘s insurance carrier absent a showing that he also represented Gordon. There is no testimony that Eaton did any more in connection with the accident than procure the statement adverted to for the insurance carrier. It is significant in this connection that Gordon denied knowing Eaton. The
“Nor shall counsel be competent or permitted to testify to confidential communications made to him by his client * * *.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Manifestly there has been no showing that Gordon was Eaton‘s client in any sense of the term. Concluding as we do that there was no proof of the existence
There is, moreover, another factor which minimizes the effect of Eaton‘s testimony. Eight days after Gordon‘s statement to Eaton he made a similar statement to one D. B. Connell, an adjuster for the same insurance carrier, in which he also located the curve on his left. The statement was produced on cross-examination of Gordon and the latter identified the signature on it as his own. Assuming, therefore, that there was harm to plaintiffs, as is urged by them, in permitting the jury to hear Eaton‘s testimony, it would appear that the harm is insubstantial, Eaton‘s testimony being merely cumulative of other evidence properly in the record.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause will be remanded for a new trial.
GOODRICH, Circuit Judge, concurs in the result but joins Judge HASTIE in reserving opinion on the evidence point concerning reports.
HASTIE, Circuit Judge (dissenting).
The only interposition by defense counsel during the trial which, in my judgment, constituted a challenge to the competency of any testimony of the witness Signorino was an objection to his statement concerning the location of debris after the accident. There was no dispute concerning the location of this debris. Accordingly, the admission of this testimony was at worst harmless error. Various other statements of Signorino, now challenged as improper conclusions and objectionable hearsay, were admitted without objection at various times during the rather lengthy testimony of this witness. In these circumstances, I think there was an effective waiver of any objection which might have been made to this testimony. Its admission, therefore, was not reversible error.
The opinion of the court also contains some discussion of the coverage of the
I would affirm the judgment simply on the ground that the objections to the admission of evidence, which the court is sustaining on this appeal, come too late.
