Dougherty v. Garrick

239 N.W. 153, 184 Minn. 436, 77 A.L.R. 1286, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 1090
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 13, 1931
DocketNo. 28,561.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 239 N.W. 153 (Dougherty v. Garrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dougherty v. Garrick, 239 N.W. 153, 184 Minn. 436, 77 A.L.R. 1286, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 1090 (Mich. 1931).

Opinions

Olsen, J.

Plaintiff appeals from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The action is one to recover damages for the death of Mary Dougherty, claimed to have been caused by the negligence of defendants.

The action was dismissed on motion of defendants at the close of plaintiff’s evidence. Defendants had not rested or presented any evidence.' A motion for a new trial was made and denied.

*438 Plaintiff presents two questions for review: (1) The general question whether the court erred in dismissing the action; (2) whether the court erred in sustaining defendants’ objections to evidence offered by the witness Sally Kenny, a daughter of Mary Dougherty, to show a statement made by the decedent to said witness shortly after the claimed accident.

The second question presented may conveniently be first considered. The plaintiff’s claim is that Mary Dougherty was fatally injured by tripping and falling over an iron pipe laid upon and along the edge of the sidewalk on a public street in the city of St. Paul by defendants Garrick Brothers, who were contractors for the city in doing some paving. The particulars will be more fully stated later when the question of negligence is considered. The court excluded the evidence on the ground that it was an attempt to show conversation with a person, since deceased, by a party interested in the outcome of ihe action.' The statement sought to be proved was: “Oh, Sally, that pipe!” .

Plaintiff argues that the statement was part of the res gestae, that it comes within the exception to the hearsay rule, and was therefore admissible. That it was made so near to the time and place of the accident as to be part of the res gestae, and not excluded by the hearsay rule, may be conceded for the purpose of this appeal.

G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9817, provides that it shall not be competent for any party, or person interested in the event of an action to give evidence therein concerning any conversation with or admission of a deceased or insane party or person relative to any matter at issue between the parties. The only exception is where the testimony of such deceased or insane person has been taken before his death or insanity, concerning such conversation or admission, and has been preserved and can be produced. These provisions are statutory law in this state. No reference to the hearsay rule is made. The hearsay rule and its exceptions are growths of judicial decisions and must yield to the statute when the statute applies.

*439 In applying the statute we have held that, being a limitation of the general rule of competency found in G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9814, it should be strictly construed. In re Will of Brown, 38 Minn. 112, 35 N. W. 726; Geisler v. Geisler, 160 Minn. 463, 200 N. W. 742.

.On the other hand, the court, speaking by Justice Mitchell, in Kells v. Webster, 71 Minn. 276, 281, 73 N. W. 962, 964, said that this statute “is founded on the plainest principles of common justice and fair play, and, so far from being cut down or evaded by construction, ought to be favored and liberally construed, so as to effect the purpose of its enactment.”

By force of the statute, evidence relative to conversations with or admissions of a person since deceased, by a person interested in the outcome of the action, is not,rendered admissible by the fact that it is a part of the res gestae or on the ground that it is not hearsay. If it were otherwise, the statute would have such limited application as to be of little or no practical effect. Take the numerous cases where actions are brought upon or to enforce an oral contract made by a person since deceased, the conversations or statements of the deceased are what make the contract, the very thing upon which the action is founded. Such conversations or statements are part of the res gestae' and are excepted ’from the hearsay rule on that ground, but cannot be testified to by a person interested in the outcome of the action, because the statute makes such a witness incompetent so to testify.

The distinction between the statute and the hearsay rules is not clearly shown in some of our decisions.

In Clark v. Davis, 153 Minn. 143, 190 N. W. 45, statements by an injured person since deceased were testified to by a person interested in the outcome of the action. This court said the evidence could be received only under the exception to the hearsay rule, as part of the res gestae. So considered, the evidence was held admissible. The statute excluding evidence of conversations Avith or admissions of persons since deceased, by a person interested in the outcome of the action, is not referred to in the opinion.

*440 In Geisler v. Geisler, 160 Minn. 463, 200 N. W. 742, 744, a person interested in the outcome of the action was permitted to testify to declarations of a person since deceased as to the legitimacy of the appellant as a child of decedent, generally referred to as pedigree testimony. It was pointed out that the evidence was admissible under an exception to the hearsay rule or as never having been within the hearsay rule. The court then cited the statute we are considering and said [160 Minn. 466]:

“It is not a too strained construction that family tradition and declarations of decedents as to facts of family history, long received almost from necessity to prove facts of pedigree and the like, do not constitute a ‘conversation’ or ‘admission’ within the meaning of - the statute.”

Giving effect to this case' as a holding that pedigree testimony is not within the statute, it does not aid us materially here, where no such testimony is involved. We are asked here to make a broader and further exception from the statute by holding that oral declarations of a person since deceased, as to the cause of an accident wherein he was fatally injured, are not conversations of or admissions by the decedent within the meaning of the statute. If the statute is not to be rendered meaningless, we think it should not be “cut down or evaded by construction,” as said in Kells v. Webster, 71 Minn. 276, 281, 73 N. W. 962, 964. To do so would amount to amendment by judicial construction.

In State ex rel. Rinker v. District Court, 142 Minn. 420, 172 N. W. 311, testimony by a person interested in the outcome, as to statements made by the person injured, since deceased, concerning the cause of his injuries, made at a time and place such that they might come within the res gestae rule, was held inadmissible under the statute.

In Johnston v. W. S. Nott Co. 183 Minn. 309, 236 N. W. 466, conversation by the injured person with his wife, interested in the outcome of the proceeding, was held inadmissible. The opinion does not expressly state that it was excluded under the statute; but, coupling the holding with the statement that the wife was the *441 sole dependent, the reasonable inference is that this was the reason for its exclusion.

In State Bank v. Strandberg, 148 Minn. 108, 180 N. W. 1006, an interested Avitness testified to a conversation with a living person, but in that conversation recited to the living person a conversation had by the Avitness Avitli a person since deceased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 N.W. 153, 184 Minn. 436, 77 A.L.R. 1286, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 1090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dougherty-v-garrick-minn-1931.