81 P. 90 | Utah | 1905
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff read to the jury the deposition of one William J. Harris, who, at the time of the accident, was a brakeman on this same train with Leach. The following portions of the deposition were admitted, over defendant’s objection: “Mr. Leach and I were sitting in the same seat in the smoking car.
Appellant contends that these statements of Hawkins, and, in particular, his declaration wherein it is claimed he said: “My God! Go back and see if you can find Leach. The bridge knocked him off” — were immaterial and incompetent, for the reason that they are hearsay, and that it was error for»the court to admit them. On the other hand, respondent insists that they were a part of the res gestae, and were therefore admissible on that ground. While there is no fixed and settled rule by which the admissibility of acts done or declarations made in relation to a transaction, under the doctrine of res gestae, shall be determined, yet the great weight of authority holds that the declarations or acts sought to be introduced in evidence as part of the res gestae must be connected with or grow out of the main or principal transaction which is the subject-matter of the; litigation, and must tend to elucidate and explain such transaction. (Gillett on Ind. & Collat. Ev., 242-247; 2 Jones on Ev. 347.) In Lousiville, etc., Ry. Co. v. Buck, 116 Ind., on page 676, 19 N. E., page 458, 2 L. R. A. 520, 9 Am. St. Eep. 883, the court tersely, and we think, correctly, stated the general rule as follows:
“It is not always easy to determine when declarations having relation to an act or transaction should be received as part of the res gestae, and much difficulty has been experienced in the effort to formulate general rules applicable to the subject. This much may, however, be safely said: that declarations which were the natural emanations or outgrowths of the act or occurrence in litigation, although not precisely concurrent in point of time, if they were yet voluntarily and spontaneously made, so nearly con-*296 temporaneoiis as to be in the presence of the transaction which they illustrate and explain, and were made under such circumstances as necessarily to exclude the idea of design or deliberation,.must, upon the clearest principles of justice, be admissible as part of the act or transaction itself.”
And the court further says:
“Any other rule would in many instances operate to defeat the accomplishment of justice by excluding evidence of the most trustworthy character.”
McKelvey in his work on evidence, p. 278, says:
“The ground of reliability upon which such declarations are received is their spontaneity. They are the extempore utterances of the mind under circumstances and at times when there has been no sufficient opportunity to plan false or misleading statements; they exhibit the mind’s impressions of immediate events, and are not narrative of past happenings; they are uttered while the mind is under the influence of the activity of the surroundings.”
In 24 A. & E. Ency. Law, 665, it is said:
“The principle upon which the admission of such evidence rests is that the declarations may be made so soon after the happening of the principal fact, and be so intimately interwoven therewith by the surrounding circumstances, as to raise a reasonable presumption that they are the spontaneous utterance of thoughts created by and springing out of the transaction itself, and to exclude the presumption that they are the result of premeditation or de-design.” (Note 2, and cases cited.)
In 1 Whart. on Ev:, the author says:
“It is in any view clear that the declarations which are the immediate accompaniments of an act*297 are admissible as part of tbe res gestae, remembering that immediateness is tested by closeness, not of time, but of causal relation, as just explained.”
