Mason v. Mootz

253 P.2d 240, 73 Idaho 461, 1953 Ida. LEXIS 231
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1953
Docket7900
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 253 P.2d 240 (Mason v. Mootz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mason v. Mootz, 253 P.2d 240, 73 Idaho 461, 1953 Ida. LEXIS 231 (Idaho 1953).

Opinions

TAYLOR, Justice.

The plaintiffs (respondents) are the widow and minor daughter of Clarence Mason, deceased. On the evening of March 21, 1951, the deceased and another, as guests, were riding in an automobile owned and driven by the defendant (appellant.) The three were proceeding from Nyssa, Oregon, to the Gay Way, on U. S. Highway 95, in Idaho, when, an accident occurred in which Clarence Mason suffered fatal injuries.

The testimony is comparatively brief and can be conveniently summarized. The witness. Leonard Platz operated a farm near the scene of the accident. Having been advised that four horses had escaped from the farm, he proceeded on foot along the highway in the direction of Nyssa to bring them back. There is a dip in the road where the accident occurred. He had proceeded past that, up and over the top of the hill beyond, where he caught one of the horses. The others “took off for home.” He then proceeded back toward his farm, leading the one horse, along on the shoulder of the right-hand side of the highway. He had just gone over the top and started down the incline when he observed the defendant’s car coming from the direction of Nyssa. It was around 8:00 o’clock and “getting.pretty dark.” As the car neared him he waved his hand up [464]*464and down. This motion was demonstrated to the jury by the witness, but whether or not it included the arm, the record does not show. For the purpose of this decision we assume that the motion was made with the arm and hand extended. Whether the driver observed this signal does not appear. The witness said that he had driven a car for about twenty-five years, but was unable -to say how fast defendant’s car was travelling at that time. “Well, I imagine it was going a medium speed * * I would say it was going at a medium speed.” He next heard the brakes “squeak” and then the crash; he did not notice that the speed was decreased as the car passed him, and he did not notice that the brakes were released or the speed increased after they were applied; that as far as he knew the brakes were continually applied to the time of the crash.

Deputy Sheriff, Ray Decker, testified that the oiled part of the highway at the scene was twenty to twenty-five feet wide with three-foot shoulders on each side, level with the pavement, but sloping somewhat therefrom; that at the bottom of the slope where the car left the highway there was. a drop-off of seven feet, where the grade crossed the hollow on a fill; that it was 300 yards from there to the top of the hill. In one part of his testimony he referred to the slope as “fairly gentle,” and at another place as “quite a dip too,” and at still another, “quite a grade going down into the bottom of the draw and pulling out on the other side.” It - was a dark night, there was no moon. He took some measurements and found skid marks beginning on the left side near the center line at a point 180 feet up the grade from the point where the car left the road, and extending across the center line down the left-hand side of the oiled surface, and across the shoulder where it went over the embankment; that he observed no other skid marks on the highway; that the car lay between the grade and the fence on its top and facing in the direction from which it had come. The earth was dug up at the point where it struck after leaving the grade, and appeared as though something had been “drug,” where the car lay with no other marks in between; that the car came to rest 120 feet from where it left the highway; that the skid marks were continuous from the point where the brakes were first applied to the point where they went over the bank.

Lienkaemper, mortician, took Mason to the .hospital in Nyssa, a distance of four miles; that he was unconscious .when picked up and did not regain consciousness before reaching the hospital.

A nurses’ aid, Marjorie Standerfer, testified that a short time after he was brought into the hospital, Mason became conscious, or partly so, and said, “Goddam-it, watch where you are going and don’t drive so fast.”

Leo Montague, a witness for the defendant, testified that he, driving his car, and [465]*465accompanied by Jim Bale, came upon the scene of the accident from the direction of Nyssa very soon after the occurrence and while there still was dust in the air; that before they came over the hill they observed the lights of the car shining up into the sky; that after they came over the hill they came upon three black horses in the highway in their right-hand lane; that he slammed on his brakes, slid the tires a ways, then when he saw there was clearance to the left he proceeded around the horses and stopped at the scene of the wreck; that the horses were about 100 yards upgrade, and that it was about 200 yards to the top of the hill, from the wreck.

Bale testified that it was dark and about 8:10 p. m.; that they started slowing when they saw the lights and after coming over the top of the hill and observing the horses, the brakes were applied, and they then went around them to the left; that there were three horses, they were black, and in the right-hand lane.

These defense witnesses also testified as to the position of .the defendant’s car and its occupants.

The first question for determination is the admissibility of the declaration of the decedent made at the hospital as testified by the nurses’ aid. It was admitted, over objection, as a part of the res gestae.

The record is indefinite as to the elapsed time between the accident and the statement attributed to the deceased. • However,, it does appear that he was picked up within a short time after the occurrence, taken by ambulance a distance of four or five miles to the hospital, and that the statement was made shortly after his arrival there. Although time is an important element, it is not necessarily controlling as to-what is admissible under the rule. Erickson v. E. Rutledge Timber Co., 33 Idaho 179, 191 P. 212. More important is the spontaneous character of the utterance and circumstances from which it can be said that it arises out of and is in a sense a part of, the main event, and that it is made when the mind is chiefly controlled or influenced by the event and not in a calm, deliberative mood. In this case the utterance was entirely spontaneous and not made in response to interrogation. The deceased’s mind, due to the intervening unconsciousness, was still apparently laboring under the emotional stress of the accident, and as though he were still in the throes of the occurrence. Continuing unconsciousness from the time of the main event to the time of the statement, in a sense, bridges the lapse of time and brings the declarant back to the time and place of the occurrence. Hines v. Foster, 166 Wash. 165, 6 P.2d 597; Chicago, R. I. & p. Ry. Co. v. Owens, 78 Okl. 50, 186 P. 1092; MacDonald v. Riverside & Fort Lee Ferry Co., 23 A.2d 405, 20 N.J.Misc. 19; 32 C. J.S., Evidence, § 419, p. 52. Cf. Wilson v. St. Joe Boom Co., 34 Idaho 253, 200 P. 884; State v. Chacon, 36 Idaho 148, 209 [466]*466P. 889; State v. Breycr, 40 Idaho 324, 232 P. 560; Jensen v. Wheeler & England, 51 Idaho 91, 1 P.2d 624. These authorities also held that the trial judge is vested'with a considerable discretion in determining the admissibility of such evidence. We think the ruling was correct.

Appellant further urges that the statement of the deceased is meaningless.

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Mason v. Mootz
253 P.2d 240 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1953)

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Bluebook (online)
253 P.2d 240, 73 Idaho 461, 1953 Ida. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-mootz-idaho-1953.