Baustian v. Young

53 S.W. 921, 152 Mo. 317, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 14, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 53 S.W. 921 (Baustian v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baustian v. Young, 53 S.W. 921, 152 Mo. 317, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 230 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

Appeal from the circuit court of St. Louis upon an order granting a new trial.

The suit is for damages for personal injuries which plaintiff avers he sustained in consequence of a def ective sidewalk. There was but one witness who testified as to the accident and its cause, which was the plaintiff himself.' The only other [321]*321witness for plaintiff was a physician who spoke of the nature of the injury. According to the plaintiff’s testimony he was walking on a plank sidewalk on Morganford road which is an unimproved street in the outskirts of the city, when he stepped on the end of a plank which yielded to his weight and caused him to fall, striking his shoulder against a telegraph pole which caused the injury complained of. Morganford road at .the point in question was like a country road, no curbing or guttering, and this wooden sidewalk was like what is seen in a country town. Whether it was put down by the city or the neighbors he did not know. After he got up he examined the place and saw that the ground underneath the sidewalk had washed out, the sleepers were rotten, and the nails hanging-down; the hollow in the ground was what caused the plank to go down.; it was rotten but would not have given away but for the hollow in the ground under it. Plaintiff was a carpenter and was employed in that vicinity; during the period of this employment he had passed along Morganford road at this point about a dozen times, but had always before walked in the road, not on the sidewalk. Four days after the accident plaintiff took a photographer to the scene and caused two photographs to be taken showing the sidewalk at that point and the surroundings. These photographs were admitted in evidence over the defendants’ objection. This, with the physician’s testimony as to the nature of the injury, was all the evidence on the part of plaintiff.

Defendants produced five witnesses who testified that they habitually passed over that sidewalk several times daily and never noticed any defect in it.

This was all the evidence. At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, and again at the close of all the evidence the defendant city asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was each time refused and exception taken.

A number of instructions were given at the instance of [322]*322the parties respectively about which no question is raised. But the court of its own motion gave the following:

“The court instructs the jury that the photographs shown to the jury are only to be considered by the jury as evidence of the general surroundings of the place where the accident occurred; and are to be given only such weight, as such evidence, as the jury believe from all the facts and circumstances in evidence, they are fairly entitled to.
“In no event are the photographs, or either of them, to be considered by the jury as any evidence at all of the accident or as to the cause thereof, or as to what parties are responsible for the condition of the sidewalk, or as to whether any person is responsible for the condition of the sidewalk or for the accident.”

There was a verdict for defendants, which on motion of plaintiff was set aside and a new trial granted on the sole ground that the court erred in giving the instruction above quoted; from that order defendants appeal.

I. The objection to the instruction insisted on by the respondent is that while in the first clause it indicates that the photographs are to be considered as evidence of the general surroundings of the place where the accident occurred, yet in the second clause the jury are directed not to consider them as evidence at all relating to the cause of the accident.

The photographs in connection with the testimony of the witness purport to show a defect in the sidewalk which according to the plaintiff’s testimony was the cause of the accident. If then the photographs are not to be considered as bearing on that point, they are not in evidence at all.

A photograph taken as these were several days after the occurrence, have not precisely the same influence, or weight as evidence, as one taken in the moment of the act it purports to portray.

It is not admissible in evidence at all until it is proven by testimony aliunde to be a true photographic print of o the [323]*323thing in question, but after that foundation has been laid the photograph speaks with a certain probative force in itself. "We take judicial cognizance of the fact that the natural forces employed in the art of photography produce certain results, and we credit the picture accordingly. But a photograph speaks only of one instant, and that the instant in which the object is seen through the camera. It may be like the object as it appeared at another time, but the natural forces that printed the photograph do not so testify, and whether it is or not depends on other evidence.

These photographs testify to us how the sidewalk appeared at the time they were taken, the plaintiff testified that it appeared at the time of the accident as it appears in the photographs,but the photographs are silent on that point,and serve in that connection only as illustrations of the witness’s testimony.

They are of the same character of evidence, as diagrams and pictures drawn by hand; not necessarily carrying the same degree of probative force, but still of the same character; not in themselves evidence at all, but representing to the eye what the witness declares was the real appearance of the thing at the time he saw it. Diagrams, drawings and photographs are resorted to only because the witness can not with language as clearly convey to the minds of the court and jury the scene as the light printed it on the retina of his own eye, at the time of which he is testifying. The Supreme Court of New Jersey have said: “As evidence, photographs have been held as admissible upon the question of identity and comparison of handwriting, and as secondary evidence when the primary and better evidence could not be obtained. It may be generally regarded as a rule that they are never admitted but as secondary evidence.” [Goldsboro v. Railroad, 60 N. J. L. loc. cit. 51.] The weight to be given this class of evidence, whether it be a diagram, painting or photograph depends on the character of the thing shown in evidence. As a diagram drawn [324]*324hastily -? by an unskillful hand does not receive the same consideration as one drawn to a scale by a mathematician, so the art of photography does not render equally trustworthy results in the hands of the unskillful and the skillful artist.

The art of photography is also not exempt from the possibility of perversion and of being made the means of creating false appearances. The Supreme Oourt of Pennsylvania have said: “Photographs are competent evidence, and when properly taken are judicially recognized as of a high character of accuracy. . . . But in careless, or inexpert, or interested hands they are capable of very serious misrepresentations of the original.” [Beardslee to use v. Columbia Township, 188 Pa. St. loc. cit. 502.] We hold therefore that the photographs in question while not evidence independent of the witness, were nevertheless in evidence as illustrations of the witness’ testimony, and the plaintiff was entitled to have them considered as such for what they were worth. This is in accordance with previous rulings of this court. [Mincke v. Skinner, 44 Mo., 92; Williamson v. Fischer, 50 Mo. 198; State v.

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W. 921, 152 Mo. 317, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baustian-v-young-mo-1899.