McCrary v. Ogden

267 S.W.2d 670
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 12, 1954
DocketNe. 43906
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 267 S.W.2d 670 (McCrary v. Ogden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCrary v. Ogden, 267 S.W.2d 670 (Mo. 1954).

Opinion

COIL, Commissioner..

Appellants (defendants below) have' appealed from plaintiffs-respondents’ judgment for $10,000 for the wrongful death of their 17-year-old son, who was killed when defendants’ truck collided with deceased’s automobile. Defendants contend: that the trial court erred in permitting an incompetent witness to testify and in admitting other evidence; that without the allegedly incompetent testimony, plaintiffs failed to make a submissible case; and that the judgment is excessive and so excessive as to indicate bias and prejudice on the part of the jury.

The accident occurred on March 6, 1951, about 11 o’clock on a dark, clear night, on 2-lane, 22-foot, dry, concrete U. S. Highway 71, between Neosho and Joplin. Defendants’ truck,- loaded with about 15 walnut logs, was proceeding uphill northwardly around a left curve when, according to plaintiffs’ evidence, a left-protruding log struck the windshield of deceased’s southbound Chevrolet coupe and pulled it into the truck’s left rear side.

Freddie Shirley, deceased’s sole passenger, was proffered as plaintiffs’ witness. Defendants’ objection that he was incompetent to testify was overruled. It was shown (in the absence of the jury) that Shirley, 38 years old at trial time, had been adjudicated insane and committed to State Hospital No. 3 . by the Probate Court of Newton County; that he was admitted to the hospital on August 25, 1950, paroled October 1, 1950, and finally discharged November 5, 1951; that on March 4, 1953, a little more than a month before the trial, it was adjudicated that he had “fully recovered his mental health and has been restored to his right mind and is now capable of managing his own affairs.”

Section 491.060 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., provides in pertinent part: “The following persons shall be incompetent to testify: (1) a person of unsound mind at the time of his production for examination * * It is apparent that at the time Shirley was produced for examination, he was not under an adjudication of insanity or confined in a mental institution. Under those circumstances, he was presumed to be a competent witness and the burden was on defendants to show his incompetency by proof that he was then of unsound mind. State v. Herring, 268 Mo. 514, 535, 188 S.W. 169, 174. Thus, the question before the court at the hearing on Shirley’s competency was whether he was of unsound mind at trial time (and perhaps the further question of whether the witness was sensible to or understood the obligation of an oath. See: State v. Jackson, 318 Mo. 1149, 1154, 2 S.W.2d 758, 760[3, 4]; 58 Am.Jur., Witnesses, § 125, p. 95). We think the trial court correctly ruled that defendants failéd to show that Shirley was of unsound mind, that he was sensible to the obligation of an oath, and that he was a competent witness; and certainly the trial court did not abuse its discretion in so ruling. State v. McCrackin, Mo.Sup., 162 S.W.2d 853[1],

At the competency hearing, the superintendent of State Hospital No. 3 testified that Shirley was diagnosed on admission as ¡•a person mentally deficient but not insane— \a low-grade moron with the mentality of a ¡child about seven years of age; that he could not read or write and had childish reactions. The witness’ further testimony supported his diagnosis and his observations that .Shirley’s low mentality prevent *673 ed'him from: naming his relatives, giving his birth date, or following any but the simplest orders'; caused' him to name Roosevelt as the current President, to answer that 3 plus 5 is 6, and in counting, to arrive at 36 and then jump to SO. The witness also said that he wouldn’t expect a gre'at deal of change in Shirley’s mentality between the time of examination and trial time; that he knew nothing about Shirley’s mpntal condition either on March 6, 1951 (the collision date), or at trial time; that Shirley had a speech defect which made it difficult for others to understand him; that witness didn’t have an opinion as to whether Shirley would be able to remember the event in which a friend was killed, but that 7-year-old children do have vivid memories.

Another doctor, adduced by defendants, .testified that, in his opinion, Shirley did not (have the ability to remember or accurately 'relate events; that, while Shirley was not insane, he had a low mentality and was hot “competent”; and that Shirley’s mental condition at the time of the doctor’s examination would continue.

Plaintiffs’ medical witness said that while Shirley was of a low type mentally, he was nevertheless “competent” in that he could relate facts that he had observed; that his .main difficulty, because of a speech defect, was to make the person to whom he was talking understand; and that, in the .doctor’s opinion, Shirley was of a mental age of 14 or 15 years.

Shirley- testified that he understood what it, meant to be sworn on his oath and to tell the truth; understood the penalties of perjury; and that he remembered the collision. On cross-examination, it was demonstrated that he did not know the- day of the week on which he was then testifying (he thought it was Monday rather than the correct day, Thursday); he didn’t know the date; he thought he had been in the state hospital until about two months prior to the trial; when, in fact, it had been over two years;' ;he said 3- plus 2 was 6; and that he thought Roosevelt was then (1953) President.' ' Plaintiffs offered- Shirley’s deposition taken about four months prior to trial. We have examined the deposition and, while there are inconsistencies in Shirley’s testimony, there is nothing therein to compel the conclusion that he was of unsound mind.

The foregoing summary of the evidence at-the hearing on Shirley’s competency demonstrates, we think, that defendants failed to show that he was of unsound mind at the time he was produced for examination. Defendants insist, apparently because their medical witness' testified ■ that Shirley had the mental ability of a 7-year-old child, that the second subdivision 1 of Section 491,060, supra, applies. Defendants have cited cases 2 dealing with the competency of children under 10 years of age wherein that subdivision was considered. But subdivision two has no application to a witness 38 years of age. That is not to say, however, that all available evidence, including Shirley’s mental age, was not properly considered in determining whether the witness was in fact of unsound mind at the time he was produced for examination. It is to say, however, that the question before the trial court, as to the 38-year-old witness, was whether he was of unsound mind at the time he was produced to testify.

Defendants also insist that Shirley’s testimony at the trial, his deposition testimony, and a comparison of them, are matters which should be considered in determining his competency as a witness. We think defendants have confused the question of the witness’ credibility with the question of his competency. The matters pointed to in defendants’ brief (which de *674 fendants contend .show the -ignorance of the witness, his inability to relate .events accurately, the inconsistencies in his direct and cross-examinations and in his deposition testimony. compared with his trial testimony) are all matters affecting. Shirley’s credibility..

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267 S.W.2d 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccrary-v-ogden-mo-1954.