124 Cal. 653 | Cal. | 1899
The appellants, claiming to be the widow and son of Dr. Charles James, deceased, appeal from a decree of distribution made and entered in the matter of his estate, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial. Dr. James died leaving quite a large property, and Laura Hilen James now claims to be his widow, and Theodore Milen Janies, the infant son of Laura, claims by guardian to be his son. The marriage relied upon is commonly called a contract marriage, and is evidenced by. an agreement in writing purporting to be signed by both parties "named therein. The lower court, after an extended trial, found as a fact that there never was a marriage between Dr. James and Laura Milen, and that her infant son was not his son.
It is first contended upon the part of the respondents that there is sufficient evidence in the record, which came before the court without objection, to support the findings of fact, and that, therefore, even conceding the admission of evidence under objection which should have been denied admission, still a new trial for the aforesaid reasons should not he ordered. This position cannot be sustained. If improper evidence under objection has been admitted, it is impossible for this court to say how much weight and influence it had in the mind of the trial court in framing its findings of fact. The improperly admitted evidence may have been all-powerful to that effect. As far as this court knows it may have been that particular evidence which turned the scale and lost the case to the appellants. This must of necessity he the rule wherever improper evidence has been admitted which upon its face tends in any degree to affect the final conclusion of the court. Counsel for appellants present an elaborate brief wherein they discuss the claimed errors of law committed by the trial court in the admission of evidence. Counsel for respondents present an elaborate reply brief, wherein they discuss at great length the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings, and devote hut little time and space to the discussion of the alleged errors of
Before passing to an examination of the merits of the motion for a new trial, let us look at the parties directly and indirectly connected with this litigation, their situation and relations. Dr. Charles James, sixty years of age, was the owner of a large apartment house, situated upon Howard street, in the city of San Francisco. Dr. Milen, a traveling vendor of drugs, his second wife Jessie Milen, his daughter by his first wife, and her husband (Mr. and Mrs. Dickman), and Laura Milen, his unmarried daughter, sister to Mrs. Dickman and nineteen years of age, rented rooms of Dr. James in his apartment house, on December 13, 1894. Prior to this event the family of Dr. Milen were strangers to Dr. James. Here Dr. James and Laura met. Little time was devoted to courtship, for the contract of marriage between them is dated January 6, 1895, and according to the testimony of Laura it was executed at that date, and the marriage relations thereupon immediately assumed. Dr. James died at his rooms in this house January 38, 1895, after a very short illness. An infant, Theodore Milen, joint defendant and appellant with his mother Laura, was born to her September 16, 1895.
During the examination of Dr. Milen he identified a book entitled “Was He to Blame?” as written by his wife, Mrs. Jessie Milen. This book was highly immoral and was introduced in evidence under objection. This evidence was thereafter followed by respondents with evidence that Laura Milen had read the book, and also the additional evidence that it had been subsequently suppressed by the Society for the Suppression of Vice. As evidence tending to besmirch the character of the author, and also that of the daughter, these facts were well calculated to serve that end. And in serving that end it necessarily had the effect of weakening the credibility of these two witnesses— the two most important witnesses to the fact of marriage. It therefore goes without saying that it was prejudicial to the appellants’ side of the ease.. To support the admissibility of this evidence, upon the ground that it tended to weaken or impeach the credibility of these two aforesaid witnesses, no au
Respondent’s counsel claim that this evidence was offered to contradict the testimony of Dr. and Mrs. Milen as to the pure surroundings and education of their daughter Laura. All the testimony of Dr. Milen in chief upon tins point is as follows: “I have bestowed all I could in the way of care over her books and education; I have not been able to provide all the books I have wished for them at home. 1 do not know that I ever gave my wife any instructions about the moral culture „of my children; I considered that she was competent to care for them in that respect, so 1 did not consider it necessary to leave any instructions.” Mrs. Milen gave no testimony whatever on the subject. Respondents claim that there was neither a marriage between this man and woman, nor meretricious relations; and that the whole thing was without any semblance of truth, and was a corrupt scheme pure and simple, concocted after the old man’s death, by which to secure the possession of his property. Aside from the question of impeachment, which we have already considered, this evidence is wholly inadmissible from any standpoint. The fact that the stepmother wrote an immoral book, and that appellant, the daughter, read it, shed no liglit
The trial court admitted in evidence the declarations of Mrs. Milen and Mr. and Mrs. Dickman, made after the death of Dr. James, to the butcher, the baker and the coal dealer, not in the presence of Laura Milen, to the effect that Laura was engaged to be married to the doctor at the time of his death. This evidence was not offered for impeachment purposes, for no foundation had been laid for it when the respective witnesses were testifying upon the stand; but, upon the contrary, it was offered and received as independent and affirmative evidence tending to show the nonexistence of a marriage between the parties. Under well-settled rules of law, the evidence was objectionable. It was hearsay of the purest character, and does not come within any of the exceptions recognizing the admissibility of that character of evidence. These appellants could not be bound to the extent of a hair by the declarations of third parties. It is claimed by respondents that these witnesses were members of the Milen family, and that declarations of any member of the family are admissible as part of the res gestae. This claim, as presenting a rule of evidence, is untenable. What third parties may say as to the character of a past occurrence, or as to the actual happening or nonhappening of an occurrence, will not be stamped by the law as res gestae. The fact that these parties may all be said to have been members of the Milen family gives no additional support to respondents’ position. Declarations of members of a family, who are not parties to the litigation, as to matters similar to those before us, are no more admissible than the declarations of strangers. The rule of law as to the admissibility of declarations of certain described persons, when those declarations bear upon matters of pedigree and kindred subjects, cannot be invoked here, for the reason that the parties making the declarations are neither deceased nor
Declarations made by the deceased, Dr. James, within a few weeks prior to his death, and within the time when the appellant, Laura, claims she was his wife, were admitted in evidence under objection. These declarations were testified to by various neighbors and friends of the doctor, and covered a wide field. The most important ones were to the effect that he was a widower, that he had dropsy, catarrh, and symptoms of Bright’s disease, and that he was impotent. We are satisfied that the rules of evidence forbid the introduction of this kind of evidence. It is not res gestae j neither does it belong to that class of hearsay which the law recognizes as competent and admissible evidence.
