28 A. 102 | Conn. | 1893
The injuries for which this action was brought were received by means of a railroad accident, which happened April 9th, 1892. On May 9th the plaintiff, who was a physician, made and signed, for the use of his counsel, a written statement of the nature and causes of the accident and the character of his injuries. He prepared it to enable them to present a proper claim for compensation to the defendant. On October 4th the suit was brought, and on October 8th he consulted a physician, Dr. Curtis of Hartford, professionally.
After the defendant had suffered a default the plaintiff's deposition was taken for use in evidence, and a few weeks later he died. The executor of his will entered to prosecute, and, upon the hearing in damages offered the deposition in evidence. After it had been introduced he offered the statement of May 9th. The defendant objected to its admission because the plaintiff had given his deposition in the cause, and also because it was "evidently prepared for the purposes of a claim for the injuries of Dr. Rowland," but the objection was overruled and the paper admitted.
This memorandum, among other things, stated that by the collision of the train in which the plaintiff was with the wreck of another train, he was thrown against the arm of a seat, suffered a "nervous shock" and "broke two of my ribs in the left side, which at my age (61) is a very serious matter," and that his "disabilities from said injuries are permanent."
Gen. Statutes, § 1094, provides that "in actions by or against the representatives of deceased persons, the entries, memoranda and declarations of the deceased, relevant to the matter in issue, may be received as evidence." This statute, so far as it applies to written statements, was passed two years after the act of 1848, by which parties and interested witnesses were allowed to testify in any cause. That act had been found to give "living parties a very great advantage over representatives of the dead," and to obviate this *417
evil the statute in question was enacted. Bissell v.Beckwith,
The present suit, at the time of the hearing in damages, was an action by the representative of a deceased person, and although it only became such after the interlocutory judgment of default, we think that it is fully within the reason and meaning of the statute. That the paper was prepared and given to counsel for the purpose of making a claim on the defendant constituted no valid objection to its admission. Bissell v. Beckwith, (supra,) 517. Whether those of its statements which set forth mere matters of opinion were admissible, it is unnecessary to inquire, since the only objections taken went to the paper as a whole. One of these objections, however, presents a novel and important question. It is that as the plaintiff by his deposition had already been a witness on the hearing, the statute did not apply, because the reason for its application in ordinary cases did not exist in this.
The act of 1848, by removing the common law disqualification of interest, brought two important witnesses, the plaintiff and defendant, into the trial of almost every suit. Two years of practice under its provisions convinced the legislature that when the accident of death had withdrawn one of these witnesses, the testimony of the other gave him, as a party, an undue advantage. The act of 1850 was intended to restore, so far as might be, the footing of equality between him and the representatives of the decedent which had existed at common law. It could not have been intended to discriminate against the surviving party. In cases where the testimony of the decedent is actually given, in ordinary course, whether by deposition, or, as might happen, should he die during the progress of the trial, by his oral examination in court, there would be a discrimination in favor of his representatives were they allowed to fortify his evidence by introducing any written entries or memoranda which he might have made, whether before or after he took the position of a witness. They could only be admissible if "relevant to the matter in issue," and all matters so relevant would *418 presumably be, and certainly should have been, covered by his deposition or oral testimony. The cardinal rule that "the best evidence of which the case in its nature is susceptible" must be produced, requires that "no evidence shall be received which is merely substitutionary in its nature, so long as the original evidence can be had." 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, § 82.
In the present case the plaintiff had given his testimony in the ordinary course of justice. He could not, had he lived, have supplemented it by proof of his own memoranda relating to the same matters, made out of court and without the sanction of an oath or the test of cross-examination. In our opinion his representatives have no greater right. While we view the statute as embracing suits to which, at the time of trial, the representatives of a decedent are parties, although they may have become such by his death after the commencement of the action, it could never have been intended to allow them to make use, first of his deposition covering the entire case, and then of his unsworn statements in his own favor as to the same subject-matter.
Dr. Curtis was a witness for the executor on the trial, and testified to certain statements made to him by Dr. Rowland, in a professional consultation, shortly after the suit was brought, in regard to his symptoms and sufferings. In the course of his examination he was asked, with reference to the injuries received by Dr. Rowland — "Did he give any statement to you about the condition of his ribs?" To this the answer was, "Yes, sir; he stated his ribs were broken at the time; that they had healed." Objection was made to the reception of this testimony on the ground that it related to a narrative of a past occurrence, but the objection was overruled and an exception taken.
It does not appear from the record that Dr. Curtis was consulted with a view to medicial or surgical treatment, and it does appear that he was not consulted until six months after the plaintiff's injuries were received, and a few days after the suit was brought. If the plaintiff called on Dr. *419
Curtis in order to give such information as would enable him to testify as an expert at the trial, the testimony in question would be clearly inadmissible. Darrigan v.New York New England Railroad Co.,
The testimony was not offered or received under Gen. Statutes, § 1094, as the declaration of a decedent whose representatives were parties to the action, and we have not therefore, thus far, considered it in that light.
It is enough, with reference to that statute, to remark that the deposition of the plaintiff had already put the court in possession of his account of the cause and character of the injuries which he received. His oral declarations can certainly stand on no higher ground than his written memoranda, and for the reasons previously given, we think that the statute did not make the plaintiffs statements, given out of court and not under oath, as to the extent and nature of his injuries, evidence against the defendant.
The complaint, after stating the fact of the collision, alleged that the plaintiff was thereby "greatly and permanently injured in his constitution and nervous system, two of his ribs were broken, and he suffered a severe shock and consequent prostration, and he was in other respects greatly hurt and bruised." The default left the burden of proving substantial damages on the plaintiff, and he could prove them only as they were alleged. Shepard v.New Haven Northampton Co.,
There is error in the judgment appealed from and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.