delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from a judgment against defendant city of Chicago for injuries sustained by plaintiff Eugene Taylor when he allegedly fell on a defective sidewalk. Defendant raises the following issues: (1) whether the trial court erred in granting plaintiff’s motion in limine to exclude any evidence of intoxication, and (2) whether the plaintiff’s closing rebuttal argument that defendant did not call a witness whose testimony would have been adverse constituted prejudicial error. The pertinent facts follow.
On August 7, 1976, plaintiff was walking on the sidewalk in the ■vicinity of 900 Montrose when he fell and fractured his ankle. Police officers Belcastro and Kindle arrived at the scene of the accident and took plaintiff to Weiss Memorial Hospital for treatment. While at the hospital, Officer Belcastro filled out a police report which stated, among other things, that plaintiff was intoxicated. Plaintiff filed a complaint against the city to recover damages for his injury and alleged that a defect in the sidewalk was the cause of his fall.
Prior to the commencement of trial, the court granted plaintiff’s motion to bar defendant from presenting any evidence of plaintiff’s intoxication. After deletion of references to drinking and intoxication, the police report was admitted into evidence as Officer Belcastro’s past recollection recorded. The only witnesses at trial, plaintiff and Officer Belcastro, presented conflicting evidence regarding the site of the accident, which testimony was crucial in determining whether there was a defect in the sidewalk. During closing rebuttal argument plaintiff’s counsel argued, over objections, that had defendant called Officer Kindle as a witness, his testimony would have supported plaintiff’s version of the accident. The jury returned a verdict of $56,000 in favor of plaintiff. Defendant appeals.
Opinion
Defendant argues first that the court erred in excluding evidence of plaintiffs intoxication as this precluded assertion of the intoxication as a proximate cause of his injury. The evidence of plaintiffs intoxication was contained in the police report made by Officer Belcastro. Although police reports are generally not admissible in Illinois (Jacobs v. Holley (1972),
Regarding the admission of evidence of intoxication, it is well established that the mere consumption of alcoholic beverages does not, by itself, establish intoxication; there must be proof of facts tending to show that the drinking resulted in intoxication. (McCullough v. McTavish (1978),
In the instant case the evidence of intoxication contained in the police report consisted of Officer Belcastro’s responses to various items on the report as shown below (the officer’s responses are in italics):
“26. Cause of Injury (Instrument or Means):
Drinking & fell
27. Reason (Accident, 111 Health, Etc.):
Too much to drink
* * *
31. Sobriety of Victim (check one):
_Sober;_Had Been Drinking;
X Intoxicated
* * *
37. Narrative: (The Indicated Sobriety of Victim or Witness is the apparent condition when reported.)
_Apparently UNFOUNDED, at the time of the preparation of this report.
Victim consumed a large amount of wine ***.”
Officer Belcastro made no mark in the space provided in item 37 to indicate that his observation of the intoxicated condition of plaintiff was unfounded. In granting plaintiff’s motion in limine the court stated that for an opinion as to intoxication to be admissible, the witness must testify to a factual foundation consisting of observations of the individual. The court characterized the officer’s responses as opinions, found the necessary factual foundation lacking, and required deletion of the responses before the report was admitted into evidence as past recollection recorded.
In deciding whether the court erred in holding such responses inadmissible, it is necessary to determine the nature of the excluded responses. In Koch v. Pearson (1920),
Officer Belcastro’s responses to item 26, “Cause of Injury”: “Drinking and fell”; item 27, “Reason”: “Too much to drink”; and item 37, “Narrative”: “Victim consumed a large amount of wine”; were not the product of his personal observation nor were they statements of fact based upon appearances which were observed and recorded at the time. They were, rather, conclusions based upon assumptions and speculation and were properly excluded. Item 31, however, called for a response based directly on the officer’s observations. The item offered a choice among several observations that could have been made and Officer Belcastro testified to the distinctions that he made between the choices and to the type of behavior which would influence him to decide on one category or another. We conclude that the portion of the police report in which the officer indicated that plaintiff was intoxicated, item 31, had a factual basis in that it was a personal observation based on appearances and, therefore, the court erred in excluding it. As such exclusion precluded defendant from asserting that plaintiff’s intoxication was a proximate cause of his accident, the error was prejudicial and a new trial is warranted.
Plaintiff contends that the deleted responses were correctly excluded from evidence as there was no foundation laid for the observations of the officer in that the procedure he used to arrive at his conclusion that plaintiff was intoxicated was arguably insufficient to accurately make such a determination. Although Officer Belcastro had no independent recollection of the event, he testified regarding the observations upon which he would generally base a determination that an individual is intoxicated. These observations are whether the individual has the odor of alcohol on his breath, whether there is a reason the individual is lying on the ground or is in whatever situation he is in, the condition of his clothing and overall appearance and hygiene, and whether the individual can function properly. Plaintiff contends that, except for alcohol on the breath, any of the facts noticed by the officer which led him to conclude that plaintiff was intoxicated could be attributed to the injury plaintiff had sustained and were not, therefore, conclusive evidence of intoxication. On this issue we agree with defendant’s argument that whether or not there was a sufficient basis for Officer Belcastro’s statement that plaintiff was intoxicated goes to the credibility of the evidence, not its admissibility. (Doria v. Costello (1974),
Young v. Gateway Transportation Co. (1975),
In view of our disposition of the foregoing issue, we find it unnecessary to address the second issue raised by defendant.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
WILSON, P.J., and SULLIVAN, J., concur.
