Hill v. Skinner

79 N.E.2d 787, 81 Ohio App. 375, 37 Ohio Op. 213, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 575
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 26, 1947
Docket3880
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 79 N.E.2d 787 (Hill v. Skinner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Skinner, 79 N.E.2d 787, 81 Ohio App. 375, 37 Ohio Op. 213, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 575 (Ohio Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

Doyle, P. J.

This is an action under the Ohio statute (Section 5838, General Code), seeking to hold the owners and harborers of a dog called “Chang” with liability for damages arising out of an episode in which the dog, Chang, is alleged to have seized with his teeth and injured a youngster aged approximately four, the petitioner herein.

A jury, upon trial, awarded damages in the amount ■of $500. The judgment rendered thereon, in the Court •of Common Pleas of Summit county, is a part of the final order from which this appeal is taken, and consideration will be first given to the legality of this money judgment.

1. The appellants say “There was no evidence'of a <bite’ anywhere in the record from any of the witnesses save the plaintiff himself. Without this * * * minor’s testimony there was evidence of injury only with barbed wire, glass, a gashed steel barrel and other dogs being present as explanation.”

It is a fact that there is no direct testimony of this dog’s attack' except that given by the child. If this evidence has probative worth, and is competent, it, coupled with the circumstances and other facts shown to exist, is sufficient to furnish the degree of proof necessary to sustain the judgment.

*377 Section 11493, General Code, reads:

“All persons are competent witnesses except those-of unsound mind, and children under ten years of age who appear incapable of receiving just impressions of . the facts and transactions respecting which they are-examined, or of relating them truly.”

. The Supreme Court of this state has recently ruled on that part of this statute pertaining to witnesses claimed to be of “unsound mind.”

“2. The competency of an insane person to testify as a witness lies in the discretion of the trial judgeN and a reviewing court will not disturb the ruling thereon where there.is no abuse of discretion.” State v. Wildman, 145 Ohio St., 379, 61 N. E. (2d), 790.

And in 2 Wigmore on Evidence (3 Ed.), Section 505, it is said:

“With reference to the general capacity to observe, recollect, and narrate, the same principles apply to-Mental Immaturity that are applied to Mental Derangement. ’ ’

The essential test of the competency of an infant witness is his comprehension of the obligation to tell the truth and his intellectual capacity of observation, recollection and communication. The nature of his conception of the obligation to tell the. truth is of little importance if he shows that he will fulfill the obligation to speak truthfully as a duty which he owes a Diety or something held in reverence or regard, and if he has the intellectual capacity to communicate his-observations and experiences.

The trial court, in. chambers, examined the child at length, touching upon his qualifications to testify.. Among other questions he was asked: “Do you know about telling the truth, what happens if you don’t tell the truth?” and he answered, “They won’t love me.”' Question: “Who won’t love you?” Answer: “God won’t love me.” And in further answer to dozens of questions propounded by both' the judge and counsel, *378 the child demonstrated a capacity for memory of events, observation, recollection and communication.

Following this necessary and proper examination by the trial judge of the prospective witness, the court permitted him to testify. The child thereupon, upon direct examination, testified in part as follows: “Q. Cary do you remember when you went over to Skinner’s? A. Sure.

“Q. Tell the judge and jury what happened. A. The doggy bit me.

“Q. What doggy bit you? A. Skinner’s doggy.

“Q. What were you doing with Skinner’s dog? A. I was loving him. ,

£iQ. How? A. Like that, (indicating.)

“Q. You mean around his neck? A. Yes.”

On cross-examination appears the following:

££Q. Where did Chang bite you, can you tell the ladies, take your fingers and show me where he bit. you? A. He bit me when I was loving him.

“Q. Where did he bite you, did he bite you on the leg? A. No, he bite me on the head and on my mouth here, (indicating.)”

As we view the testimony, the youthful narrator, except for a few nonresponsive answers, clearly described and explained the circumstances giving rise to this action. The evidence considered as a whole describes the wandering of the child out onto his neighbor’s yard and the subsequent attack of the dog, under circumstances clearly related by the child. There is nothing in the record to show, except through pure guess and speculation, that the head injuries resulted from any other cause.

Paraphrasing a syllabus in State v. Wildman, supra, to fit this case, the rule may be pronounced to be that the competency of a child of mental immaturity to testify as a witness lies in the discretion of the trial judge, and a reviewing court will not disturb the ruling *379 thereon when.there is no abuse of discretion. In the instant case we find no such abuse. We further find that the evidence in the record is such as to warrant the jury in finding in favor of the petitioner.

Complaint is further made by the appellants, that prejudicial error intervened in permitting the mother of the child to testify that, as the child was held in, a bathtub in her home shortly after the injury, she said to him, “What happened, sweetheart?” and he answered, “Doggy bife me.”

Of course, if this evidence is proper it is only so because of the exception to the hearsay rule which treats of a class of testimony termed the “res gestae,” admissible in evidence, though in fact hearsay.

• The evidence was improperly admitted. It was not a spontaneous or impulsive statement or exclamation. Bake v. Industrial Commission, 135 Ohio St., 627, 22 N. E. (2d), 130. And while the statement to come within the rules of res-gestae need not be strictly contemporaneous with the incident to which it relates, it should not be a narration of a past event, nor should it be an answer to a question propounded after the intervention of circumstances which would make the reply one lacking the attributes of spontaneity.

While we hold this evidence improper, we do not find that its submission to the jury constitutes error of a prejudicial nature.

2. Complaint is further made of that part of the judgment entry which declared that the dog is a common nuisance, and which ordered the defendants “to remove said dog from the locality and vicinity of the residence of the respective parties * * * within twenty-four hours from the filing of this order and * * * that unless said chow dog is so removed from said vicinity within said period that defendants kill or cause said dog to be killed and that in lieu of disposal of said dog as provided by the foregoing alternative orders the sheriff of Summit county be and he hereby is or *380

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.E.2d 787, 81 Ohio App. 375, 37 Ohio Op. 213, 1947 Ohio App. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-skinner-ohioctapp-1947.