Panik v. Didra

88 A.2d 730, 370 Pa. 488, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 367
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 26, 1952
DocketAppeal, 163
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 88 A.2d 730 (Panik v. Didra) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Panik v. Didra, 88 A.2d 730, 370 Pa. 488, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 367 (Pa. 1952).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Jones,

At the trial of this action for damages for personal injury resulting from an automobile accident, the plaintiff called a witness in rebuttal to impeach a certain portion of the testimony of the defendant driver of the automobile involved. The trial judge refused to permit the witness to refresh her recollection from a writ-, ten report she had contemporaneously made of statements of the defendant- concerning the happening of the accident. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant. On the plaintiff’s motion, the court en banc awarded a new trial on the ground that the trial court had erred in respect of the above-mentioned ruling. The defendant appealed.

The appellant raises two questions, viz., (1) whether the witness who took the information from the defendant regarding the motor accident is competent to testify to such information for the purpose of contradicting the defendant at the trial of the action in trespass against him growing out of thé accident and (2) whether the trial judge, in. refusing, the witness. per-, mission to use her written report of the indicated, in-. *490 formation to refresh her recollection, committed such prejudicial error as to justify the granting of a new trial.

The injury in suit was inflicted when the plaintiff, a pedestrian, was struck by an automobile driven by the defendant near a street intersection in Allentown. Shortly after the occurrence, the defendant, in obedience to a local ordinance, went to police headquarters to report the happening of the accident. He there made certain statements as to how the accident had occurred which a clerk in the traffic office of the Police Department embodied in a typewritten report. A portion of the defendant’s testimony at the trial, two years later, being thought inconsistent with the information he had given the clerk in the traffic office, the plaintiff called the clerk in rebuttal for the purpose of contradicting the defendant’s testimony in cognate regard. The witness was unable to recollect the defendant’s prior statements but testified that she could do so if permitted to refresh her memory from the report she had written at the time. It was in that situation that the court refused her the right so to do. The learned trial judge was of the opinion that the report was incompetent as evidence because of the privilege imposed by Sec. 1214 of The Vehicle Code of 1929 (the Act of May 1, 1929, P. L. 905, 75 PS §761) 1 and that testimony, as to any “statement contained therein”, by a witness who had refreshed her recollection from the report would be but a roundabout way of getting the report or a portion thereof in evidence contrary to the prohibition of the statute. ■

The error in the viéw so taken by the court at .trial lay in the fact that the report in question' was not the *491 report to the State required by Sec. 1214 of The Vehicle Code of 1929 but was merely a report to the local police of the happening of the accident as required by an ordinance of the City of Allentown enacted pursuant to authority conferred on municipalities by Section 1214 of The Vehicle Code, cit. supra. A report to the State has to be filled out and transmitted by the operator of a motor vehicle, involved in an accident, on forms supplied by the Department of Revenue, while the report to the police need be no more than the operator’s verbal notification to the Police Department of the' happening of the accident. The two types of report differ materially in scope and attributes. The distinction between them will readily become apparent upon reference to the history behind the Vehicle Code as it now exists. It will likewise plainly appear that the privilege attaching to the State report does not attend the report to the police.

The “1927” Vehicle Code (Act of May 11,1927, P. L. 886, Sec. 1030) required the operator of a motor vehi-' cle involved in an accident to report such accident to the Department of Highways “. . . except that, when such accident occurs within an incorporated city or town, such report shall be made ... to the police headquarters in such city or town. Every police department shall forward a copy of every such report so filed with it to the [highway] department.” As is evident, thé report then made to the police under the foregoing statutory provision at once became the report to the State. Such reports were privileged- by the further provision of Section 1030 that “. . . no such reports . . . shall be admissible in evidence-for any other purpose [than proof of law compliance] in any trial, civil or-criminal, arising out of such accidents.” However, the law with respect to reporting automobile ac-. cidents was changed by The .Vehicle' Code of 1929 (Act. of May 1, -1929, P. L, 905): By Section: 1214 of...that *492 Act, the duty was imposed directly on the operator of a motor vehicle involved in an accident to . . forward a report of such accident to the department [of revenue], upon forms furnished by the department,” and a report so filed with the Department of Revenue was, by the terms of Section 1214, privileged from use as evidence in any trial, civil or criminal, arising out of the reported accident. But, Section 1214 further provided that “Local authorities may require the reporting of motor vehicle accidents, in such form as they deem advisable, occurring within their jurisdictions, . . . .” And, the Act is silent about reports under such local regulations being privileged.

The obvious change thus wrought in the prior law by Section 1214 of The Vehicle Code of 1929 is significant and is not to be ignored. As we said in Fidelity Trust Company v. Kirk, 344 Pa. 455, 458, 25 A. 2d 825, —“Where words of a later statute differ from those of a previous one on the same subject they presumably are intended to have a different construction: [citing cases]. As Mr. Justice Brewer said in Hudson v. Parker, 156 U. S. 277, 291, ‘The logic of all differences in substantial provisions between earlier and later statutes is indicative of difference rather than identity of purpose.’ ” It can be asserted with confidence that nowhere, since the effective date of The Vehicle Code of 1929 down to the-present time, has the statute law of the State privileged an operator’s report to the police of his automobile accident.

Nor does the ordinance, which the City of Allentown enacted pursuant to the leave granted municipalities by Section 1214 of The Vehicle Code of 1929, accord. any privilege to the reports of automobile accidents made- thereunder. The ordinance did not prescribe that the report be made on any particular form as does the statute with respect to the report to be made to the Department.of Revenue. Under the ordinance’s *493 very general provision for the reporting of an automobile accident to the police, a verbal report of the mere happening of the accident satisfies the requirements of the situation. The ordinance itself appropriately regards the report to be made by the operator to the Department of Revenue as being an entirely different thing.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A.2d 730, 370 Pa. 488, 1952 Pa. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panik-v-didra-pa-1952.