Whitney v. Sioux City

Citation154 N.W. 497,172 Iowa 336
Decision Date26 October 1915
Docket Number30310
PartiesMARTHA WHITNEY, Appellee, v. CITY OF SIOUX CITY, Appellant
CourtIowa Supreme Court

Appeal from Woodbury District Court.--HON. GEORGE JEPSON, Judge.

ACTION for damages consequent upon injury suffered in one of defendant's streets resulted in a judgment against defendant, from which it appeals.

Affirmed.

Schmidt & Pike and Sam Page, for appellant.

Shull Gill, Sammis & Stillwill, and U. G. Whitney, for appellee.

LADD J. DEEMER, C. J., GAYNOR and SALINGER, JJ., concur.

OPINION

LADD, J.

The facts sufficiently appear in Lawrence v. Sioux City, 172 Iowa 320, 154 N.W. 494. Three points not there ruled will be considered. After being precipitated into the gully, plaintiff and Dorothy Lawrence were taken to the house of St. Onge, and witnesses were asked, in substance, what Dorothy Lawrence then said in presence of persons named; and an objection as incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial and no foundation laid was sustained. Defendant offered to show that she said: "We were going too fast and I told John so"; and evidence thereof was held incompetent. What she said of the speed of the car was a mere opinion or conclusion of the deceased, and no statement of fact as to how fast the car was going. This being so, it was not admissible, even if a part of the res gestae. Dunn v. Railway, 130 Iowa 580. But coupled with the statement, "I told him so", a fact was stated, namely, that she told him "we were riding too fast". But this related to some time prior to the accident,--a past occurrence,--and not to what happened in connection with the precipitation of the car into the ditch. It did not grow out of the transaction nor derive credit therefrom, but was merely the relation of a conversation which may have taken place at any time while traveling the two miles prior to reaching the gully. A mere recital of a past occurrence is not to be submitted as part of the res gestae, and there was no error in excluding this evidence. Alsever v. Railway, 115 Iowa 338; Chicago West. Div. Ry. Co. v. Becker, (Ill.) 128 Ill. 545, 21 N.E. 524. The true theory upon which such a declaration is received in evidence is that it illustrates, explains or interprets other parts of the transaction of which it is a part; but when merely an account in part or in whole of a completed past affair, it should be excluded.

II. Paul Gibeau testified to having a talk with Knott about a week before the accident, and was asked whether Knott had then made any statements about the condition of the big lights on the car. An objection as immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent was sustained. The alleged error may be disposed of on the ground that there is nothing in the record tending to show the nature of the answer expected or that, if given or the statements recited, anything testified to would have had any bearing on the issues being tried. Arnold v. Livingstone, 155 Iowa 601, 604, 134 N.W. 101. Knott had testified that he had not told Gibeau that his Prestolites were out of whack; but from this it was not to be inferred that the witness would testify to the contrary, or that he had had a conversation with Knott, though the latter had testified that he had not seen him. The ruling does not appear to have been prejudicial.

III. The verdict...

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