The Charleston National Bank, as Administrator of the Estate of Jennings Everett Samples, Deceased v. William M. Hennessy

404 F.2d 539, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4710
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 27, 1968
Docket25673
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 404 F.2d 539 (The Charleston National Bank, as Administrator of the Estate of Jennings Everett Samples, Deceased v. William M. Hennessy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Charleston National Bank, as Administrator of the Estate of Jennings Everett Samples, Deceased v. William M. Hennessy, 404 F.2d 539, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4710 (5th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

GODBOLD, Circuit Judge:

This appeal is from a judgment for plaintiffs on a jury verdict, for personal injuries and property damage, against appellant as administrator of the estate of J. E. Samples, deceased.

While traveling on the Florida Turnpike, a divided toll road, out of control and at a very high speed, Samples’ car struck in the rear the automobile of appellees traveling in the same direction. Samples and his wife, the sole occupants of their car, were killed in the accident. Appellees were injured.

Appellant’s sole defense was that Samples had a sudden and unexpected heart attack or failure, causing him to lose control of his car, broadened in the later stages of the trial to the claim that Samples had an unforeseen and unexplained seizure or attack, the nature of which was unknown, and was dead or dying at the time of impact. In support of its theory appellant offered in evidence the death certificate on Samples. *541 The court admitted it into evidence except for the statement of the coroner contained therein that Samples “apparently had heart attack.”

Appellant claims that the entire death certificate was admissible as a business record under the Florida statute. 1 We need not consider whether the certificate was a business record, or whether only the more particular Florida statute on admissibility of death certificates would govern, because the business records statute gives the trial judge discretion to exclude records if “the sources of information, method and time of preparation were [not] such as to justify its admission.” Fla.Stat.Ann. § 92.36(2) (1960). The trial judge had before him evidence of the qualifications of the coroner, the time of preparation and the sources of information. He did not abuse his discretion.

Alternatively appellant relies upon Fla.Stat.Ann. §§ 382.20 and 382.35 (1960), providing that death certificates shall be prima facie evidence in any court of the facts contained therein. This contention raises underlying considerations of hearsay testimony and the admissibility of opinion testimony. Written official statements, which include certificates officially required to be made, are to some extent recognized as exceptions to the rules prohibiting hearsay assertions. There is a tendency to trustworthiness because the certificate is made by a public officer while carrying out his required duty and because the document is available for public inspection. Use of the certificate is a convenience also. To require the official be called from his public duties to testify may be inconvenient to him, the court, and the public; moreover, he may be unavailable by reason of conflicting engagements or death or other reason. See 5 Wigmore, Evidence §§ 1631-32. But the courts in their search for trustworthy and convenient means to reconstruct prior events — insofar as that is possible ■ — -in a judicial atmosphere, need not be mesmerized by a piece of paper, even an official one, so as to disregard realities. Some certificates embrace personal knowledge by the certifying officer of the thing recorded or certified, as the notary’s acknowledgement that a signatory has personally appeared before him and acknowledged an instrument, the certificate of death by the treating physician in actual attendance, the certificate of marriage by the person performing the ceremony. But there cannot be imposed an unrealistically strict requirement of personal knowledge by the certifying officer, for the practical advantages of records of birth, marriage, death, divorce, and official registrations would be destroyed.

The nature of the fact or event certified may require no particular qualifications on the part of the certifying officer, as the notary’s certificate that an acknowledgement has been taken, or the clerk’s certificate that an automobile has been registered. Or it may require the highest degree of professional skill and training about a matter as to which well-qualified experts may have différ-ing opinions — such as opinions as to cause of death, in a complex factual situation, by persons not in attendance at the time of death.

Against this background we look at what is here in issue.

The entry made by the coroner was based in part on information told to him by others at the scene, plus his own observations of the exterior condition of Samples’ body. There was no autopsy. The coroner was also a justice of the peace. 2 He was a layman without medical training. His experience as coroner was not proved. There was no substantial evidence of any kind showing him to be qualified as an expert on causes of *542 death. He arrived at the scene 45 minutes to an hour after the accident and found Mr. and Mrs. Samples dead. The entry had nothing to recommend it as trustworthy except that it was made by one holding the office of coroner and is a public record.

The Florida District Court of Appeal has held inadmissible the statement of the coroner in a death certificate that a death was “probably accident” and that “deceased jumped out of a motor vehicle, during argument” because from the coroner it was hearsay:

The coroner could not have testified that the death was “probably accident” nor to the fact that “deceased jumped out of a moving motor vehicle, during argument” because from the coroner such testimony would have been hearsay. It necessarily follows that the same statement on a piece of paper in no way increases the statement’s probative value. The statute provides that all the “facts” in the death certificate shall be prima facie evidence to the facts therein stated. The two statements of the coroner or the medical examiner on the death certificate did not constitute “facts”, but unverified opinion which was not entitled to judicial consideration.

Southern Life & Health Ins. Co. v. Medley, 161 So.2d 19, 21 (1964).

The court in Southern Life did not, as contended by appellant, carefully limit its holding to one that a coroner’s finding is inadmissible on the issue of suicide. The above-quoted language was preceded by the statement,

When the legislature adopted § 382.35(6), Fla.Stat., F.S.A., they did not change any of the substantive provisions of the law of evidence, they merely made procedural changes.

Id.

Analysis is not to be based on the formalities of the nature of the cause of action but on the realities of proffered evidence as trustworthy and of probative value on the issues involved. See also Mutual Life Ins. Co. of New York v. Bell, 147 Fla. 734, 3 So.2d 487 (1941); World Ins. Co. v. Kincaid, 145 So.2d 268 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1962). In Life Ins. Co. of Virginia v. Brockman, 173 Va. 86, 3 S.E.2d 480 (1939), the medical certificate of the coroner was excluded when he testified that his opinion as to the cause of death was based on statements of bystanders. In the present case the coroner’s opinion would have been inadmissible if proffered on oral examination.

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650 A.2d 202 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1994)
Kramer v. J. T. Keys
643 F.2d 382 (Fifth Circuit, 1981)
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643 F.2d 382 (Fifth Circuit, 1981)
Lois G. Pope v. Travelers Insurance Company
477 F.2d 557 (Fifth Circuit, 1973)
Kurtz v. People
494 P.2d 97 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1972)

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404 F.2d 539, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-charleston-national-bank-as-administrator-of-the-estate-of-jennings-ca5-1968.