DONALD A. WINGATE vs. EMERY AIR FREIGHT CORP.
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
Bristol. November 2, 1981. — March 2, 1982.
385 Mass. 402
Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., LIACOS, ABRAMS, NOLAN, & LYNCH, JJ.
In a tort action brought by a plaintiff employee against a third party, evidence did not warrant an inference that the content of a report of the plaintiff‘s injury, made by the employer to its insurer and admitted in evidence by the judge as an inconsistent prior statement of the plaintiff, was attributable to the plaintiff. [405]
In a tort action brought by a plaintiff employee against a third party, the employer‘s report of the plaintiff‘s injury was inadmissible under the business records exception to the hearsay rule,
LIACOS, J., concurring.
CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court on November 15, 1977.
The case was tried before Ponte, J.
After review by the Appeals Court, the Supreme Judicial Court granted leave to obtain further appellate review.
Ephraim F. Horvitz for the plaintiff.
Charles R. Desmarais for the defendant.
HENNESSEY, C.J. This appeal concerns the circumstances under which an employer‘s report of injury, containing an account of an accident that resulted in injury to an employee, may be introduced in evidence, despite its hearsay nature, in a tort case brought by the plaintiff employee against a third party. We agree with the Appeals Court‘s conclusion that the admission of the report in this case was prejudicial error, and reverse the judgment in favor of the defendant Emery
The plaintiff was employed by the J.A. Jones Construction Company (Jones Company) in Somerset, Massachusetts. He testified at trial that he had been injured at the Logan International Airport premises of Emery while accepting a delivery for Jones Company. According to the plaintiff, his injury occurred when an Emery employee negligently caused a crate to strike him and knock him down. Emery denied any knowledge of the accident, and gave evidence tending to show that the accident had not happened at Emery‘s loading docks as alleged by the plaintiff.
Among the items of evidence offered by Emery was an “Employer‘s First Report of Injury,” prepared by Jones Company pursuant to
The plaintiff objected on the ground that he had not participated in the preparation of the report. He admitted that he had told someone at Jones Company about his accident, but testified that he had not spoken to, and in fact had never met, Louis Belmont. This testimony was not contradicted. In his final charge, the judge instructed the jury that, if they determined that the plaintiff had made the statements contained in the report to the preparer, they should consider the report as an inconsistent statement casting substantial doubt on the plaintiff‘s credibility. If, however, they found that the plaintiff had not related the information to Belmont, they should not consider the report as evidence of inconsistency in the plaintiff‘s “stories.”
The jury returned a verdict for Emery, and the plaintiff appealed. The Appeals Court reversed the judgment, reasoning that in the absence of proof that the information in the report reflected statements made by the plaintiff directly to the preparer, the admission of the report was prejudicial error. Wingate v. Emery Air Freight Corp., 11 Mass. App. Ct. 982, 984 (1981). We granted Emery‘s request for further appellate review.
We dispose quickly of the premise that the report contained a prior inconsistency.4 The evidence did not warrant an inference that the content of the report was attributable to the plaintiff. He denied that he had talked with Belmont, and he denied that he had made the statement contained in the report. His mere testimony that he had told his story to some person at the company was not sufficient to charge him with the version of the facts shown in the report.5
We turn now to the issue whether the report was admissible under the business records statute. Generally, evidence based on a chain of statements is admissible only if each out-of-court assertion falls within an exception to the hearsay rule. Bouchie v. Murray, 376 Mass. 524, 527-531 (1978). McCormick, Evidence § 246, at 585-586 (2d ed. 1972). See
It does not follow, however, that the preparer may rely on statements that are not themselves a part of the regular course of business record-keeping. The preparer‘s hearsay sources must carry the same indicia of reliability, arising from regularity and business motives, that bring his own act of recording the information within the statutory exception. Thus, unless statements on which the preparer relies fall within some other exception to the hearsay rule, the proponent must show that all persons in the chain of communication, from the observer to the preparer, reported the information as a matter of business duty or business routine. See Commonwealth v. DeBrosky, 363 Mass. 718, 724-725 & n.6 (1973); United States v. Burruss, 418 F.2d 677, 679 (4th Cir. 1969); Fagan v. Newark, 78 N.J. Super. 294, 319 (1963); McCormick, supra § 310, at 726-727. Cf. Saba v. Cohen, 333 Mass. 557, 558-559 (1956) (records transcribed from other records, also apparently made in ordinary course of business). Ordinarily this can, of course, be accomplished by presenting evidence of normal business practice, with no need to produce each speaker.
If the original source of the information was not an employee with “eyewitness” knowledge or similar “personal knowledge,” reliability is lacking. Further, if the original
Inferences were probably warranted that an employee of Jones Company had a duty to report an injury incurred by him while working, and that such reports were made in the regular course of business. However, as noted above, there was no evidence that the plaintiff told his story directly to Belmont. Of course it might have been shown that a fellow employee of the plaintiff was an eyewitness to the accident, and had a duty to report, but there was no evidence of any such eyewitness. In any event, there was no evidence that the plaintiff or anyone else with personal knowledge and a duty to report had relayed the information to the preparer of the record or to someone under a business duty to inform the preparer of the record, so that the intermediary‘s statement would itself be a part of the business record-keeping process.
The admission of the report cannot be regarded as harmless error. See
The judgment is reversed, the verdict set aside, and the case remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial.
So ordered.
LIACOS, J. (concurring). I agree with the result reached by the court in this case. While I agree also with the reasons stated by the court, a few additional words may be helpful to a fuller understanding of the statutory business records exception to the hearsay rule.
When a document is offered as being within the hearsay exception created by
If the first obstacle to admissibility is overcome, then and only then, does the second question possibly arise. That question is whether all or only some of the material and information contained in the document qualifies as being within the scope of the statutory exception.
To illustrate these preliminary points by way of example, a document would not be admissible under
In my view, the problem the court addresses (as to the source of the information in the business record) goes to the second question, not the first. Although I agree with the court‘s statement (supra at 404 n.3), that the issue has not been briefed, I believe it would be helpful to point out that the report offered here did not qualify, at the threshold, as a business record of the workmen‘s compensation insurer.1
The common law rules of exception to the hearsay rule regarding business records were wholly inadequate to meet the needs and realities of a modern industrial and commercial society. 5 J. Wigmore, Evidence §§ 1521, 1522, 1561a, 1561b (Chadbourn rev. 1974). Wigmore stated well the reasoning that led to the enactment of statutes such as G. L.
Speaking of business records Wigmore wrote: “Such entries are dealt with... in the most important undertakings of mercantile and industrial life. They are the ultimate basis of calculation, investment, and general confidence in every business enterprise.... It would seem that expedients which the entire commercial world recognizes as safe could be sanctioned, and not discredited, by courts of justice.... The merchant and the manufacturer must not be turned away remediless because methods in which the entire community places a just confidence are a little difficult to reconcile with technical judicial scruples on the part of the same persons who as attorneys have already employed and relied upon the same methods. In short, courts must here cease to be pedantic and endeavor to be practical.” 5 J. Wigmore, supra § 1530, at 452.
The courts did not, as a whole, respond to Wigmore‘s plea, but legislatures did. Keeping the object of such legislation in mind, it is clear that business enterprises rely on records they make to the extent those records reflect, as the court points out, information based on personal knowledge of its own employees who have a business interest to report accurately. The injury report received by the insurer has none of these indicia of reliability. Hence, it is not a business record admissible by virtue of
