Western Insurance v. Tobin

32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 77
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 77 (Western Insurance v. Tobin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Insurance v. Tobin, 32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 77 (Ohio 1877).

Opinion

Ashburn, J.

The first question we will consider arises on the exceptions by the defendant below to the special charges given, the special charges refused, and the general charge to the jury.

Plaintiffs below requested the court to give in charge to the jury a series of eight propositions, each of the series [88]*88numbered. Some of them the court gave in form as requested ; others as modified in the general charge. To these charges the defendant below excepted in this form, viz: “ To the giving of which charges the defendant at the time excepted.”

This exception, we think, too general. If it was the purpose to except to each proposition in the series, the exception should have been to each, or so framed as to distinctly indicate such purpose. If intended as an exception to the whole series, it was insufficient. "Where the exception is to the whole series, and in it is found one or more sound propositions, as in this case, a general exception to the series as a charge is insufficient. 1 Seld. 422.

Defendant below requested the court to give in charge to the jury a series of twenty-one requests ; not each an independent proposition, but a portion of them independent propositions, and others depending one upon another. The first request in the series was given, many of them wholly refused, and the residue given as modified in the general charge. To this ruling an exception was taken in this form : “ To which refusal and modification of said charges defendant at the time excepted.”

The exception we think insufficient. Some of the propositions in the series were not sound, and the rule is firmly settled where one of a series of propositions presented in one request for a charge is unsound, an exception to a refusal to charge the entire series, as requested, can not be maintained. 3 Otto, 46; 11 N. Y. 416; 6 N. Y. 233; 7 N. Y. 236; 40 N Y. 556; 45 N. Y. 556; 47 N. Y. 570; 30 Ohio St. 104; 30 Barb. 246.

. To the general charge of the court the defendant took exception in this form : “ To which general charge of the court, the defendant, by his counsel, at the time excepted, and excepted also to each proposition of law therein contained differing from the several specific charges asked by defendant.” This form of exception is clearly obnoxious to the settled law upon this subject. It is not the duty of a reviewing court to analyze and compare the requests, [89]*89modifications, and charge, to discover what particular portions are intended to bp excepted to. The chief office of an exception is to call the attention of the' trial court to the precise point as to which it is claimed it has erred, that the court may, then and there, consider it, and give other and different instructions to the jury, if, in its judgment, it has erred and should do so. An exception in the form we are considering wholly defeats that object. 25 Ohio St. 584; 47 N. Y. 576; 3 Otto, 46; Servis v. Stockstill, 30 Ohio St. 418; 3 Otto, 291; The P. Ft. W. & C. Railway v. Probst, 30 Ohio St. 104.

II. Many objections and exceptions to the admission of testimony offered by plaintiff below were made and taken by defendant below.

So far as practical, we have endeavored to classify the .testimony objected to, and exceptions. To consider and report upou each exception would be an unnecessary labor, and lead to no better practical result than to consider a single case of exception as the representative of a class.

a. The first class claiming consideration embraces all cases of special loss of steamboats from unknown causes, and may be represented by the following question and answer, taken from the testimony of the witness, E. C. Eindren.

“ Q. 17. Have you known of any instance of steamboats navigating the Mississippi river and its tributaries sustaining injuries in their hulls, by striking stumps, snags, and landings, by which they leaked or were sunk, and not discovered until some time after they had occurred; and if yea, give them ?

“A. I have known such instances. The "W. N. Sherman, in the Yazoo river, made a landing on the left hand side of the river; we run from that landing probably three miles, when we discovered the boat was filling with water; landed on the right hand shore, and she sank in about fifteen or twenty minutes ; this was in the year .1856; we found, through means of divers, that she had struck, on the left hand side of the river (where we had landed), a [90]*90stump, and no one knew anything about it at the time; the divers found the hole afterward, and stopped it, and we raised the boat; that was tlie only instance that occurred to myself.”

¥e think this class of testimony objectionable on both principle and authority. It was calculated to create as many collateral issues as special cases of such loss introduced. In this case, the witness states: “No one knew anything about it at the time.” This is but the witness’ opinion on a subject upon which his opinion was not competent testimony. Other persons on the Sherman at the time might have noticed the shock occasioned by the blow that broke the vessel. This would probably become a disputed question, calling for the testimony of all the persons on the Sherman at the time of the accident, to settle the question of fact as to her case. The testimony of one credible witness, that he felt and noticed the blow, would properly outweigh the testimony of many who did not notice the fact. Here would be a vexed, but valueless, collateral issue. If such testimony is competent, coming from the plaintiff, the right of the defendant to meet and controvert it is unquestionable.

Very many cases were introduced in testimony, on the part of plaintiff, where steamboats had met with some unknown accident, and, suddenly springing a leak, sunk. This class of testimony was incompetent, because calculated to surprise, and take undue advantage of defendant at the trial. Ordinarily, he could not be prepared to meet and contest the merits of each particular case of loss, from unknown cause, introduced. To deprive him of this privilege would be the denial of a legal right, and to admit them would overwhelm the case with collateral issues of fact— distract judicial investigation — leading to no valuable legal result.

It is stated and claimed, this class of testimony was introduced and admitted only to show the nature and peril of such navigation. As testimony-in-chief, such testimony was not competent for any purpose. On cross-examination, [91]*91it would be competent for a party to propound such questions as would call out such special cases. This could be done in order to ascertain the grounds of the witness’ judgment, and tending to test the correctness of his testimony. If special cases were called out on cross-examination, the party calling for them would be bound by the answers given, and no collateral issues could arise on its admission.

Greenleaf states the rule thus, and we think it sound and applicable: “ This rule excludes all evidence of collateral facts, or those which are incapable of affording any reasonable presumption or inference as to the principal fact or matter in dispute, and the reason is that such evidence tends to draw away the minds of the jurors from the point in issue, and to excite prejudice and mislead them ; and moreover, the adverse party, having had no notice of such a course of evidence, is not prepared to rebut it.” 1 Green-leaf, § 52.

b.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Ohio St. (N.S.) 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-insurance-v-tobin-ohio-1877.