Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Gleaves

2 Tenn. App. 549, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJanuary 29, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 549 (Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Gleaves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Central Railway Co. v. Gleaves, 2 Tenn. App. 549, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

This was an action for damages brought by Mrs. May E. Gleaves, Administratrix of the estate of her son, Frank D. Gleaves, deceased, for the alleged wrongful killing of said Frank D. Gleaves by a passenger train of plaintiff in error on September 27, 1923. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff' below for $10,000. The trial judge suggested a remittitur of $3,500, which was accepted by the defendant in error under protest; whereupon judgment was rendered in her favor for $6,500 and costs of suit. From this judgment the defendant below has appealed in the nature of a writ of error and has assigned numerous errors. For convenience the parties will be referred to in this opinion as plaintiff and defendant as they stood in the circuit court.

The action was predicated upon an alleged violation of section 1574, sub-section 4 of .Shannon’s Code, which is as follows:

“Every railroad company shall keep the engineer, fireman, *551 or some other person upon the locomotive, always upon the lookout ahead, and when any person, animal or other obstruction appears upon the road, the alarm and whistle shall be sounded, the brakes put down and every possible means employed to stop the train and prevent the accident.”

It was averred in the declaration that because of the defendant’s failure to comply with this statute, enacted for the prevention of accidents and for the protection of human life, Frank D. Gleaves was run into and knocked a considerable distance and killed by defendant’s train.

The first assignment is that the court erred in admitting the testimony of the witness, Percy Carver, the railway postal clerk on the defendant’s passenger train on the night of the alleged killing of the deceased, to the effect that after the train stopped and after the engineer had alighted from his engine and was going back by the side of his car walking along on the ground, the witness asked the engineer what had happened, and the engineer said in reply that he had hit a man at the crossing; and that the court erred in refusing the special request offered by defendant’s counsel that the jury be charged that said testimony of witness Carver as to what the engineer told him was incompetent and so withdrawn from their consideration. It is insisted that this testimony was hearsay only and not a part of the res gestae because it was not voluntary and spontaneous but was in response to a question by the witness Carver.

The place of the occurrence is at Hermitage Station, a flag station on defendant’s railway about eleven miles from the city of Nashville. The passenger train of defendant was going toward Nashville. It came around a curve through a cut the western point of which, going toward Nashville, is three hundred and sixty feet from the crossing of a public road and seven hundred and sixty feet from the place where the train stopped. The body of the deceased was found lying seven or eight feet north of the track and eight or ten feet west of the public road, which was about thirty feet wide. About fifteen to twenty minutes before the train arrived the deceased had been seen by one witness sitting on the north end of a cross-tie, just east of the crossing, facing north, and smoking a cigarette. From the point' of the curve to where the deceased was sitting, the track is straight. The train was running somewhere between twenty and twenty-five miles an hour when it approached the station. No one who testified saw the train hit the deceased. The proof of the.fact that the deceased was an obstruction on the track and that the train hit him rests upon circumstantial evidence unless this statement of the engineer is admissible. The distance from where the deceased was sitting on the cross-tie and where the train stopped is about four hundred and forty feet. When the *552 train had gone this distance it came to a stop, then it was backed to a point opposite where the body of the deceased lay, about four hundred and sixteen feet. "When it stopped, the engineer stepped off the engine, walked the length of the tender and the mail car and met the witness, Carver, the mail clerk, as he stepped off the mail car. There the conversation in question took place.

In Jones on Evidence, section 345, -it is said that among the more modern cases it will be found that conversations after accidents are frequently tendered as part of the res gestae, and eases are cited as giving excellent illustrations of their rejection on the ground of narrative; and it is also said that the mere fact that the statement is in narrative form will not exclude it if it was actually a part of the res gestae.

In Kennedy v. Railway Company, 2 Tenn. C. C. A., 103, cases are reviewed holding as part of the res gestae and admissible, statements made by injured persons just after the accident occurred; the court held that statements made by the plaintiff’s intestate after he was struck by a train were not admissible because it did not appear how sioon after the accident or how closely connected therewith the statements were made; in other words, that it did not appear that they were a part of the res gestae.

The rule in Tennessee laid down in Denton v. State, 1 Swan, 278, is as follows:

“It is certainly true, as stated by Mr. Greenleaf, that it is not possible to define with precision what is, and what is not part of the res gestae, and that it must be left in a great measure to the discretion of the court in each particular case. Nevertheless, it is clearly laid down that declarations, in order to be evidence as part of the res gestae, must be contemporaneous with the principal transaction of which they are part. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence, secs. 108, 111. This principle of law is founded upon the clearest dictate of reason. The declarations are evidence, because they are part of the thing doing. If, therefore, the thing shall have been done and concluded, declarations then made are not evidence.”

This strict rule has been constantly adhered to in Tennessee, whether the declarations were self-serving or were in the nature of admissions.

In Dinwiddie v. Railroad, 9 Lea, 309, it appeared that immediately after the deceased had been run over, the train was stopped and the engineer, conductor, and other train hands had gathered around the body, which was still breathing; that a witness was asked what statements were made around the body by the operatives of the train as to how the killing occurred? The Supreme Court, in holding that this question was incompetent, said:

“We think it requires neither argument or authority to show *553 that there is no error in this. It is not shown what statement the plaintiff proposed to prove and besides it would have been but the declarations of persons not parties to the cause, as to facts which they were competent witnesses to prove, but as to which they could make no admission binding upon the defendant. ’ ’

In Street Railroad Company v.

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2 Tenn. App. 549, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-central-railway-co-v-gleaves-tennctapp-1926.