Applying tbe facts in tbis case to tbe foregoing principles, we are clearly of tbe opinion that tbe statements of Hawkins as to bow tbe accident happened, which, tbe record shows, were made but a few seconds, at most, after tbe accident occurred and while be was giving orders in the line of bis duty respecting .the accident, were admissible in evidence as a part of the res gestae. There is evidence in tbe record which tends to show that, when Hawkins returned to tbe car and made the statements attributed to him, bis face was covered with blood. And tbis testimony is not wholly denied, for Hawkins admitted on cross-examination that, at tbe time be beard Leach’s lantern drop, “a little white - speck,” “a little fleshy substance,” which be supposed was a portion of Leach’s brain, struck him in tbe forehead. Tbis circumstance, and tbe fact that be knew that Leach in all probability bad been burled to bis death, together with tbe character of tbe expressions or statements attributed to him when be informed Harris of the accident, would indicate that be was laboring under considerable excitement, and that tbe declarations under consideration, if made at all by him, were tbe emanations or outgrowth of tbe occurrence, and the instinctive and natural outburst of expression explaining what bad just happened to Leach, which clearly brings them within tbe rule as declared by the great weight of authority. In the case of The Ohio, etc., R. W. Co. v. Stein, 133 Ind. 243, 31 N. E. 180, 32 N. E. 831, 19 L. R. A. 733, the plaintiff was hurt in a collision of some cars. The engineer immediately after the injury came a car’s length to see the plaintiff, and the conversation there had between them was admitted in evidence, and the court held it was not error. The court, in a well-considered opinion, discusses the doctrine of res gestae, and reviews many cases in which the question was involved and discussed, and in the course of the opinion says:
*298 “The case at our bar differs from those cited in essential particulars, for here the declarations'were made at the time and place where the collision they referred to occurred, and they illustrated the event, and were made while all who participated in it were present. We may therefore well adjudge that there was no error in overruling the appellant’s objections without denying the doctrines asserted in our cases. The latest decision of our court upon the question is that given in the case of Louisville, etc., Ry. Co. v. Buck, 116 Ind. 566, 19 N. E. 453, 2 L. R. A. 520, 9 Am. St. Rep. 883. In that case the conductor of the train on which the intestate of the plaintiff was employed as a brakeman was on the ‘caboose’ when he received notice that the deceased had been injured while coupling cars, and he immediately ran forward and found the deceased under the rear end of the second car from the engine. The' conductor, when he took the deceased from under the car, asked, ‘How did this happen’ and the deceased fully described the cause of the accident. The court held that this testimony was competent, and cited many cases in support of its conclusion.” (Hanover Ry. Co. v. Coyle, 55 Pa. 396; McLeod, Receiver, v. Ginther’s Adm’r, 80 Ky. 399; Leahy v. Cass Ave. & F. G. Ry. Co., 97 Mo. 165, 10 S. W. 58, 10 Am. St. Rep. 300.)
Appellant requested the court to give to the jury the following instruction, which was refused: “You are further instructed that the servant, upon entering the employment of the master, assumes all the ordinary risks incident to his employment; and if the death of the deceased, John Leach, was occasioned by a risk which was incident to his business as a brakeman, the plaintiffs here cannot recover in this action. And you are further instructed that if you believe from the evidence that the bridge in question was not a reasonably safe place, in view of the equipment of the baggage car and the
“The employer, on the one hand, may rely on the fact that the employee assumes the risks usually incident to the employment. The employee, on the other hand, has the right to rest on the assumption that the appliances furnished are free from defects discoverable by proper inspection, and is not submitted to the danger of using appliances containing such defects because of his knowledge of the general methods adopted by the employer in carrying on his business or because by ordinary care he might have known of the methods, and inferred therefrom that danger of unsafe appliances might arise.”
The Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Choctaw, etc., R. R. Co. v. McDade, 191 U. S. 64, 24 Sup. Ct. 24, 48 L. Ed. 96, again declared this same doctrine as follows:
“The servant has the right to assume that the master has used due diligence to provide suitable appliances in the operation of his business, and he does not assume risks of the employer’s negligence in performing such duties. The employee is not obliged to pass judgment upon the employer’s methods of transacting his business, but may assume that reasonable care will be used in furnishing ap*301 pliances necessary for its operation. Tbis rule is subject to tbe exception that where a defect is known to the employee, or is so patent as to be readily observed by him, he cannot continue to use the defective apparatus, in the face of knowledge and without objection, without assuming the hazard incident to such situation.” (Davidson v. Cornell et al., 132 N. Y. 228, 30 N. E. 573; Garity v. B. B. & Co. [Utah], 76 Pac. 556; Shearman & Redfield, Neg., 185; Bailey, Mast. Liab., 150-155; 1 Labatt, Mast, and Serv., 260.)
