4 S.W.2d 383 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1928
Reversing.
This is the second appeal of this case, the opinion on the former appeal being reported in
As directed in that opinion, the testimony of the widow was excluded upon the second trial, as was the testimony of interested witnesses as to statements made by the decedent. Several disinterested witnesses were permitted to testify to conversations with the decedent in which he stated that, while hauling some logs, the horses started suddenly and he was accidentally thrown from the wagon, his side striking a knot on one of the logs. A number of questions put to these witnesses tended to elicit evidence of statements made by the decedent which tended to show how, when, and where the alleged accident occurred. The evidence thus elicited was wholly self-serving and was clearly incompetent. Statements made by a party against interest are admissible against him, but any statements made by him which are self-serving are not admissible, and the fact that the party is dead does not change the rule. Jackson Baptist Church v. Combs' Ex'r,
An apparent exception to the rule is where a physician is permitted to testify as to statements of a patient in giving a history of his case, but even in such a case the physician is permitted to testify only as to such statements as may be necessary to enable him to render a proper diagnosis, and not to unnecessary extrinsic facts such as the place where the accident occurred.
In North American Accident Insurance Co. v. Hill's Adm'x,
"That while he was boarding a train the train started off suddenly, throwing him violently, and as to him falling on the grip, or the grip falling on him, I don't exactly recollect. I know the grip he was carrying was the cause of his injury indirectly."
In holding this evidence incompetent, this court said:
"By this answer the deceased himself was made to testify not only as to the way and manner of receiving his injuries, but also that they were received while deceased was traveling upon a passenger train in a coach provided for that purpose, thus bringing the accident directly within the terms of the policy; for, according to those terms, if the accident had not been inflicted while the deceased was thus circumstanced, it would not be covered by the policy. It is a rule quite universally recognized that it is competent for a patient to give a history of his case to his physician so as to enable the latter to render a proper diagnosis and give such treatment as the affliction demands. This, however, in the instant case, required no more than that the patient should have said to the physician that he had sustained an accident wherein he fell upon his grip or the grip fell upon him, naming the part of the body affected, together with the symptoms following. It is by no means essential for any purpose that the place where the accident occurred should have been mentioned."
In the instant case all of the statements of the decedent testified to by the various witnesses were made several days after the alleged accident occurred. They were not spontaneous expressions closely related to the transaction but were so remote as to be inadmissible under the res gestae rule. Valentine v. Weaver,
"To enable the plaintiff to recover, it was necessary that he should establish by evidence that J.F. Caskey, while riding on this wagon was accidentally thrown therefrom and thereby received injuries from which, independently of all other causes, he died."
With the testimony as to the statements made by the decedent excluded, there was no evidence authorizing the submission of the case to the jury, and the court erred in refusing to sustain the defendant's motion for a directed verdict.
The judgment is therefore reversed with directions to grant appellant a new trial in conformity herewith.