179 A. 349 | N.H. | 1935
The testimony concerning the utterance of the undoubtedly offered for the purpose of showing that the engineer negligently failed to heed a timely warning of the danger to the decedent. This testimony is clearly hearsay, and so is only to be received in evidence if it falls within some exception to the rule which excludes such evidence. It is argued that the testimony should be received either because the fireman's statement constituted an admission of fault, or else because it formed a part of the res gestae. We are of the opinion that neither argument is tenable.
"An agent's admissions are not evidence against the principal unless the agency includes authority to make them." Ernshaw v. Roberge,
Neither does the proffered testimony fall within that exception to the hearsay rule which admits utterances which form a part of the res gestae.
"The theory of the Hearsay rule . . . is that, when a human utterance is offered as evidence of the truth of the fact asserted in it, the credit of the assertor becomes the basis of our inference, and therefore the assertion can be received only when made upon the stand, subject to the test of cross-examination." 3 Wig., Ev. s. 1766. The theory which underlies the res gestae exception to the hearsay rule is that the circumstances under which the utterance was made afford a guarantee of truth in substitution for that provided by oath and cross-examination. To provide this substitute guarantee it must appear to the satisfaction of the presiding justice that the utterance was a spontaneous verbal reaction to some starting or shocking event, made time when the speaker was still in a state of nervous excitement produced by that event, and before he had time to contrive or misrepresent. 3 Wig., Ev. ss. 1747, 1750; St. Laurent v. Railway,
Neither the circumstance that an utterance was made in response to a question (Murray v. Railroad,
The court's tentative finding that the statement formed a part of the res gestae was erroneous, but has "no legal effect, since it did not result in any specific finding of fact or ruling of law." Arsenault v. Lepage,
The defendant argues that even if the words were competent under the res gestae rule, still they should have been excluded because it did not appear that the fireman was authorized to speak for his employer. This argument is without merit because it confuses the two separate exceptions to the hearsay rule above discussed. Statements which form a part of the res gestae, if made by an agent for either party, are admitted, not because of the agency, but regardless of it. The statements of a bystander, if otherwise admissible, fully as competent as are those of an agent for either party or of a party himself. St. Laurent v. Railway,
The plaintiff's exception to the order of nonsuit is not supported by any argument other than that which has already been considered and so no further discussion is necessary.
Judgment for the defendant.
All concurred. *282