88 S.E. 734 | N.C. | 1916
The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by defendant's negligence, which consisted in permitting an iron frog to be left in a street (441) of Charlotte. Plaintiff, while walking on the street, stepped on the frog and her foot was caught in the same and she was injured. The case was here at the last term, and plaintiff then was granted a new trial.
1. Was the plaintiff injured by the negligence of the defendant, as alleged in the complaint? Answer: "Yes."
2. Was the release set out in the answer secured by undue advantage and fraud, as alleged in the replication of the plaintiff? Answer: "No."
3. What damages, if any, is the plaintiff entitled to recover of defendant? (No answer.)
Defendant offered as evidence the examination of W. W. Rhodes, a witness who testified for the defendant at the former trial. It was taken down by a stenographer, who testified that it was a correct and literal reproduction of all that the witness said at the time. It appeared that W. W. Rhodes was in Arizona when this testimony was introduced, and has been there for nearly a year, he having gone there for his health. He had been an employee of the defendant, and was such at the time the alleged release of plaintiff was executed. He carried it to her home for her signature. "His salary, though, ceased at the time he left the service of the company." His testimony related exclusively to the signing of the release to the defendant by the plaintiff and what occurred at her home when it was signed. Plaintiff objected to the testimony, the objection was overruled, and plaintiff excepted. The typewritten examination was admitted and read to the jury. The objection was based on its incompetency, its relevancy being admitted. There were other exceptions taken by the appellant which will be considered in the opinion. Judgment was entered upon the verdict, and plaintiff appealed. After stating the case: The precise question involved in the admission of the proof as to the testimony of W. W. Rhodes, a witness for the defendant at the former trial of this case, has never before been considered by this Court. But it is thoroughly well settled, as it seems, by the great weight of authority and numerous precedents that evidence of the kind is admissible when the witness is absent from the State and not within the jurisdiction of the court. We need not decide as to whether a temporary absence will render the evidence competent, as in this case it appears that the witness is absent permanently, or, at least, for such a prolonged or indefinite period (442) that his return is merely contingent or conjectural. He may now fairly be considered as a nonresident in this State.
The rule in regard to such evidence which has generally been followed is thus stated in 1 Greenleaf on Evidence (16 Ed.), sec. 1639: *505
"The death of the witness has always and as of course been considered as sufficient to allow the introduction of his testimony. The absence of the witness from the jurisdiction, out of the court's process, ought also to be sufficient, and is so treated by the great majority of courts." 5 Enc. of Ev., p. 904, says: "The absence of the witness from the State is a sufficient ground for admitting the testimony," citing in the notes many cases which support the text. The following authorities sustain the rule: Wigmore on Ev., sec. 1404; Stephens Digest of Evidence (1886), art. 32; Wharton on Ev., sec. 178; 1 Atkyns Rep. (1737), p. 444; B. N. Natl. Bank v. Bradley, 30 So. 546; M. Mill Co. v. M. S. R. Co.,
We are of the opinion that the judge's reference to the interest of the plaintiff in the cause, as something that should induce them to weigh his testimony cautiously, was not calculated to prejudice the plaintiff, under the facts and circumstances of the case. Besides, it was shown that Rhodes had quit the service of the defendant at the time he testified, and had no interest whatever in the result of the litigation. It may also be added that the charge of the court on the question of interest was rather more favorable to the plaintiff than the strict rule of the law would permit, and it surely worked no harm. She has no just cause to complain.
The execution of the release having been shown, the court properly admitted it in evidence. This did not prevent the plaintiff from attacking it is fraudulent. The judge should not, as he could not, have told the jury that the release was fraudulent and void as matter of law. The parties did not agree as to the amount of damages, nor did they plainly appear. This was a disputed matter. The plaintiff claimed large damages, and the defendant asserted that the injury was slight and the damages small. The court could not take the case from the jury where the facts were disputed. But the objection was to the introduction of the release, and this was properly overruled after the execution of the release had been shown. Its introduction was proper, as part of the evidence, even if it was fraudulently obtained.
The court was right in charging the jury that the fraud, if any, must have induced the execution of the release by the plaintiff, otherwise the fraud, if practiced upon the plaintiff, would have been harmless. It would seem that this exception is based upon a misconception of the particular nature of the instruction given by the court, which related to the operation or effect of the alleged fraudulent conduct upon the mind and will of the plaintiff. The charge of the court, as to what constituted fraud, was based upon special prayers of the plaintiff, as it seems, and given in accordance therewith. It was, anyhow, sufficiently full and explicit, and the jury must have understood what was meant, and what was necessary for them to find in (445) order to invalidate the paper.
Having carefully examined the record, we find no ground for a reversal. *508
Cited: Bank v. Whilden,