125 Wash. 352 | Wash. | 1923
Between 4 and 4:15 o’clock in the afternoon of December 23, 1921, a girl, seven and one-half years of age, the child of the respondents, was killed by being struck by an automobile owned by the appellants, at that time being operated by one of their employees. The trial of the case before a jury resulted
Two principal errors are argued in behalf of a reversal; the first, that a police officer of the city of Tacoma (where the accident occurred) was allowed to testify as to a conversation had with the appellants’ employee, and it is claimed that this testimony should not have been admitted for the reason that it was not part of the res gestae. The facts in regard to this phase of the case are as follows: immediately upon striking the child, the employee jumped from his machine, picked up the body of the child and took it to its parents’ residence near by, and it appears from the testimony that at that time the child was probably already dead. Accompanied by the child’s mother, the employee immediately took the body in the automobile of a passer-by to the Tacoma General Hospital, and from there he telephoned to the police department, reporting the accident, and was advised that an officer would come at once to the hospital. This officer was the witness whose testimony is objected to. He arrived at the hospital at about 4:30 or 4:45 o ’clock, and testified that he there at once interviewed the employee, who, in response to his inquiries, stated that, at the time of the accident, he was operating the car at about twenty-five or twenty-eight miles an hour, which was in excess of the lawful limit. o
The .objection to this testimony is that it was so lacking in the elements of spontaneity that it could not be brought within the rule of permissible evidence; that so much time had elapsed between the accident and the recitation of its occurrence, and so many things had intervened during that time, that what was said amounted only to the narration of a past event, and was
It would do little good to refer to cases which have held either one way or the other as to the admissibility of evidence as part of the res gestae, for, as was said by "Wigmore in his work on Evidence, quoted by us in State v. Goodwin, supra:
“ ‘To argue from one case to another on this question of “time to devise or contrive” is to trifle with principle, and to cumber the records with unnecessary and unprofitable quibbles’.”
The rule which we make on the admission of this testimony goes not nearly as far as that announced in Walters v. Spokane International R. Co., 58 Wash. 293, 108 Pac. 593, 42 L. R. A. (N. S.) 917, which makes a rather extreme allowance of such testimony, and we find nothing in Harris v. Carstens Packing Co., 43 Wash. 647, 86 Pac. 1125, 6 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1164; Henry v. Seattle Elec. Co., 55 Wash. 444, 104 Pac. 776; and Singer v. Metz Co., 101 Wash 67, 171 Pac. 1032, cited from this court by the appellants, persuasive against our present ruling.
The second point urged by the appellants is that one of respondents’ attorneys, in his argument to the jury, engaged in such prejudicial remarks as to preclude the appellants from a fair trial. The record shows that,
*357 “. . . if it be apparent that counsel deliberately sets about, although in an indirect way, to inform the jury that the loss, if any, will fall upon an insurance company instead of the defendant, his conduct will be held prejudicial. ’ ’
And as said in Shay v. Horr, supra, “the striking of the answers conveying such information and the instructing the jury not to consider it will not save the error.”
Respondents cite to us the cases of Iverson v. McDonnell, supra; Johansen v. Pioneer Mining Co., 77 Wash. 421, 137 Pac. 1019; Gianini v. Carini, supra, and Canfield v. Seattle Cornice Works, 122 Wash. 318, 210 Pac. 773, as supporting their contention that, “if such information comes about naturally and is incident to a lawful inquiry, there can be no error.” The facts in the case before us, however, do not show such a natural and incidental process, but a deliberate one. Nor does the situation come within the rule of the last cited case that some misconduct is so harmless that an instruction to disregard it will work a cure.
For the. error last discussed, the judgment is reversed and a new trial is ordered.
Main, C. J., Bridges, and Mitchell, JJ., concur.