Gibson Oil Co. v. Westbrooke

1932 OK 698, 16 P.2d 127, 160 Okla. 26, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 662
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 25, 1932
Docket21244
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1932 OK 698 (Gibson Oil Co. v. Westbrooke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibson Oil Co. v. Westbrooke, 1932 OK 698, 16 P.2d 127, 160 Okla. 26, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 662 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

OULLISON, J.

Planitiff, Bessie West-brooke, instituted suit .against the Gibson Oil Company and Dee Adams, defendants, seeking to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received in an automobile accident where defendant’s truck and the car in which plaintiff was riding collided.

From a judgment favorable to plaintiff, defendants appeal and assign as error the action of the trial court in permitting the introduction over the objection of the Gibson Oil Company of the testimony of the witness Ed Loftin as to statements made by Dee Adams, the truck driver, and the agent of the Gib'son Oil Company, sometime after the collision had occurred, relative to the cause of such collision, the same not being a part of the res gestae and not binding upon it.

The record discloses that Adams was driving one of the trucks of the Gibson Oil Company on the paved highway. That the Gibson Oil Company owned a service station along said paved highway. That as Adams approached said service station, the automobile in which plaintiff was riding approached from the opposite direction. When Adams arrived at the point where he desired to turn into defendant’s filling station, he turned to the left across the pavement, and as he turned to the left and started across the pavement, his truck collided with the ear in which plaintiff was riding. After the accident occurred, Adams backed his truck away fom the automobile and drove a short distance to his garage.

Witness Loftin testified as to a conversation which occurred between Adams and wife after Adams drove up to the garage. The following statement of the witness Loftin was objected to by the Gibson Oil Company, which objection was overruled and the oil company saved exceptions:

“Q. What was it he said to her he was doing at tire time the cars collided? A. (The Witness) : She asked him what he was doing and what he .meant and he said, ‘Well, I was just looking 'back when it happened’.”

The Gibson Oil Company contends that the admission of said evidence was error and no part of the res gestae,

Plaintiffs in error, who were defendants in the trial court, and who will he referred to *28 as defendants herein, interpose many assignments of error, but devote nearly all their entire brief to- discussing assignment No. 3, which reads as follows:

“Assignment No. 3.

“The trial court erred in permitting the introduction, over the objection of Gibson Oil Company, of the testimony of the witness Ed Loftin as to statements made by Dee Adams the truck driver, and the agent of the Gibson Oil Company, sometime after the collision had occurred relative to the cause of such collision, the same not being part of the res gestae and not binding upon it.”

Defendant Gibson Oil Company contends that the court erred in permitting the witness Ed Loftin to testify to statements made by Dee Adams over the objections of said defendant oil company; that the statements made by Dee Adams in ithe presence of witness Loftin are no part of the res gestae in said case and not binding upon defendant Gibson Oil Company.

We think the error assigned calls, first, for the definition of the term “res gestae.”

“Res Gestae'’ defined: “Transaction; Thing done; the subject-matter.” Bouvier Laws Dictionary, vol. 2, p. 579.

Wharton, in his work on Evidence, 258, 267, says:

“Those circumstances which are the un-designed incidences of particular litigated acts, and are admissible when illustrative of such acts.”

It will be observed that the words “res gestae” in law have reference to' the subject-matter, the entire transaction, and the testimony or declarations of parties acquainted with the facts.

The defendant Gibson Oil Company con-itends that the statements of Dee Adams, driver of the truck, employee of the company, and one of the defendants herein, are-no part of the res gestae; i. e., no part of the subject-matter, transaction, or of the incident (injury) complained of.

This court is therefore called upon to determine whether or not the statements of Dee Adams are in law a part of the res gestae in the instant case. If we keep conT stantly before our minds the definition of res gestae as laid down by the law-writers and the applicability of the term as held by the various courts of the country, we will be greatly assisted in determining the issue.

The courts have laid down what may be considered a general rule for our guidance in determining what statements or testimony may be regarded as part of the res gestae in a given case, and we cite the following authorities in support of what we conceive to be the general rule:

“When it is necessary in the course of a cause to inquire into the nature of a particular act or th® intention of the person who did the act, proof of what the person said at the time of doing it is admissible evidence as part of the res gestae for the purpose of showing its true character. * * * ” Bouviers Law Dictionary, vol. 2, p. 597.

The same author further says:

“In, the United States the tendency is toi extend, rather than to narrow, the doctrine of res gestae. Although generally the declarations must be contemporaneous with the event sought to be proved, yet, where there are connecting circumstances, they may, even when made sometime afterwards, form a part of the whole res gestae.”

We cite with approval the following authorities found in Words & Phrases, vol. 7, First Series, p. 6130.

“The doctrine of res gestae is based upon the presumption that declarations made at the same time with the principal act, evoked by it without premeditation, and giving it color and character as explanatory of the mind and purpose of the actor, are as reliable as it he act itself, of which it is part and can be proved along with it. * * * Mitchum v. State, 11 Ga. 615.”
“Circumstances attending a particular transaction on investigation by the jury, if so interwoven with each other and with the principal fact (that they cannot well be separated without depriving the jury of proof that is essential in order to- reach a just conclusion, are admissible in evidence. These surrounding circumstances constituting a part of the res gestae, says Greenleaf, may always be shown to the jury. State v. Prater (W. Va.) 43 S. E. 230.”
“Whenever it becomes important to show upon the trial of any cause the occurrence of any fact or event, it is competent also to show any accompanying act, declaration, or exclamation which relatesl to, or is explanatory of, such fact or event. Such act, declaration, or exclamation is known to the law as res gestae. Davids v. Peo. (Ill.) 61 N. E. 537.”
“No inflexible rule has ever been adopted as to what is part of the res gestae. It must be determined largely in each case by the peculiar facts and circumstances incident thereto, but it may be stated as a fixed rule that included in the res gestae are the facts which so illustrate and characterize the principal fact as to constitute the whole one transaction, and render the latter necessary *29

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Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 698, 16 P.2d 127, 160 Okla. 26, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-oil-co-v-westbrooke-okla-1932.