43 Kan. 145 | Kan. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On June 30, 1886, John F. Patterson was employed in the service of the Southern Kansas Railway Company, as a passenger conductor. At that time a Sunday-school assembly was in session at Ottawa, and the railway company was running excursion trains from several points in
This action is brought by the representative of the deceased to recover damages for the benefit of the widow and child, it being alleged that his life was lost in consequence of the negligence of the railway company. The company alleged and contended that Patterson was guilty of negligence contributing to the accident. The plaintiff prevailed, and recovered a judgment for $5,500.
Errors are assigned here upon the rulings of the court in admitting evidence. The deposition of a witness was received that was not taken in the exact place stated in the notice. The notice named the office of Winslow P. Hyatt, Colorado street, Pasadena, Los Angeles county, California, as the place of taking the deposition, but as he had moved about a block away on another street, the notary met the plaintiff’s attorney at that place at the proper time, and adjourned the taking of the deposition to another office on another street in Pasadena; and there the deposition was continued, completed, sealed up, and properly addressed. In the afternoon of that day, the attorney for the defendant was found and informed what had been done, and by consent the deposition was then opened, and the witness was recalled and cross-examined by defendant’s attorney.
“Q. You say you have passed over this road a great many mes ? A. I have.
“Q,. And over this bridge ? A. Yes, sir.
“ Q. Now, can you state to the jury, under the circumstances which surrounded Mr. Patterson there, whether or not there was any cause why he should have ascended that car with great speed and haste, and if so, what that cause was ? Explain to the jury. A. Well, the way that man started in to go up the side of the car, he couldn’t see the bridge when he started; and at the speed the train was running, and him climbing up the side of the car, by the time the engine struck the bridge he would be towards the top, and when he heard the thundering noise that the engine makes when it strikes a bridge, and he hurried to get on top of the car.”
This testimony was given over, the objection of the plaintiff in error. The witness was the conductor of another train, who was far away when Patterson fell from the box car. He did not know and could not state whether Patterson could see the bridge when he started to ascend the ladder, nor how far he had ascended when the bridge was reached; neither was he competent to state what causes operated on the mind of Patterson that led him to ascend the ladder with great speed and haste.
The admission of the incompetent testimony was error, for which the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.