Losleben v. California State Life Insurance

6 P.2d 1012, 119 Cal. App. 556
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 8, 1932
DocketDocket No. 572.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 6 P.2d 1012 (Losleben v. California State Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Losleben v. California State Life Insurance, 6 P.2d 1012, 119 Cal. App. 556 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

The plaintiff is the widow of George Phillip Losleben, who held an insurance policy issued by the defendant. This policy provided for the payment of $2,500 in the event of death resulting from natural causes and for an additional $2,500 “in the event that the death of the insured is caused by bodily injuries effected exclusively and wholly by external, violent and accidental means, said death occurring within ninety days after the happening of such accident”. The insured was employed as a mechanic in a packing-house and on November 21, 1929, was directed by his employer to build a shelf over a work-bench, which bench was about three feet high. The employer left the building about 3. o’clock on the afternoon of that day, leaving the insured engaged in this work. When the employer returned about two hours later he found the insured in great pain and sent him home. Doctors were immediately called, an operation was performed and on November 25, 1929, the insured died. The defendant paid the $2,500 contemplated by the policy for death from a natural cause, but refused to pay the additional $2,500. This action followed and at the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court granted a motion for a nonsuit. Prom the ensuing judgment this appeal is taken.

The first point raised by appellant is that the court erred in refusing to permit the employer to testify as to certain statements relative to what had occurred, made to him by the insured when he returned to the packing-house and found him suffering, and also in refusing to permit *558 similar testimony by the plaintiff as to statements made to her by her husband upon his return home. It is urged that these statements were admissible as a part of the res gestae. The employer had testified that when he returned to the premises he observed that part of the work of putting up the shelving had been done, but that the work had not been completed; that the insured was not then engaged in the work; and that, as he entered, the insured came out of a little storeroom adjoining the office and stood in a “doubled up” position. There is no evidence that anyone else was in the building during the time the employer was gone.

In Heckle v. Southern Pac. Co., 123 Cal. 441 [56 Pac. 56, 57], the court said:

“There is no great difficulty in stating the general principles which prevail in determining whether in a given case certain declarations or acts are part of the res gestae. A declaration, to be admissible on that ground, must be an undesigned part, or incident, of the occurrence in question. It must be, in a general sense, contemporaneous with the main occurrence, although, in case of a sudden accident or attack, the declaration would not be inadmissible merely because the blow or collision immediately preceded it; it must be the natural and spontaneous outgrowth of the main occurrence, and must exclude the notion of deliberation or calculation, or the design to manufacture evidence for future purposes; and, if it be a mere narrative of past events, it then is clearly within the category of inadmissible hearsay, and must, beyond doubt, be excluded.”

In Williams v. Southern Pac. Co., 133 Cal. 550 [65 Pac. 1100, 1102], the court said:

“The ruling admitting these declarations was clearly erroneous. It is contended that they were part of the res gestae . . . Statements are like other circumstances when they are part of it, and if the whole affair cannot be rightly understood without them, they are competent. Expressions of persons who are actors, made during the occurrence, may generally, but not always, be proved. If spontaneous, and caused by the event, they may nearly always be shown. But if, afterwards, no matter how shortly afterwards, there is an attempt to explain what has happened, or to account for it, or to defend one’s self, or the like, it is incompetent, *559 and inadmissible as res gestae. A narrative, even if given during the occurrence, is inadmissible.”

In Murphy v. Board of Police etc. Commrs., 2 Cal. App. 468 [83 Pac. 577], the court used the following language: “The witness was then asked to state what Murphy said to him at that time as to what was the matter with him. The question was objected to upon the ground that it was hearsay and no part of the res gestae, and the court sustained the objection. The ruling was not erroneous. The evidence sought to be elicited was purely hearsay. It could not, under well-settled principles of evidence, be binding upon defendant. If Murphy had received injuries from the men who were seen running away it would seem that plaintiff could have proven it without the evidence of Murphy’s statement of a transaction that had ended and been completed. Murphy was not under oath. The defendant was not present. The statement was made, if made at all, after Murphy had been injured, if he had been injured.” Appellant’s cause of action' is based upon the theory that her husband received internal injuries as the result of falling from or jumping from the bench upon which he was working. It appears from the evidence that -he had left the scene of his work and had gone into an adjoining room from which he emerged when his employer returned. While the appellant was not permitted by the trial court to bring out in evidence statements made by the insured as to what time he claimed to have been injured, the .time element is not controlling and even if the statements sought to be introduced in evidence were made to the employer within a few minutes after the injury occurred, that fact in itself does not make such statement admissible as a part of the res gestae. (Coryell v. Clifford F. Reid, Inc., 117 Cal. App. 534 [4 Pac. (2d) 295].) Under the authorities prevailing in this state, we feel compelled to hold that the court correctly refused to admit evidence of these statements by the deceased (see, also, People v. Ah Lee, 60 Cal. 85; Lissak v. Crocker Estate Co., 119 Cal. 442 [51 Pac. 688]; People v. Wong Ark, 96 Cal. 125 [30 Pac. 1115]; Boone v. Oakland Transit Co., 139 Cal. 490 [73 Pac. 243]).

It is next urged that the court erred in refusing to permit a physician who attended the insured to testify as to statements made to him by the insured as to what caused his *560 injury. It is particularly urged that these statements were necessary and useful to the physician in enabling him to diagnose the trouble and treat the patient. The physician was allowed to testify as to what the patient told him in regard to his condition, in regard to the results of his examination of the patient, and in regard to what was found during an operation that followed. Objections were sustained, however, to questions attempting to bring out what the patient stated to the physician in relation to what had caused the existing condition. In our opinion these rulings of the court were correct.

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.2d 1012, 119 Cal. App. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/losleben-v-california-state-life-insurance-calctapp-1932.