95 N.Y. 274 | NY | 1884
The intestate came to his death from injuries received on defendant’s railroad in the city of Rochester, near midnight, July 1, 1876. He was an educated deaf-mute, intelligent, and in possession of all his faculties, except that of . speech and hearing. He was familiar with the railroad at the place where he was injured ; and was probably attempting to cross the railroad on his way home at the time he was struck by an engine and fatally injured. No one saw the accident; but the theory of the plaintiff is, that as he approached the railroad tracks, a freight train came from the east, and he waited for that to pass, and then started to cross the track and was struck by ■ an engine backing in the same direction at a distance of about fifty feet in the rear of the train. The, manner of the accident, and whether it was caused solely by the negligence of the defendant, without any contributory negli- • gence on the part of the intestate, were matters of controversy
Shortly after the passage of the train and the engine, the groans of the intestate were heard, and he was found lying upon the southerly or outer track of the railroad, about fifteen feet from the sidewalk, badly bruised and mangled. He was soon removed to the sidewalk, and afterward to the hospital, where he died in about three hours. After he was removed to the sidewalk, his brother, also a deaf-mute, was sent for; and about thirty minutes after the accident, he there obtained from him, by signs, the declarations the reception of which in evidence are complained of as error. He was produced by plaintiff as a witness and was asked; “what did he tell you? ” To this defendant’s counsel objected, on the grounds “ (1) that the declarations of the deceased are incompetent, (2) that they are no part of the res gestes, (3) that whatever the conversation may have been, it took place at a time considerably subsequent to the time of the injury, at a place other than where the injury occurred, (4) that the evidence is inadmissible for any purpose.” The court overruled the objections, and the defendant’s counsel excepted. The counsel further objected to the reception of the evidence," “ upon the ground that the declarations of the deceased are not competent for the purpose of establishing either negligence on the part of the defendant, or absence of negligence on the part of the deceased.” The court overruled the objection, and defendant’s counsel again excepted. The witness then answered : “ John said he got hit! John said there was a long train, that he stood waiting for it to go, and an engine followed and struck him.” The counsel in objecting to this evidence, and the court in ruling upon the objections, must have known what evidence was sought to be elicited by the question, as the case had before been tried, and the same evidence had been given. (19 Hun, 69.) It is not disputed that this evidence was quite material, and we cannot say that it was not very damaging to the defendant upon a vital issue. Was it competent? We think not.
It is not easy always to determine when declarations may be ¡ received as part of a res-gesta, and the cases upon this subject in this country and in England are not always in harmony. The case of Commonwealth v. McPike (3 Cushing, 181), and Insurance Company v. Mosley (8 Wall. 397), are extreme cases upon one side, and would justify the reception of these declarations. The case of Regina v. Bedingfield (14 Cox’s Cr. Cases, 341), is an extreme case upon the other side, and goes much further than would be needed to justify the exclusion of these declarations. That case was decided by Lord Chief Justice Cookbubh, after consulting with Field and Manistt, JJ., and aroused much discussion and criticism in England. (Bedingfield’s Case, 14 Am. Law Review, 817; 15 id. 71.)
The rule as to res gesta laid down in Commonwealth v. McPike, has since been limited, and very properly applied in other cases in that State. In Lund v. Tyngsborough (9 Cush. 36), in view of the frequent recurrence of questions in regard to the admission of declarations claimed to be part of some res gesta, the court undertook to set forth and illustrate with some particularity the principles and tests by which such questions must be determined, and among other things said: “When the act of a party may be given in evidence, his declarations made at the time, and calculated to elucidate and ex
Without further calling attention to cases outside of this State, I will now refer to a few cases decided by this court in further illustration of this rule. In Moore v. Meacham (10
In Tilson v. Terwilliger (56 N. Y. 273), Folger, J., lays down the rule as to res gesta declarations as follows : “ to be • a part of the res gesta they must be made at the time of the act done, which they are supposed to characterize; they must
The counsel for the plaintiff, in his argument before us to justify this evidence, cited but two cases from the reports of this State; Swift v. Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co., (63 N. Y. 186), and Schnicker v. People (88 N. Y. 192). In the first case it was held that in an action upon a policy of life insurance, issued upon the life of one person for the benefit of another, evidence of declarations made to third parties by the insured at a time prior to, and not remote from, that of his examination and in connection with facts, or acts, exhibiting his then state of health (for instance, declarations made by him when apparently ill, as to the nature or cause of his illness) is competent upon the question as to the truthfulness of statements made by him to the examining physician, as to his knowledge that he had, or had not had, a certain disease, or symptoms of it. It is difficult to perceive how any thing decided in that case, or stated in the opinion of the court, can have any material bearing upon this. In the second case, Schnicher was indicted for the offense of taking a woman, un
I have now called attention to the principal authorities in this State, upon the doctrine of res gesta evidence, and I have examined all the other cases which have been reported in this State relating to the doctrine, and I confidently assert that there is no authority in this State for holding that this evidence, was competent. Here the res gesta, strictly and accuratelyN speaking, was not the fact that the intestate was injured, nor the fact that he was injured by coming in collision with the
■ This evidence cannot be received upon the theory that there; is a very strong probability that the declarations made by they intestate were true. The probability would have been equally strong if they had been made several hours later when he was removed to the hospital. The probability is that as he neared his death, he would have told the truth, if he said any thing about it. The same may be said of many statements not under oath. They are frequently .made under such circumstances as entitle them to very great, and frequently to implicit con-y fidenee ; and yet they do not answer the requirements of the! law — that a party prosecuted shall be confronted with they witnesses, shall have an opportunity of cross-examination, and that the evidence against him shall be given under the test and sanction of a solemn oath. Declarations which are received as part of the res gesta are to some extent a departure from or an exception to the general rule; and when they are so far separated from the act which they are alleged to characterize that they are not part of that act or interwoven into it by the surrounding circumstances so as to receive credit from it and from the surrounding circumstances, they are no better than any other unsworn statements made under any other circumstances. They then depend entirely upon the credit of the person making them and of the persons who testify to them, and hence are of no more value as evidence in a legal proceeding than the unsworn declarations of a person under any other circumstances.
Even dying declarations are not received in civil actions unless part of the res gesta. Such declarations made in the immediate presence of death, under the most solemn circumstances, when all motive to pervert the truth may be supposed to have ceased to operate, are received only in trials for hour
There is no middle ground for receiving declarations of this character — that is, they must be received either as dying declarations or as declarations forming part of the res gesta.
But it is said that althotigh this evidence may have been incompetent to show how the accident happened, it was competent to explain the condition of the intestate at the time he made the declarations. It is clear, however, that they were not received for that purpose. There was no dispute about his condition. It was not questioned that he was badly mangled and bruised, and that his injuries were received upon the defendant’s railroad by contact with one of its engines ; and so far as the declarations tended to show that he was simply hit by an engine, and received his injuries in that way, they were wholly unnecessary and immaterial. The sole point of the evidence was to show that he approached the track, waited for ' a long train to pass, and then in attempting to cross the track, was struck by an engine backing in the same direction, thus j making a question for the jury as to the contributory negli-ji gence on his part. For that purpose the evidence was incompetent, and that was the sole purpose, manifestly, for which it was offered or received. Suppose the intestate had been found there with á mortal stab inflicted half an hour before, and he had said, “ I am stabbed, John Doe did it! ” and the evidence had been objected to and received, would it have been an
We are, therefore, of opinion that an important rale of evidence was violated in receiving these declarations, and that upon that ground me judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concur, except Rapallo, J., not voting, and Danfobth, J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed.