Court Opinion

ID: 8018335
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:07:29.822379+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:42.556918
License: Public Domain

LAMM, J.
Plaintiff, -widow of Niels A. Lorenzen timely sned in the circuit court of St. Louis for statutory damages for Ms wrongful death at the hands of defendant. Verdict for defendant. New trial ordered and granted on plaintiff’s motion. Defendant appeals from that order. Such strokes earmark the case.
The specifications of negligence are: . (1) a violation of the “Vigilant Watch Ordinance,” (2) the violation of an ordinance limiting the maximum speed of street cars in St. Louis at the place in hand to ten miles per hour- — both, it is alleged, having causal connection with Lorenzen’s death and both introduced in evidence. The Vigilant Watch Ordinance has been here often. It relates to the duty of employees in charge of a going street car in St. Louis to keep a vigilant watch for those approaching their tracks and to use diligence in stopping the car on the first appearance of danger to such persons. [White v. Railroad, 202 Mo. 1. c. 549.] Its terms are not material to any issue here; for the court instructed on that ordinance and the jury found for defendant on that issue. Moreover, plaintiff does not now contend the order granting a new trial can be sustained because of error in the way that issue was put to the jury. So that if we held, as we would be bounden to do, that the ratio decidendi on the motion was immaterial, if other good ground existed, it would not mend matters a whit.
The court granted‘a new trial for error in ruling out testimony on negligent speed. By that ruling plaintiff was left without proof of the rate of speed of the car killing her husband and her case breaking-down on that issue, it did not get to the jury. It is obvious, therefore, that if the court erred in excluding testimony on speed that error materially affected the merits, and, when later the trial court corrected that error by awarding a new trial, it did excellent justice. ' Contra, if the court did not err in excluding such tes*186timony, then it erred in granting a new trial because of such exclusion, the verdict for defendant should he reinstated and final judgment thereon follow as a sequence.
The shoe pinching at that precise point and nowhere else (under the briefs on both sides), the blunt and single question on this appeal is: Was there error in excluding testimony of eye witnesses on the speed of the car killing Niels A. Lorenzen? That question will he put in a form narrowing it very much presently when the actual ruling below is reached.
A word more on the record, before coming to the turning question:
Lorenzen was a teamster plying his calling at the time by driving a loaded coal wagon south on Broadway in St. Louis at dusk on November 12, 1907. South of (and approaching) him was one of defendant’s street cars propelled by electricity, in charge of defendant’s employees, running on defendant’s track and about defendant’s business of carrying passengers for hire. We take it the point of the accident was well lighted by street lamps, that Lorenzen could see the street car (and that those manning it could see him) for a block away — there being no turn in the street or obstructions. Defendant had two tracks on Broadway and Lorenzen was driving outside of both. O’Fal-lon intersects Broadway. At that intersection Loren-zen turned to cross defendant’s- tracks, on a line making an acute angle with the rails, to go down 0 ’Fallon. He had got so far that his wagon was one-half over the track' the car was on when it was struck about the middle by the oncoming car and he was thrown off and instantly killed, the car stopping in a few feet. There is testimony that the car was about sixty-five to seventy-five feet away when the team got on the track.
The facts and circumstances indicating that the car’s rate of speed bore a causal connection to his *187death, plaintiff sought to prove by two eye witnesses, O’Longhlin and Carroll, that the car’s speed exceeded the ordinance limit. The testimony of Carroll we pnt to one side on this appeal. Because, whether it was admissible or not is immaterial in view of the farther fact that if O’Longhlin was admissible we onght not to disturb the order granting a new trial.
I. At the threshold lies this guiding and general proposition to quicken us, namely:
New Trial. Although the discretion of a trial court in granting a new trial is reviewable on appeal as the statutes read (R. S. 1909, see. 2038), yet that discretion will not be interfered with unless manifestly.abused below. Such discretion has been defined as a “judicial” one—i. e., a soimd discretion. It has also been defined as one to be exercised whenever in the judgment of the trial court an unfair advantage has been obtained at the expense of justice. It is a discretion appellate courts have encouraged trial courts in exercising to prevent a miscarriage of right, one we are reluctant to interfere with unless exercised capriciously, arbitrarily or improvidently, a discretion resting “mainly” and “peculiarly,” it has been said, with the trial judge. [Schmidt v. Railroad, 149 Mo. l. c. 282; Stetzler v. Railroad, 210 Mo. l. c. 711; Rodan v. Transit Co., 207 Mo. l. c. 406; McCarty v. Transit Co., 192 Mo. l. c. 401, and cases cited.]
Speed of Car: Expert: Teamster. II. As said, the turning question may be narrowed. This task we now undertake, viz.: The eye witness, O’Loughlin, stood hardby the intersection of O’Fallon and Broadway; he saw the oncoming car sixty-five or seventy-five feet away at the time Lorenzen was driving on the track; he watched the car and saw all there was to see of the collision. lie had been a teamster for many years on the streets of St. Louis; testified like a man of good sense and solid parts; was familiar *188with the running of street cars on defendant’s tracks on Broadway and other streets and had watched their rate of speed as they passed him while hauling. Indeed (as his testimony indicates) he was obliged to know how to estimate such speed to save himself in hauling on streets where such cars ran. His qualification to give an estimate of the speed, we think, was abundantly shown under the steadily maintained and liberal doctrine of our courts on that head.
