97 Ala. 211 | Ala. | 1892
— The complaint as amended presented a good cause of action and the demurrer to it was properly overruled. Declarations of plaintiff’s intestate were admitted in evidence against the objection of the defendant. The admission of this evidence is assigned as error. It is claimed that these declarations were properly admitted as a part of
Jesse Williams testified that after the car was rolled off the bodjq in reply to a question as to how it occurred, plaintiff’s intestate said “The hand-hold let me down.”
Charley Roberts’ testimony is to the same effect. Bob Patterson testifies that he was seventy-five or one hundred yards off when the car run over deceased, “that he got there about five minutes after the car got on him” that while the car was on him deceased said, “The hand-hold let me down.” This statement of the declarations admitted as res gestee suffices for a consideration of the question, as to whether they constituted a part of the res gestee of the accident, and as' such admissible in evidence: In Gandy v. Humphries, 35 Ala. 624, the principle is thus declared: “When it is said that declarations, to be admissible as a part of the res gestee, must be contemporaneous with the principal transaction it is not meant that they shall be exactly coincident in point of time with the main fact. If they appear to spring out of the transaction, if they serve to elucidate it, and are made so shortly after the happening of the main fact, as to stand in the relation of unpremeditated result to it, the idea of deliberate design in making them being fairly precluded by the surrounding-circumstances then they may be regarded as contemporaneous.” In the case of the Ala. Gr. So. R. R. Co. v. Hawk, 72 Ala. 112, hlie same principle is declared, and it is added : “The evidence offered must not have the ear-marks of a device, or afterthought, nor be merely narrative of a transaction which is really and substantially past...... The time “afew minutes” does not appear to be so proximate to the main transaction, nor are the declarations made,
In the case of the Richmond & Danville R. R. Co. v. Hammond, 93 Ala. 181, in regard to declarations, admitted as res gestee, it is said: “They were made five minutes or more after the collision, were not spontaneously made, but in answer to the question “hoto it happened” after a conversation with the witness as to the extent of his injury; and do not illustrate or explain or receive support from the transaction itself, unless it be as to his supposition that it happened from the carelessness of Hackett in not having out a flagman, which supposition would not have been competent evidence, had the deceased lived and testified for himself.”
In Taylor on Evidence Yol. I, •§ 545 it is said: “In all these cases the principal points of attention are, whether the circumstances and declarations offered in proof were so connected with the main fact under consideration as to illustrate its character, to further its object, or to form in conjunction with it, one continuous transaction.” The same rule is declared in almost similar language in 1 Gr. Ev. § 108. Many phrases have been used in the endeavor to express definitely and clearly the proper relation and character of a declaration or act to the main fact, by which it becomes res gestee. It is termed a “verbal act, from an act.” “A natural impulse from an act,” is that which “owes its birth to a preceding fact,” “it must spring out of the transaction,” “it must be spontaneous,” and many others might be mentioned. Unless the main fact is relevant and competent evidence the res gestee is inadmissible as evidence. If the declaration be a mere narration of a past complete act, it is not res gestee. If it bear evidence of the exercise of reason, or that it is a conclusion of the mind after reflection, it is no part of the main fact, but a mere expression of opinion. In determining whether a declaration of circumstance is a part of the res gestee, it is important to consider the time between the main fact or act, and the declaration or circumstance, but res gestee can not be tried by any specified time or number of minutes. The real enquiry is, did the main act proprio vigore further assert itself and demonstrate its character or intent by impelling the contemporaneous or subsequent declaration or act, offered in evidence, and without which the main act is left incomplete and only partially proven, or did the declaration or
The principle of law upon which the doctrine of res gesta1. rests, should not be confounded with the principle of law under which the admissions of a party are admissible as against him, or with the principle upon which dying declarations are admitted as evidence.
Cases will arise in which it is difficult to determine whether the declaration or acts are a part of the main act, and res gestee, or whether they are mere hearsay, and each case must in great measure be determined by the court when presented. Apply these principles of law to the facts of this case. It seems that the witness was some thirty yards off, saw the accident, that deceased saw him and called for assistance, that witness ran up to deceased, and exclaimed “Mr. Creecy what in the world?” This exclamation of the witness was in effect an enquiry, as to how the accident happened. It was made after deceased had called to him for help. The declaration of the deceased, “The hand-hold let me down” was more in the nature of a response to the enquiry of the witness “What in the world?” than a further assertion or demonstration of the main fact, manifesting itself in the declaration; and this is further apparent, when it is remembered that deceased had prior to that time, called to witness to assist him. We think the declaration was no part of the main fact. It is clear that the declarations of deceased, testified to, made after the car was removed from over the body, and those in response to questions as to “how it happened” under the facts as proven, were not res gesta1. The court erred in admitting the declarations of the deceased.
The evidence in relation to the safety or danger of using “kicking switches” or where the engineer was at the time of the accident, or that the coupling might have been safely effected by the use of the engine, was wholly irrelevant to the issue. Neither of these facts could be regarded as the proximate cause of the injury. Neither would it follow as a conclusion of law that if it was the safer way, for deceased to have ascended at the rear of the car, instead of the front, that he was guilty of contributory negligence if he selected the more dangerous way. if the deceased selected a dangerous way to perform
“Employees of every grade are warned to see for themselves before using them that the machinery and tools which they are expected to use, are in proper condition for the service required, and if not to put them in proper condition for the service required, or see that they are so put before using them. And the company does not wish or expect its employees to incur any risk whatever from which by the exercise of their own judgment or personal care, they can protect themselves; but enjoins them to take time in all cases
We think the court erred in admitting in evidence rule 53. We have been unable to see its relevancy to the matters in issue before the jury.
Human feelings are easily excited by the description of great bodily injuries, or ghastly wounds, or the exhibition of objects which appeal to the senses. Sympathy or indignation once aroused, in the average juror readily become enlisted, to the prejudice of the person accused as the author of the injury. It may be that the detail of the facts showing the position of the body under the wheel of the car, and the position of the foot in the frog of the switch, operated unduly on the minds of the jurors, but we can not say such evidence did not tend to corroborate other evidence in the case, as to how and exactly where the accident occurred. The record fails to show the materiality or relevancy of the evidence furnished by the introduction of the shoe said to have been worn by the deceased at the time of the accident. The exhibition of the shoe was simply an appeal to the feel
The exceptions and assignments of error are so numerous in this case we have not undertaken to do more than declare the general principles of law, which are applicable and control them all.
Reversed and remanded.