104 So. 250 | Ala. | 1925
The complaint contained counts based on simple negligence and wanton conduct. The trial was without a jury, and resulted in judgment for plaintiff.
The question, "I will ask you, then, did the driver of the truck at the time and place, and immediately after the accident, state to you that he couldn't stop the truck?" was not proper for impeachment, in the absence of a predicate. Lester v. Jacobs (Ala. Sup.)
Declarations of third persons, to be considered as a part of the res gestæ must be a part of the transaction and under such circumstances as that their spontaneity is assured — "were free from all suspicion of device, premeditation or aforethought." Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Whitman,
Plaintiff propounded to the witness Brideshaw, over the objection of defendant, the questions: "There is always danger when a crank case is welded in finding it warped after it is welded, is there not, no matter how carefully done?" "It might though?" The respective answers were: "Of course there is a danger of it warping, but if it warped you can tell it before you assemble it. If it don't warp, it wont likely warp afterwards." "I never have had it."
The witness Turrentine had testified on redirect examination that the crank case was welded; that, if a welded job is successful, it will hold up fairly well, but, if not, "may give you trouble"; that it is difficult to tell by looking at it whether it is successful or not; that as to whether a welded job is "likely to hold up as a new job * * * is a gamble"; and that a car with welded crank case will not bring as much on the market in a resale as a car without a welded crank case.
Mr. Brideshaw then qualified as an expert, stated that he saw the truck belonging to plaintiff, testified to the necessary and reasonable repairs and costs thereof, the price of a new crank case, and the nature and office of that part of the truck, explained how that crank case was welded. When the two questions and answers are considered together and with the other evidence, no reversible error intervened in said affirmative and negative answers made by the witness Brideshaw. It is true there was no evidence that the instant crank case, after being welded, was warped — yet the questions tended to show the nature of the damage and depreciation in the market value of the truck. The case of L. N. R. R. Co. v. Banks, *80
No reversible error resulted in permitting the witness Hess to answer that he knew Twenty-Sixth street and Eighth avenue were busy thoroughfares in the city of Birmingham, and the refusal to exclude the same on grounds that it was not in rebuttal. Defendant's truck driver had given testimony to like effect, and, though the question was not more specific as to the time of the accident, we do not find reversible error as to defendant, whose witness on cross-examination had given, without objection, the specific facts of the place at the time of the collision — that the streets were important thoroughfares, referring, by this, to the volume of traffic thereon.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.