Price v. Grieger

70 N.W.2d 421, 244 Minn. 466, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 604
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 6, 1955
Docket36,344
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 70 N.W.2d 421 (Price v. Grieger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. Grieger, 70 N.W.2d 421, 244 Minn. 466, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 604 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Thomas Gallagher, Justice.

In an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by plaintiff struck by defendant’s car, the jury returned a verdict for defendant. This is an appeal from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

On appeal plaintiff contends principally that the trial court erred (!) in permitting a witness to refresh her memory from her shorthand notes of statements made by plaintiff within five days of the accident and barred from evidence by virtue of M. S. A. 602.01 and thereafter to testify as to what plaintiff had said at such time; and (2) in receiving in evidence part of a written statement signed by a witness shortly after the accident, wherein the witness related a conversation with another witness in the presence of plaintiff immediately after the accident, in which statements were made by the two witnesses giving rise to the conclusion that when struck plain *468 tiff was intoxicated due to his drinking “canned heat” prior to the accident.

The accident occurred May 31, 1951, on highway No. 10, near Hastings when plaintiff, a pedestrian thereon, was struck and seriously injured by defendant’s car. On June 5, 1951, Mrs. Mabel Vandersteen, a stenographer, was employed by Mercury Indemnity Company, defendant’s insurer, to accompany their representative, Daniel Sears, to St. Eaphael’s Hospital, where plaintiff was confined, to take shorthand notes of an interview with him relating to the accident. At the hospital the interview was taken down in shorthand by Mrs. Vandersteen. Later she transcribed it and forwarded the transcription to Mr. Sears. It was not signed by plaintiff and no copies were forwarded to him. It is not disputed that at the time it was taken drugs and sedatives had been administered to plaintiff to ease his pain.

At the trial, to show that the statements made by plaintiff as noted by Mrs. Vandersteen were inconsistent with plaintiff’s testimony, Mrs. Vandersteen, after testifying that she had no independent recollection of the statements, was asked to refer to her shorthand notes to refresh her memory and then to relate what plaintiff had said at the interview. Upon objection of plaintiff’s counsel that § 602.01 prohibited the use of such statements where no copy thereof had been given to the injured person within 30 days, the trial court ruled:

“* * * there is a statutory provision that bars a statement of this kind, that is a statement taken unless a copy was given to this man within a certain time after it was taken, which wasn’t done, and the statement itself is excluded, but this Court has ruled that you may testify as to what questions were made or questions put and answers made, refreshing your recollection from the notes, but you may not read the direct answers.”

Thereafter, the witness was permitted to refer to her shorthand notes and testify as to the answers made by plaintiff to the questions asked by Mr. Sears during the interview.

As to the second contention, the record indicates that on July 30, 1951, James Dodge, who had assisted at the accident and helped *469 transport plaintiff to the hospital, had signed a written statement prepared by a representative of the insurer, wherein the following was set forth:

“* * * While we were cutting the clothes [plaintiff’s] off, Sontag [the ambulance driver] made the remark that it was a good thing that Price was drunk because of the injuries. I said that it looked like a canned heat drunk and Price mumbled ‘I never use canned heat.’ ”

Mr. Sontag testified as a witness for plaintiff but had made no reference to the statement attributed to him as above, nor as to whether he had observed that plaintiff had been drinking. He testified that “both of his [plaintiff’s] legs were broken”; that while at the hospital he could not say whether plaintiff was conscious or not; and that plaintiff had “mumbled” in response to questions asked him there.

Mr. Dodge, testifying for plaintiff, stated that he did not smell any liquor on the latter at the time of the accident. He admitted that he had signed the statement above referred to. He testified that when plaintiff talked “he mumbled — talked heavy” — “like he had been hit about the face.” He was asked if he recalled Mr. Sontag making a remark at the hospital about plaintiff’s “apparent drinking habits or his use of intoxicants.” This was objected to by plaintiff’s counsel, but the court ruled that since the conversation was in the presence of plaintiff, the question was proper. The witness thereupon replied there was such remark and that plaintiff had replied to it. He was then asked to repeat the remark and the reply, but before he could do so, counsel for defendant offered the statement in evidence and over objection of plaintiff’s counsel as to foundation, the statements attributed to plaintiff, to Sontag, and to Dodge as above quoted were received and read to the jury.

Section 602.01 2 is divisible into two parts, one of which creates the presumption of fraud as to any statement taken from an injured *470 person within 30 days after his injuries in the trial of any action therefor; and the other of which prohibits its use in evidence unless the injured party is given a copy of it within 30 days. No such copy was furnished plaintiff here. The statement was taken in shorthand, and a transcription thereof made and mailed to the insurer but not to plaintiff. The trial court correctly ruled that the transcription was inadmissible under the statute. This was circumvented by having the witness who had taken the shorthand notes refer thereto to refresh her memory and then relate in evidence plaintiff’s responses to the questions he was asked relative to the accident as noted therein. In permitting this procedure, we feel the trial court was in error. The statute seeks to prevent unfair practices in the procurement of statements from injured parties. Yeager v. Chapman, 233 Minn. 1, 45 N. W. (2d) 776, 22 A. L. R. (2d) 1260. It does not specify that such statements be signed, and it would seem that if the obvious purpose of the statute is to be fulfilled any written statement or memorandum taken under the circumstances described, whether in shorthand,'longhand, or typed, or any statement recorded by tape, wire, or otherwise would be encompassed within its terms. The rejection of a transcription of shorthand notes of such a statement would afford no statutory protection if the contents thereof are nevertheless received by the simple device of having the witness refresh her memory from the shorthand notes and thereafter relate plaintiff’s responses as contained therein.

The situation is not unlike that in Lowen v. Pates, 219 Minn. 566, 18 N. W. (2d) 455, which involved construction of § 169.09, subd. 13. This section then provided that accident reports of police officers required to be filed with the commissioner of highways under § 169.09, subd. 8, were for the confidential use of the department for accident prevention and should not be used as evidence in any trial arising out of an accident. It further specified that no person should be examined or testify as to the making of such a report or the Con *471

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 N.W.2d 421, 244 Minn. 466, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-grieger-minn-1955.