Sullivan v. Seattle Electric Co.

97 P. 1109, 51 Wash. 71, 1908 Wash. LEXIS 969
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1908
DocketNo. 7593
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 97 P. 1109 (Sullivan v. Seattle Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sullivan v. Seattle Electric Co., 97 P. 1109, 51 Wash. 71, 1908 Wash. LEXIS 969 (Wash. 1908).

Opinion

Rudkin, J.

— This action was instituted by the widow and minor children of David Sullivan, deceased, to recover damages for his death, which is alleged to have been caused by the wrongful act or neglect of the defendant. The case was before this court on a former appeal where a full statement of the facts will be found. Sullivan v. Seattle Elec. Co., 44 Wash. 53, 86 Pac. 786. On a retrial of the action, the plaintiffs had judgment for the sum of $3,000, and the defendant has appealed. In the course of the trial the respondents offered in evidence the report of the deputy coroner to the county auditor, made pursuant to § 6 of the act of March 7, 1891, Laws 1891, page 188, for the purpose of proving the cause of death. The appellant challenged the competency of this report, but its objection was overruled and this ruling is the first error assigned. It was formerly held that the record of a coroner’s inquest on a dead body was competent but not conclusive evidence of the cause of death in all civil actions, because it was the result of an inquiry made under competent public authority to ascertain matters of public interest and concern. 1 Greenleaf, § 556. This rule still prevails in a few jurisdictions, but the great [73]*73weight of modern authority is against it. Memphis & C. R. Co. v. Wormack, 84 Ala. 149, 4 South. 618; Germania Life Ins. Co. v. Ross-Lewin, 24 Colo. 43, 51 Pac. 488, 65 Am. St. 215; In re Dolbeer’s Estate, 149 Cal. 227, 86 Pac. 695; Central R. Co. v. Moore, 61 Ga. 151; Union Cent. Life Ins. Co. v. Hollowell, 14 Ind. App. 611, 43 N. E. 211; Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Kaiser, 115 Ky. 539, 74 S. W. 203; Wasey v. Travelers’ Ins. Co., 126 Mich. 119, 85 N. W. 459; State v. Cecil Co., 54 Md. 426; Louis v. Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co., 58 App. Div. 137, 68 N. Y. S. 683; Insurance Co. v. Schmidt, 40 Ohio St. 112; Cox v. Royal Tribe, 42 Ore. 365, 71 Pac. 73, 95 Am. St. 152, 60 L. R. A. 620; Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Milward, 118 Ky. 716, 82 S. W. 364, 68 L. R. A. 285; Kane v. Supreme Tent, Knights of Maccabees, 113 Mo. App. 104, 87 S. W. 547; Boehme v. Sovereign Camp, Woodmen of the World, 98 Texas 376, 84 S. W. 422; Kinney v. Brotherhood of American Yoeman, 15 N. D. 21, 106 N. W. 44; Chambers v. Modern Woodmen of America, 18 S. D. 173, 99 N. W. 1107; Wigmore Evidence, § 1671.

The rule excluding such records prevails indiscriminately in actions on insurance policies and in actions to recover damages for death by wrongful act, as will appear from an examination of the cases cited. The reason for the change in the rule is not far to seek.

“By the ancient law, such high credit was given to a coroner’s inquest that the judge would not receive a verdict acquitting a person of the death of a man found against the accused by the coroner’s inquest, unless the jury finding such acquittal also found what other person did the act, or by what other means the party came to his death. 2 Bac. Abr. Tit. ‘Coroner.’ This rule does not now obtain anywhere and the natural inquiry is, what remnants of it ought to remain? The inquiry into the cause of death cannot, under our law, in and of itself establish the status of any one or of any property ... At the ancient common law when the jury found that a person had committed suicide, ignominious burial followed. To this extent the inquest established the status of the deceased, but, under our practice, nothing fol[74]*74lows upon the verdict except in case it is found that a crime has been committed. Why, then, should a stranger to the proceeding be bound by the verdict? Why should it be evidence against a stranger of the cause of his death? We cannot see any well grounded reason why such a verdict be either conclusive or evidence against a stranger to the proceeding.” Wasey v. Insurance Co., supra.

The reasons for excluding this class of testimony are thus stated by the court in Germania Life Ins. Co. v. Ross-Lewin,, supra:

“Ijn case of death under suspicious circumstances, or resulting from accident, the rule permitting inquisitions to be used in evidence would result in a race and scramble to secure a favorable coroner’s verdict, that would influence, and perhaps control, in case suit should be instituted against life insurance companies upon policies of insurance, and in cases of accidents . occurring as the result of negligence on the part of corporations operating railways, street car lines, mining for coal or the precious metals, etc. Law writers, of late, have frequently animadverted upon the carelessness with which such inquests are frequently conducted, and to allow inquisitions to be used in a suit between private parties upon a cause of action growing out of the death of the deceased, as in this case, would be to introduce an element of uncertainty into the practice which, we think, would be contrary to public policy, and pernicious in the extreme; and for this reason we conclude, upon careful consideration, that the safer and better rule is to exclude such inquisitions.”

We have thus far considered the report of the coroner as if it were entitled to the same degree of credit as the record of an inquest, because the parties have so treated it, but in our opinion the report does not stand on as high a plane as the formal record. It is simply a report made to the auditor by the coroner as a part of the vital statistics of the state, under the provisions of the act creating the state board of health, and, as said by the court in Sovereign Camp of W. O. W. v. Grandon, 64 Neb. 39, 89 N. W. 448:

“It is a mere police regulation, and is not intended for supplying the public at large with information upon which re[75]*75liance may be placed in the business affairs of the community. We do not think the record is of such a character as to entitle it to be received in evidence, as affecting the interest of a party to a litigation.”

The respondents offered testimony tending to show that the deceased attempted to get off the car at a point where the streets were graded and level, but was' restrained from so doing by the servants of the appellant. This testimony was admitted over objections, but the court afterwards charged the jury that they could only consider it in determining the condition of the deceased. Doubtless the entire conduct of the deceased while he was a passenger on the car might be given in evidence for the purpose of showing his condition and the knowledge that the appellant or its servants had of that condition, but the condition of the streets where the appellant first attempted to leave the car had no bearing upon that question. The jury might well infer from this testimony that the appellant was in the wrong in restraining the deceased from leaving the car at a safe and proper place, and how far this fact may have influenced or entered into the general verdict we do not know. The testimony bearing upon the character of the streets where the deceased attempted to leave the car should have been excluded.

Three witnesses called by the respondents were permitted to testify over objection, that at or about the time the deceased left the car, a woman passenger in the same car, got up or jumped up, and exclaimed, that “it was murder,” or “looked like murder,” to let the deceased off at that place.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 1109, 51 Wash. 71, 1908 Wash. LEXIS 969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-seattle-electric-co-wash-1908.