Now, the record in this case shows that Leach, at the time he was killed, was making his third or fourth trip as brakeman on this “mixed” train, which, passed over the bridge in question and others of a like character on this route, in the nighttime. And there is absolutely no evidence in the record which goes to show, and no fact or circumstance from which it can be inferred; that Leach had, at any time prior to the accident which cost him his life, passed along the outside of the baggage car by means of the railings referred to while the train was passing over this or any other bridge of the same kind and structure. Nor is it shown that he had any knowledge of the close proximity of the railings on the baggage car to the -upright portions or sides of the bridges along the route on which he was brakeman. But, on the contrary, the record shows that he had made but a few trips on this “mixed” train, and on each occasion passed over these truss bridges in the nighttime, and at a rate of speed of from twenty to twenty-five miles per hour, which gave him no opportunity whatever to know or appreciate the danger of passing along the hand and foot railings on the baggage car while it was passing over the bridges referred to. Neither is it shown, nor can it be inferred from the evidence in the case, that Leach’s experience as a brakesman on freight trains before he went to work •on the mixed train was such as to inform him of the narrow space between the sides of the combination baggage car and the upright portions of the bridges. The evidence tends to
“In assuming the risks of the particular service in which he engages, the employee may legally assume that the employer, by whatever rule he elects to conduct his business, will fulfill his legal duty by making reasonable efforts to furnish appliances reasonably safe for the purposes for which they are intended; and whilst this does not justify an employee in using an appliance which he knows to be defective, or relieve him from observing patent defects therein, it obviously does not compel him to know or investigate the employer’s modes of business, under the penalty, if he does not do so, of taking the risk of the employer’s fault in furnishing him unsafe appliances.” (Louisville, etc., Ry. Co. v. Wright, 115 Ind. 378, 16 N. E. 145, 17 N. E. 584, 7 Am. St. Rep. 432; Baltimore, etc., Ry. Co. v. Rowan, 104 Ind. 88, 3 N. E. 627; St. Louis, etc., Ry. Co. v. Irwin [Kan. Sup.], 16 Pac. 146, 1 Am. St. Rep. 266; Bass v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co. [N. D.], 49 N. W. 655, 33 Am. St. Rep. 756; Ill. Terr. Ry. Co. v. Thompson [Ill.], 71 N. E. 328; Pidcock*303 v. Ry. Co., 5 Utab 612, 19 Pac. 191, 1 L. R. A. 131; 20 A. &. E. Ency. Law [2 Ed.], p. 73; Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Stevens [Ill.], 59 N. E. 577; Choctaw, etc., Ry. Co. v. McDade, 191 U. S. 64-67, 24 Sup. Ct. 24, 48 L. Ed. 96.)
There are two propositions contained in tbe instruction asked for by appellant. Tbe first is, if tbe death of Leach was occasioned by a risk which was incident to his business as brakeman, tbe plaintiffs cannot recover. And the second is, if he knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care and prudence would have known, that the place where he was killed was not reasonably safe, the defendant would not be liable. As to the first proposition, the facts and circumstances show that the risk was not such as Leach was legally bound to know or anticipate when he went to work on this “mixed” train. And the second proposition contained in the instruction does not correctly declare the láw applicable to the facts in this case. It is not claimed that Leach received any instructions respecting the close proximity of the sides of the bridge to those of the baggage car. And, as we.have hereinbefore stated, he had a right to assume that the space between the baggage car and the uprights and the braces of the bridges was sufficient to enable him to pass and repass along the sides of the car in the performance of his duties with reasonable safety. Under the law as declared by the foregoing decisions and as announced by the text-writers, the burden of inspection was not on him to ascertain if there were any defects in the roadway, or in the structure of the bridges, which would tend to make of the service in which he was engaged one of extraordinary danger, as the foregoing instruction asked for by appellant would imply. The court instructed the jury very elaborately upon the question of negligence, and of the degree of care required of both appellant and the deceased, and the instructions, as a whole, were as favorable to the defendant as the facts in the case warranted.
We find no reversible error in the record. The judgment is therefore affirmed; the. coste of. this appeal-to be .taxed against appellant.