Pennsylvania Co. v. Trainer

12 Ohio C.C. 66
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedMay 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Ohio C.C. 66 (Pennsylvania Co. v. Trainer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Co. v. Trainer, 12 Ohio C.C. 66 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Frazier, J.

The defendant in error, the plaintiff below, recovered a judgment for the claimed wrongfully causing the death of Josiah Philips, against the plaintiff in error operating the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad. The collision by which the deceased lost his life occurred at a point in or near the city of Steubenville, where the public highway crosses at grade the main track of the defendant’s road; where, by reason of an elevated track leading to a furnace and crossing the highway over head,persons, approaching the crossing of the main track in the direction deceased was traveling cannot by reason of the elevated track obstructing the view see a train approaching on the main track until within a short distance of the crossing. And on this occasion it is claimed no signal was given by bell or whistle of the approaching train.

At the time of the accident the deceased was traveling toward the city in a cart drawn by one horse. Counsel for plaintiff proposed to prove that deceased on other occasions, when about to pass over this crossing, stopped to look and listen for approaching trains; which testimony was rightfully excluded. But the plaintiff was permitted, in chief, to inquire of witnesses; “what kind of a man was deceased in reference to his habits in regard to carefulness in driving, management and care of horses, ’ ’ and witnesses testified they thought “he was one of the most careful men in driving horses in the neighborhood.’’ In the admission of such testimony the judge below erred. •

Another question more difficult of solution, and, as a ques[68]*68tion of practice, of much more importance is made in the record, Rebecca Hibbetts and Bertha Stevenhart, two young girls, were the only persons who saw the deceased approaching the crossing. They were sitting near the crossing, and one of them spoke to the deceased. They had testified upon a former trial, and it is not questioned that the proper foundation is laid for showing, as affecting their testimony, what they testified to on the former trial, by competent testimony.

The defendant called a's a witness T. A. L. Thompson, Esq., and showed that he was the official stenographer for Jefferson county, Ohio, appointed by the court of common pleas under á statute of Ohio, and was acting as such at the time of the former trial, and as such official stenographer he took down in short hand the testimony,including the testimony of Rebecca Hibbetts and Bertha Stevenhart; that he then had present his notes of the testimony; that such notes are correct as to what they testified upon such former trial.

Counsel for defendant asked the witness to turn to his notes of the testimony of the Hibbitt’s girl, and tell the jury what her answers were at' the former trial to certain questions; to which the plaintiff objected. The judge sustained the objection, holding and deciding that the stenographer may use his notes to refresh his memory, and then if he can remember, he can answer. He must have an independent recollection before he can answer. The witness stated: ‘ I rely entirely upon my notes taken at the time. I have no independent recollection”. The same rulings were made as to the testimony of Bertha Stevenhart.

It is claimed by counsel for plaintiff in error, that its admission is warranted by section 5242a Revised Statutes, 89 Ohio Laws, 148. This statute, like most of the reported cases and comments of text writers when treating of stenographer’s notes, has reference to the reproduction of the • testimony of a deceased or absent witness given upon a for[69]*69mer trial, and not for the purpose of affecting the testimony of a witness who is present and testifies, but whose testimony it is claimed materially differs from what he testified on the former trial, for the purpose of impeaching his testimony. Nor is it a question whether the notes of a stenographer are the best or only evidence for that purpose. In Brice et al. v. Miller, 15 S. E. Reporter 272, in the case of an absent witness,it is held: “The stenographer’s notes of the testimony of a witness is not the best evidence of such testimony so as to prevent any other person who was present from testifying in relation thereto.’’

Counsel for defendant in error cite a number of authorities in support of the proposition that the notes of a stenographer, like other writings made by the witness at the time of the occurrence, can only be used to refresh his memory. In Thompson on Trials Sec. 504, under headnote “Former Testimony, How Proved’’, the author says; “It is not error to refuse to allow a transcribed phonographic report of the testimony of a witness given on a former trial, to be read to the jury for the purpose of contradicting him, unless the legislature has declared that such reports shall be evidence. The reason is that such stenographic reports are not seen by the witness, and that they may be fair and truthful reports of the testimony of the witness, and may not. ’ ’ The author adds: “But the rule is different where the testimony has been taken down by a commissioner and duly certified by him,although not read over by the witness before signing.’’

It has long been an established rule of evidence that a witness who has made entries in a book or reduced to writing facts which he is required to do in the regular order of his employment,on the day they purport to have been made, though he has now no independent recollection of the facts mentioned in it, if he remembers that at the time he knew the facts were correctly stated, may be permitted to use it to refresh and assist his memory; but the writing itself must [70]*70be produced in court, in order that the other party may, by cross-examination, have the benefit of the witness refreshing his memory by every part. The American courts have carried the rule farther than it has been carried in England, by admitting the writing itself to go in evidence to the jury in all cases where it was made by the witness at the time it occurred, for the purpose of preserving the memory of it, if, at the time of testifying, he can.recollect nothing farther han that he had accurately reduced the whole transaction to writing. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence Sec. 437 and note 3 to 12 edition; Moots v. The State, 21 Ohio St. 653; Shriedley v. The State, 23 Ohio St. 130.

If entries or writings, made by a person in the performance of a private employment, are admitted in evidence upon the testimony of the person who made them that they are correct, although he has no recollection of the facts; whj on principle and reason should not the testimony of a witness taken in short hand by an officer of the court appointed for that purpose, and whose sworn duty it is to correctly report the testimony, be admitted when it is competent to prove it, although the officer at the time of testifying has no independent recollection of what the witnesa testified.

The violent changes effected in the modes of procedure by the courts, in the last few years, the progress of science, the startling and violent inroads effected by the telegraph, the telephone, the phonograph, the application of electricity as motive power and to other purposes with the application of photography in evidence, and the employment of court stenographers, have placed the line of relevancy far beyond what would be recognized by the courts of even twenty years ago.

If law is “the perfection of human wisdom’’,it should keep pace with science and the progress of our people, and institutions, or those who administer it, are not worthy of the trust committed to them.

[71]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Ohio C.C. 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-co-v-trainer-ohiocirct-1896.