Meyer v. Lewis

43 Mo. App. 417, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 55
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 43 Mo. App. 417 (Meyer v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyer v. Lewis, 43 Mo. App. 417, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 55 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

This was an action for damages grounded upon negligence. The plaintiff had a verdict and judgment, and the defendant takes the case here by-appeal. The errors which are assigned are, so far as they need be noticed, the following: First. That there was no evidence to take the case to the jury ; second, that the court erred in admitting an item of evidence as to the statement made by the driver of the defendant, against the defendant’s objection.

As to the first assignment of error it is to be observed that the injury, according to the evidence, happened in this way : The defendant was the owner [418]*418of certain hackney coaches in the city of St. Louis. One of these coaches was on the street in charge of a driver named Elstner, who was driving it along one of the streets of St. Louis at about one o’clock during a dark night. The plaintiff and a man with whom he had been drinking in a saloon came out of the saloon, and the plaintiff was about to get upon a street car for the purpose of going home, when suddenly he was struck and run over by the defendant’s horses and hack so in the charge of Elstner. The plaintiff’s version of the affair is that the light emitted by a street lamp, and through the glass doors of the saloon in which he had been drinking, was such that he stood in the light where he could be seen; whereas the1 defendant’s hack approached him out of the dark where it could not be seen. These statements are sufficient to show that there is no ground for the assignment of error that the court erred in submitting the case to the jury. In cases of this kind — collisions upon the highway, where both parties have a right to be — there is generally a fair question for a jury, both on the question of the negligence of the defendant and the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. Such was the case here ; and the court seems to have submitted the case to the jury upon sufficient and proper instructions.

But we are of the opinion that the second assignment of error is well taken, and that it must lead to a reversal of the judgment. This question is exhibited by the bill of exceptions in this way: The plaintiff, being on the witness stand testifying in his own behalf, the following colloquy took place :

“By Mr. Talty: Now, I want to ask what this driver said. I have shown Mr. Lewis stated it was his driver. I want to show what the driver testified in court,. on the stand, as to what occurred on that night when he w7as injured.

“Mr. Yastine: I would like to prove first that the driver testified in the case.

[419]*419“ The court: He may now testify, if he remembers, what the driver stated at that trial in the presence and hearing of Mr. Lewis.

“Defendant’s counsel objects to the question as irrelevant and incompetent; objection overruled; defendant at the time duly excepts.

“By Mr. Talty: Q. What did this driver, whose name is Elstner, say in the hearing of the defendant,— anything as to how the accident occurred, as to how you were hurt ? A. The judges asked him if he had stopped at the crossing, or that if he knowed that he had to stop ; he said no, he did not' know he was on the crossing, or if he knowed he was on the crossing, — something like that. And so the judge said, ‘If you don’t know to stop at the crossing when passengers are on it, trying to get in the cars, the judge said —

Q. Don’t say what he said ; I don’t care anything about that. Did the driver say anything> about how he came to run over you ?” A. No, he did not know it.

Q. State what he said. A. He said he didn’t know, it seemed like he was asleep on the hack, or didn’t know anything about the whole thing, he did not see nobody, and didn’t see his own horses.

Q. Did he say that ? A. That is what he said, he did not see nobody.”

The court gave, among a large number of instructions relating to the law of the case, the following cautionary instruction to the jury: “ The jury are instructed to disregard all testimony concerning the statement alleged to have been made by Joseph Elstner in the police court.” That the testimony of the plaintiff concerning the statement thus made by Elstner, the defendant’s driver, was inadmissible and prejudicial, is not controverted. He is understood to have been testifying for himself in a quasi- criminal prosecution, instituted against him by the city for hi§ criminal negligence in running over the plaintiff. He was endeavoring to exonerate himself merely, and the mere fact that the [420]*420defendant may' have been present in court did not affect-the defendant or bind him by the statements made by Elstner, on any principle known to the law. Moreover this evidence belongs to a species of evidence —evidence of the declarations or admissions of parties ©r of other persons — which is always attended with danger. It is always subject to the infirmity of being garbled or misrepresented by the witness, through whose mouth it is detailed. The danger is greater in such a case as the present, where it is detailed through the mouth of an interested party.

The question for decision then is, whether the admission of the testimony is to be regarded as error, for which the judgment ought to be reversed, notwithstanding that the court attempted to cure the prejudice by directing the jury to disregard it. In this state the rule in criminal cases is, that the admission of improper testimony cannot be cured by an instruction to the jury, to disregard it. State v. Mix, 15 Mo. 153; State v. Wolff, 15 Mo. 168; State v. Schneider, 35 Mo. 533; State v. Marshall, 36 Mo. 400; State v. Daubert, 42 Mo. 242; State v. Thomas, 99 Mo. 235. This rule has been established out of the extreme solicitude of the law that persons accused of crime shall be fairly tried. The rule does not hold to the same extent in civil cases. In other jurisdictions the prevailing view seems to be that the prejudice, produced by admitting illegal evidence, may be cured by instructing the jury to disregard such evidence. Bee cases cited in 1 Thompson ©n Trials, sections 351, 723. But decisions of several respectable courts are found to the effect, that even in a .civil case the admission of illegal evidence, which is plainly prejudicial, may be ground for a new trial, where the reviewing court is of opinion that its prejudicial tendency was probably not cured by a direction, to the jury to disregard it. Railroad v. Winslow, 66 Ill. 219; Lycoming Ins. Co. v. Rubin, 79 Ill. 402; Howe Machine Co. v. Rosine, 87 Ill. 105. It is plain [421]*421that it cannot be admitted, even in a civil case, that illegal testimony can always be cured by an instruction directing the jury to disregard it. If such were the rule, it would open the door to gross fraud upon the administration of justice. A cunning lawyer might frequently get such testimony before the jury, and after-wards withdraw it by offering to have it stricken out, or by procuring the judge to instruct the jury to disregard it.

This is well illustrated by a modern holding in the New York court of appeals. After repeated objections to illegal questions had been made and overruled, and the answers of the witness had been given, the party tendering the evidence proposed to have it stricken out. The opposing party declined to accept this proposition, and elected to retain and to stand upon his exception.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 Mo. App. 417, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-lewis-moctapp-1891.