This evidence is not res gestae. Section 1850 of the Code of Civil Procedure fairly covers those eases where declarations form part of the res gestae, and here we have no such case. That section provides: “Where, also, the declaration, act, or omissions forms part of a transaction, which is itself the fact in dispute, or evidence of that fact, such declaration, act, or omission is evidence, as part of the transaction.” These declarations are no part of a transaction. They are substantive, independent statements of the existence of certain facts. The unsworn statement of Dr. James that he had Bright’s disease, or dropsy, or catarrh cannot be held to prove that fact. If such were the law, a man being dead, the floodgates for perjured testimony would be lifted to their fullest extent. These declarations of James as to his various bodily afflictions were in no sense those of a patient to his physician. Neither were they those involuntary and spasmodic exclamations of an injured man as to his physical pains made at the time of the injury. These declarations of the deceased were not involuntary exclamations. They were made deliberately and calmly, and neces
We find analogous principles discussed in many cases upon contest of the probate of wills, where contestants have claimed the testator never signed the instrument, or that he signed it under duress or menace. In such cases it has always been held that the declarations of the testator as to menace or duress, or as to the fact of his signature, are hearsay, and cannot be received in evidence. If the issue is will or no will, and the testator’s declarations may not be received to indicate the truth, how may the declarations of Dr. James be received upon the issue of marriage or no marriage, or potency or impotency ? The cases appear entirely similar in principle. Such declarations are held to be “mere hearsay evidence which, by reason of the death of the party whose statement is offered, can never be explained or contradicted by him.” (Griffith v. Diffenderffer, 50 Md. 480.) One of the important questions in Boylan v. Meeker, 28 N. J. L. 274, bore upon the matter of the forgery of a will; and the declarations of the alleged testator to the effect that he had never made a will were rejected as hearsay evidence. In the case of In re Calkins, 112 Cal. 300, in speaking as to the declarations, of a testatrix, a contest of the probate of her will being the matter in litigation, this court said: “But to the extent that they purported to be declarations of the acts of others or of her own acts, they were but matters of hearsay merely, whose truth rested in the veracity of the utterer, and upon which there was no opportunity of cross-examination, or of explanation by the party who had uttered them, and were not entitled to any weight by
Section 1852 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “The declaration, act, or omission of a member of a family who is a decedent, or out of the jurisdiction, is also admissible as evidence of common reputation, in cases where, on questions of pedigree, such reputation is admissible.” It is now contended that the declarations of Dr. James that he was not married are admissible under the provisions of the foregoing section. But this cannot be so, for the reason that such declarations must come from a member of a family; and the whole case of respondents rests upon the claim that James was not a member of the Milen family. He was not a member of Laura Milen’s family unless he was her husband, and that is the sole point involved in this litigation. Pearson v. Pearson, 46 Cal. 610, is much relied upon to support the admissibility of these declarations. But that was a case coming directly within the provisions of the section quoted, and the declarations were admitted by virtue of the law there declared. The declarations were there made by the testator in his will, to the effect that certain parties therein named were his wife and his children. These declarations comprised all the evidence upon the question, and were held by this court sufficient to prove the facts embodied therein. The entire opinion of the court concedes that the testator was a member of the family comprised in part of the parties named in the will. The admissibility of pedigree evidence by declarations has for its only basis the close and intimate relations existing between the declarant and the party to whom the declarations pertain. The declarations, to be admissible, must not only be made by a deceased member of the family, but they must be made of and concerning a member of the same family. Here we have nothing of the kind. If a family relation be assumed to have existed between this man and this woman sufficient to justify the admission of his declarations after death as to the marriage relation existing between them, then the respondent’s whole case falls to the ground; for there was no family relation between these two people, unless it was that of husband and wife. 'There is no pretense of any other.
Evidence came from one Lewis, under objection, to the effect
Aside from the declarations of the deceased, James, there is no evidence that he was afflicted with any sort or kind of disease prior to his death. Those declarations have been held inadmissible. It therefore follows that all the expert evidence of medical gentlemen based upon his physical condition as declared by himself must be rejected. This necessarily follows, for there is no proper evidence in the record upon which to base expert medical testimony.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are reversed and the cause remauded for a new trial.
Harrison, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.