French v. Seattle Traction Co.

66 P. 404, 26 Wash. 264, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 639
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1901
DocketNo. 3712
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 66 P. 404 (French v. Seattle Traction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
French v. Seattle Traction Co., 66 P. 404, 26 Wash. 264, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 639 (Wash. 1901).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Eullerton, J.

The respondent recovered a judgment against the appellant for personal injuries received while alighting from a street car owned and operated by the appellant. It is assigned that the trial court erred: (1) In admitting the testimony of a witness for the plaintiff, on rebuttal, as to admissions made by the conductor of the defendant’s car, about a month after the accident, to the effect that the plaintiff had signaled to him to stop the ear, and that he had stopped it for her; (2) in admitting the testimony of a witness for the plaintiff as to the plaintiff’s earning capacity prior to the accident; (3) in commenting upon facts in evidence in the case, in the court’s modifications of, or additions to, the first instruction requested by the defendant; (4) in refusing to give to the [266]*266jury as a part of the court’s charge, the seventh instruction requested by the defendant. These assignments of error we will notice in order.

1. While detailing the circumstances leading up to the time she received the injury on her examination in chief, the respondent testified that she entered the appellant’s car at the corner of Belle street and First avenue, in the city of Seattle, and rode from thence in the direction of Madison street, where she intended to alight; that shortly before reaching Madison street she signaled to the conductor, by nodding her head, that she wished to get off at that place, and received an answering signal in return; that the car was stopped at Madison street, whereupon she started to get off, when the car was started suddenly, throwing her to the ground, causing the injuries complained of. On being cross-examined she reiterated her statement that she had signaled the conductor that she wished to alight, and had received an answering signal in return, prior to the time the car reached Madison street, and in the same connection said that the conductor, some three weeks after the accident, in the presence of her two daughters, told her that he had “stopped for her to get off.” The conductor was examined for the appellant. In his testimony in chief he testified that all cars are required by the rules of the company to stop at Madison street; that the car on which the respondent was riding was stopped there because of the requirement, and not because of any signal made by respondent; that he saw no such signal, nor did he have any knowledge that the respondent wished to get off at that place; and that he did not make the statement to the contrary effect as testified to by the respondent. On cross-examination his attention was called to the particular circumstances of this conversation, and [267]*267he was asked directly if he had not stated at that time that he noticed the signal, and had stopped the car for the respondent to get off; to which he answered in the negative. The daughter of the respondent was called in rebuttal, and permitted, over the objection of the appellant, to testify that the witness had in that conversation stated in substance the matter imputed to him in the questions put to him on his cross-examination.

It is said that these statements of the conductor are inadmissible, because, being in the nature of admissions against interest, they are too remote, under the rule that declarations and admissions of a party’s agent, not made at the time of the occurrence, cannot be received as evidence to aid in establishing liability; and, further, that if they were admissible at all, they were a part of the respondent’s case in chief, and cannot be introduced in rebuttal. It may be conceded, we think, that these statements were too remote to form a part of the res gestae, and consequently too remote to be admitted as declarations against interest; also that for this purpose it was a part of the respondent’s case in chief. But this was not the purpose for which the rebuttal evidence was offered. It was offered for the purpose of impeaching the conductor by showing that he had made statements out of court contradicting those made by him while on the witness stahd. Bor this purpose it was clearly admissible. Whether the respondent signaled to the conductor that she desired to alight at the place where the injury occurred, or whether the conductor knew of the fact from other circumstances, was material on the question of the negligence of appellant, and the conductor’s statements to the effect that she did not signal, and that he did not know she intended to alight, were subject to be impeached by showing that, he had [268]*268made contradictory statements at another time and place. ISTor does the fact that the respondent testified to the statement in her cross-examination while on the witness stand at the opening of her case change the rule. Conceding her testimony on the matter to he voluntary, — a fact not disclosed by the record, — it was not, for that reason, made a part of her case in chief. It was nothing more than receiving evidence out of its order, and should not he held to deprive her of the benefit of cumulative evidence offered at the proper time.

2. A daughter of the respondent was asked, and permitted to answer over the appellant’s objection, the following questions:

“Q. Do you know of your own knowledge, about what your mother’s earning capacity was before she was injured? A. Yes. Q. She is in the millinery business, is she? A. Yes, sir. Q. blow, tell the jury what was her earning capacity before the injury. A. Why, to my knowledge she could earn on an average about fifty dollars a month.”

There was no cross-examination on this subject. It is urged that this was hearsay testimony; that the daughter was not shown to have kept the accounts of her mother’s business, or to have been otherwise associated with her mother in the conduct of it, and her knowledge must have been derived at second hand. But we think the evidence admissible. If she knew of her own knowledge what her mother’s earning capacity was, she was competent to testify to the fact. Because the witness did not detail the sources from which her knowledge was derived, it is not to be presumed, as against her positive statement to the contrary, that her knowledge was hearsay, nor is it presumed that she testified falsely.

3. The court gave to the jury, among others, the following instructions:

[269]*269“If the jury find from the fair preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff undertook to leave the defendant’s car at the time of the accident in question, without having signified to the conductor or to the motorman that she desired to leave it, and that the conductor and motorman had no reason to suppose and did not suppose that she desired to leave it, and if the jury also find that such act on her part under such circumstances involved a want of ordinary care on her part and contributed materially and proximately toward causing the accident, then the verdict of the jury should be in favor of the defendant.
“You as men of experience know that these signals are sometimes given with a look, with a nod, with the voice; any way that is known and recognized can be counted as a signal.
“You. will consider this instruction with reference to what I have heretofore said to you about the duty of the conductor, the duty that the law imposes on him, the high degree of care it requires. You may consider it also in connection with the testimony as to the number of persons there was, if any, aboard that car.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P. 404, 26 Wash. 264, 1901 Wash. LEXIS 639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-v-seattle-traction-co-wash-1901.