McCarty v. Sirianni

285 P. 825, 132 Or. 290, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 215
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 285 P. 825 (McCarty v. Sirianni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCarty v. Sirianni, 285 P. 825, 132 Or. 290, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 215 (Or. 1930).

Opinion

McBRIDE, J.

This is an action to recover for the death of plaintiff’s intestate alleged to have been caused by a collision with an automobile driven by the defendant Frank Sirianni.

The principal question is as to whether the dying declarations of deceased are admissible to prove the cause of the injury. It requires no citation of authorities to settle the doctrine that such declarations were not admissible at common law, and that in most of the states of the union, the courts, either following tne the common law doctrine or in compliance with statutes, have held strictly to this rule. While the rule has been often severely criticised (see 3 Wigmore on Evidence, § 1435, et seq.), we find but two states, outside of our own, which seem definitely to have broken away from it. North Carolina, by statute, and Kansas, by a declaration of her highest court, has declared the rule confining the reception of dying declarations only to criminal cases logically unsound, saying:

“We are confronted with a restrictive rule of evidence commendable only for its age, its respectability resting solely upon a habit of judicial recognition, formed without reason and continued without justification. The fact that the reason for a given rule perished long ago is no just excuse for refusing now to declare the rule itself abrogated, but rather the greater justification for so declaring; and if no reason ever existed, that fact furnishes additional justification”: Thurston v. Fritz, 91 Kan. 468, 475 (138 P. 625, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1167, 38 Ann. Cas. 212); Vassar v. Swift & Co., 106 Kan. 836 (189 P. 943).

*292 But we are not so much, concerned as to what the law is in other jurisdictions as with what it now is in our own jurisdiction. It is needless to search for the earliest legislation on this subject of dying declarations. It suffices, that in the first general compilation, Deady’s Code, which embraced all laws in force in Oregon up to 1864, we find in section 696, the following :

“In conformity with the preceding provisions, evi- . dence may be given on the trial of the following facts:
& * ^ # *
“4. The declaration or act, verbal or written, of a deceased person, in respect to the relationship, birth, marriage or death of any person related by blood or marriage to such deceased person; the declaration or act of a deceased person, made or done against his interest in respect to his real property; and also in criminal actions, the declaration or act of a dying person, made or done under a sense of impending death, respecting the cause of his death; ’ ’

This provision was continued through all subsequent compilations until 1909, appearing in Bellinger and Cotton’s compiled laws as subdivision 4 of section 718 thereof.

At the legislative session of 1909, there appears as chapter 25 of the general laws thereof, an act entitled, “An act to amend section 718 of Bellinger and Cotton’s Annotated Codes and Statutes of Oregon.” The amendment consisted in re-enacting the whole section, word for word, excepting that the words “in criminal actions” were deleted, leaving the section as it now stands in section 727, Olson’s Oregon Laws. There is no room for question as to the intent of this amend *293 ment. As remarked by Professor Carlton E. Spencer in his article on this subject, Oregon Law Review, February, 1930:

“The words ‘in criminal actions’ were stricken out. The omission of these words might be laid to error, oversight or misprint, were it not for the fact that it is the only change made by the amendment. It must, therefore, be assumed that the legislature intended to remove the common law limitation on the use of dying declarations and to make them available in eases other than criminal.”

This seems to be the inevitable conclusion and we now hold that evidence of the dying declarations of a person, injured in a collision under circumstances such as the present, respecting the cause of the injury resulting in his death, is admissible to the same extent and under the same limitations as evidence of such declarations made in a case of homicide. Further than this, we do not go. If any further relaxation of the common law rule seems to be in consonance with the progressive spirit of our jurisprudence, it should be carefully and cautiously made by the legislature and not by the courts.

When we reflect that a party, against whom such evidence may be invoked, is deprived of the power of 'cross-examination, and that it is sometimes transmitted through recollection of partizan or interested witnesses, it is best to adhere closely to the established rules in regulating its admission until legislative wisdom shall devise another procedure. Another argument, forcibly and plausibly urged, is that plaintiff’s counsel made no sufficient statement of what he expected to prove by the proffered witness as to the declarations. The objection is not well taken. In the *294 course of the trial the plaintiff called A. G-. McCarty, a brother of the deceased, and asked him the following question:

“Q. Now, I will ask you, Mr. McCarty, if during the time that your brother was in the hospital, after he was injured, and especially around about the 4th day of January, 1929, whether or not you had any conversation with him as to whether he believed he was going to live or die Í ’ ’

The defendant objected on the ground that the question was incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial. Then a discussion ensued between counsel in which counsel for plaintiff read subd. 4, § 727, Or. L., claiming the evidence was admissible thereunder. Counsel for defendant insisted that the cause of the death of deceased was admitted in that it was admitted that the cause of his death was an automobile accident referred to in the pleading. The discussion continued as follows:

“Mr. Phelps: * * * “Now it is under that last section, ‘respecting the ease of his death’—
“Mr. Morrison: Which is not in issue. We have admitted the cause of his death.
“Mr. Phelps: You may have admitted the cause of his death, that the injuries caused his death, but this is respecting the accident that caused his death, and we believe that under that section ‘ and also the declaration or act of a dying person, made or done under a sense of impending death’ — we want to show by these witnesses that he believed that he was going to die at the time when he gave this deposition — counsel had a right, and did cross-examine him at that time— and we believe when it says ‘respecting the cause of his death’, that this accident was certainly respecting the cause of Mr. McCarty’s death, and under that section of the statute it is our contention that we have a right to show what happened there that caused his injuries from which he died. That is our contention.
*295 “Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
285 P. 825, 132 Or. 290, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarty-v-sirianni-or-1930.