203 N.W. 415 | Minn. | 1925
The time of the accident was October 25, 1923, at about 6 p.m.; the place was Arcade street, an arterial street for north and south traffic in the city of St. Paul. The boy was on the west side of the street near the curb and was returning to his home, south of the place of the accident. He had a can of milk in one hand and steered his bicycle with the other. The truck came from the north. Its lights were not lit. The boy testified that he neither saw nor heard it and that it came up behind him and ran him down.
Byrons was not present at the trial, but, by stipulation, his written statement was received in evidence. He denied that the truck struck the boy or his bicycle, and stated facts from which it might be inferred that the boy ran against the rear of the truck when its speed was slackened.
Hans Melland, a witness for appellant, testified that, as he approached the place of the accident, Byrons had the boy in his arms, and said: "Take him to the hospital. I ran over the boy, I don't know whether I killed him or not." Without objection, Melland related everything else that Byrons said about the accident while out in the street. Melland took the boy into his house close by. Byrons followed. He was excited and trembled. Clara Melland, who was in the house, was asked to relate what Byrons said when he came in. It was objected that what he said would not be part of the res gestae, and the objection was sustained. Byrons was still in Melland's house when Dr. Mollander arrived and asked him how the accident happened. The doctor's testimony on this point was objected to and the objection sustained.
At the respondent's request, the court instructed the jury as follows:
(1) The court charges the jury that the testimony of alleged admissions is the lowest class of proof and should be received with great caution.
(2) The court charges the jury that an admission not based on personal knowledge, as in the case of the driver in the present action, should be carefully weighed. *443
In his notice of motion for a new trial, appellant specified as error the rulings excluding the testimony of Miss Melland and Dr. Mollander and the giving of the instructions set out above, in conjunction with an additional instruction. The exception embraced the three instructions, one of which, the third, was proper, and was defective under the rule adopted in Murphy v. Collins,
The rulings complained of were not followed by offers of proof, but anything Byrons may have said about the accident would obviously be material and relevant, hence a formal offer of proof was not necessary. Dunnell, Minn. Dig. § 9717.
Byrons' statement to Miss Melland was made so soon after the accident that his excitement had not subsided, hence the statement was admissible under the so-called res gestae rule. Dunnell, Minn. Dig. §§ 3300, 3301.
His statement to Dr. Mollander was made a little later, but apparently while the excitement continued. It would have been proper to have received it, for we no longer confine proof of utterances which seem to be spontaneous within arbitrary limits of time. Clark v. Davis,
Byrons was respondent's servant, hence his spontaneous declarations would be admissible both for and against respondent. 2 Wigmore, Ev. (2d ed.) § 1078.
Although they cannot be regarded as authorized, the declarations and admissions of an agent or servant may be put in evidence whenever they constitute part of what is called the res gestae. Their admissibility does not necessarily depend on the law of agency. They are received under a rule of evidence which is as applicable in a proper case to one not an agent at all as to one who was an agent. 2 Mechem Agency, (2d ed.) § 1793.
"In determining whether the statement made is part of the res gestae * * * the trial court has a wide range of discretion," Lambrecht v. Schreyer,
We hold that the court should not have stopped with the admission of Melland's testimony concerning Byrons' statements, but should have allowed Miss Melland and Dr. Mollander to testify on the same subject.
It is true that, if the evidence had been received, it would have been cumulative, but this is a case where competent evidence bearing on a vital question should be admitted even though it is cumulative.
Since there must be a new trial, we will say that we do not approve of the two instructions of which appellant complains.
The weight of evidence of an admission is for the jury. An admission may be made in such language and under such circumstances as to make it the most satisfactory kind of proof.
There was no occasion for giving a cautionary instruction. Byrons' statement to Melland was not in the nature of a casual admission carelessly made to a witness interested in obtaining it for the purpose of establishing appellant's case. Whether the statement was made and, if made, what effect should be given to it, were matters for the consideration of the jury and the court should not have minimized its effect. Blume v. C.M. St. P. Ry. Co.
A cautionary instruction may be proper enough when only an admission against interest is to be considered, and the time of the alleged admission and the circumstances under which it was made affect is credibility. Tozer v. Hershey,
Orders reversed. *445