Sparr & Green v. Wellman

11 Mo. 230
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 11 Mo. 230 (Sparr & Green v. Wellman) 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
Sparr & Green v. Wellman, 11 Mo. 230 (Mo. 1847).

Opinion

Napton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action on the case brought to recover the value of certain property, alledged to have been stolen from the plaintiff whilst a guest at the inn of the defendants. The case was tried upon the general issue.

The plaintiff introduced a witness, Crenshaw, who stated, that in May, 1845, whilst he was collecting news for the JV“ew Era, a daily journal in St. Louis, ha was informed that a robbery had been committed at the Virginia Hotel; that he went to said Hotel to learn the particulars and arrived there about dinner time, where a considerable crowd was collected in the bar room; that he stepped up to Mr. Sparr, one of the defendants, and asked him if there had been a robbery at his house the night before; that Sparr answered in the affirmative, and turned to his register and gave him the names of the three persons robbed, among whom Wellman, the plaintiff, was one; and Sparr further said, that Wellman’s room was entered, and he had been robbed of $180 in money and a fine gold watch. On cross examination, this witness stated, that he had for some time been a collector of local news for the press — that the conversation with Sparr was hurried, and he believed Sparr knew at the time he was collecting news for the press. He stated further, that from nothing which took place at the time between himself and Sparr, did he infer that Sparr had any personal knowledge in regard to the robbery. This last statement was objected to, and excluded by the court, and an exception taken.— The defendant then asked the witness, if said Sparr did not give him, the witness to understand, that what he, Sparr, stated about the robbery was the mere report of what the parties said to have been robbed, had told him. This question was objected to, and excluded and an exception [233]*233taken. On examination by plaintiff, this witness stated, that Sparr told him that Wellman’s room had been entered, and his money and watch stolen — this was said without qualification.

It was proved that when plaintiff called on Sparr to pay his board, Sparr remarked that his bill was seven dollars, but as he had been unfortunate in being robbed, he would only charge him five dollars.

The plaintiff then read Sparr’s receipt for $5, for one week’s board.— The plaintiff then offered himself as a witness to prove the particular articles of which he had been robbed. This was objected to — but the court decided that the plaintiff was competent to give evidence of the articles of which he had been robbed, but not to prove their value. An exception was taken on this point. Plaintiff then stated, that he was robbed of two fifty dollar bills on the Bank of Missouri, one twenty dollar bill, five ten dollar, and one five dollar bill on the Northern Bank of Kentucky, one double cased patent lever watch, which cost $140, a key and heavy gold guard chain, that cost $40. On the morning after the robbery, he thought he had lost $180, and so told Sparr, but afterwards on reflection recollected that he had paid out $5.

The plaintiff then proved the value of gold watches, &c.

The court instructed the jury, that “if the defendants were inn-keepers and the money and effects of plaintiff were stolen or otherwise illegally taken from his room, he being at the time a guest of defendants, they are liable for the money and effects so stolen or taken with six per cent, interest from the day of the loss.”

The defendant asked the following instructions, which were refused:

1. The defendants are not liable, unless the plaintiff has given evidence of the circumstances of the alledged robbery, so far as to enable the jury to determine whether the same was committed by plaintiff’s servants or associates or others.

2. If the statements of Sparr to Crenshaw, were merely the repetition of information derived from the plaintiff, and not intended by him as an admission of the fact of robbery, the statements are no legal evidence of such facts.

Before the jury retired, the court told them to disregard the evidence given by the plaintiff as a witness, and decide the cause upon the other testimony.

There was a motion for a new trial overruled, and the case was brought here by appeal.

The point which first presents itself on the record is the competency of the question propounded to the witness Crenshaw; and in this con[234]*234nexion, we will also consider the second instruction asked by the defendant.

It appears that the witness had detailed the words of Sparr, and was then asked what inference he drew from this language; whether he did not infer that what Sparr stated about the robbery was the mere report of what the parties said to have been robbed told him.

It is the province of a witness to state facts and circijmstances, from which the jury may draw inferences, but it is not for the witness to state his own inferences or opinions. The language used by Sparr was therefore properly accompanied with the circumstances under which it was used, and it was for the jury to determine wl at meaning should be given to it under these circumstances. The circumstances detailed by the witness — that he was a collector of news — that the conversation was about dinner time, when a crowd was assembled — that it was a hurried conversation — might lead the jury to the conclusion, that Sparr was merely stating what, he had heard from others, and about which he had formed no opinion. If this was the conclusion of the jury, it was their duty to diregard it. It could not amount to an admission. On the other hand, there were other circumstances, in addition to those mentioned by the witness, but which were in evidence, from which a different conclusion might have been drawn. Sparr was an inn-keeper, and Wellman was his guest. A robbery was alledged — and the inn-keeper himself, in this conversation with Crenshaw, and afterwards with another witness, speaks of it as a fact, without qualification. Might it not be inferred, from the relation of the parties, that the inn- keeper, upon hearing such a report, would feel sufficient solicitude for the credit of his house, to make the necessary inquiries and satisfy himself of the truth of the reported robbery, .before he would contribute to its promulgation through the columns of a daily newspaper? If he had made such inquiries, and became convinced of the truth of the report, he was then stating as fact, what he had not only heard, but believed.

An admission is the statement of a fact against the interest of a party making it — but it is not essential to constitute it an admission, that the fact should have come under the personal observation of the declarant. Undoubtedly admissions of the latter kind are much stronger than where the declaration is of a fact, of which the party could have no personal knowledge. But where a party believes a fact upon evidence sufficient to convince him of its existence, his declaration of the existence of that fact, if against his interest, is evidence against him. It is no doubt evi[235]*235dence of a very unsatisfactory character, depending altogether on the circumstances under which it is made, but it is competent.

The competency of the plaintiff Wellman, to prove the articles of which he was robbed, is an important question in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Mo. 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparr-green-v-wellman-mo-1847.