The case calls for no new exposition of that doctrine; for in Stotler v. Railroad, 200 Mo. l. c. 123, et seq., the question is considered at length In Banc and unanimously ruled. (Q. v.) The authorities are there reviewed and the writer can add nothing more to what is there said. A later case, Mccreery v. Railroad, 221 Mo. l. c. 27, may be taken as authority for denying probative force to a mere “guess” on the part of a witness, but there is no note of discord in principle between the Stotler and McOreery cases.
Opinion Simultaneous With Accident. O’Loughlin being qualified to give an opinion, why was it excluded? Observe, his testimony was rejected on the ground that he formed no opinion, judgment or estimate instantaneously with the accident. A very few days later, on being inquired of for the first time, he then formed an opinion or estimate of the speed. A long, running, tri-lateral discussion between court and counsel on both sides is brought up, which it would serve no useful purpose to set forth in detail or summary, making it entirely clear that the only reason he was not allowed to give his opinion or estimate was as stated.
The actual question, then, shifts or narrows itself to this:
May a witness, otherwise qualified to give a speed opinion, testify to that opinion when he did not form it instantaneously with the event itself, but after-wards ?
*189We think the court erred in excluding the testimony on that ground, this because:
Metaphysical Distinctions. (a) To determine the admissibility of evidence by subtle distinctions and refinements, lurking in the convenient shade of psychology and metaphysics, is an experiment of questionable value in the everyday administration of the laws of a practical people. Too much metaphysics is bad in legal exposition. [Stauffer v. Railroad, 243 Mo. l. c. 325.] There is danger there and courts should sound at every step to see they are on solid ground.
(Note: On the theory of the rhyming adage, A little — to-wit, a very little — nonsense now and then, etc., I recall the facetious and rather sly definition of “mind” and “matter” laid at the door of a celebrated metaphysician, viz.: What is mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind. It serves to somewhat earmark the elusiveness and obscurity inherent in the subject.)
So much, by mere way of warning.
Opinion Evidence: Speed. (b) In the next place (and closer home) opinion evidence on speed is precisely of the same quality as opinion evidence on time, quantity, number, dimensions, height, distance or the like (vide, Lawson on Expert and Op. Ev., quoted in the Stotler case, supra, p. 123) and is admitted as evidence for the same reasons, viz., because, from the nature of the subject under investigation, no better evidence can be obtained or the facts cannot be otherwise presented to the tribunal.
-: Gathered From Observation. (c) Finally (and still closer to the point) opinion evidence gathers efficacy and wisdom by reference to the phenomena of everyday experience and observation. The sources of judgment on the admissibility of such evidence are, therefore, to be looked for in the homely illustrations of everyday life. Let us take some hypothetical cases of that sort by way of illustration:
*190(1) John is asked to give the height of his favorite tree in his father’s dooryard. Now, he has not seen that tree for many a day. He had never, that he remembered, formed an opinion of its height in his boyhood or since. In fact had never been asked the question before, or thought about its height in feet and inches. Is Ms estimate o.r opinion of the height of the tree of no value?
(2) Apply that same illustration to quantity or number. Mary, the maid, is asked by her mistress, Mrs. Wilkins Micawber, a week after the event, how many eggs and how much butter she borrowed from the neighbors across the way. The number and quantity had not interested Mary before, yet may she not give a fairly correct estimate on reconstructing the facts in her, mind, viz., that she used both in making five cakes by the Micawber family recipe for use at at dinner given by Wilkins Micawber to Heep, Copperfield et al.?
(3) It becomes material to know, subsequent to the event, the distance between A and B. Henry having formed no opinion at the time of the occurrence, may he not on a review in his mind of all the incidents give an estimate of the distance worth while?
Nay, is not an opinion (say, of the speed of a car at the time it killed a man) which is formed after the event in a moment of calmness of more substance than one formed instantaneously in a moment of intense excitement or when the mind was off guard and taken by surprise?
Conceding that impressions may be formed spontaneously (and simultaneously with the event) yet are all impressions formed that way? May not some good ones be the product of meditation, of deduction, of a review of known facts and recalled details ?
We see no good reason why, subject to the supreme test of cross-examination on the sources of his opinion, a witness may not give an opinion on the speed *191of a car formed a few days after lie saw its movement. Indeed, facts forming the trne basis of an opinion may 'have been observed at the time of the event and yet the conscious opinion itself may not be formed at the time, bnt be the later product of the judgment. To rule otherwise would be an innovation of no substantial value in jurisprudence, as we see it, and would likely be spurious psychology as well.
Accordingly the circuit court committed no error in granting a new trial in this case.
Appellant cites a case from Nebraska (Mathieson v. Railroad, 97 N. W. 243) which, on first blush, seems to run a little counter to the views expressed. But critically analyzed,'in view of the testimony there dealt with, we deem the case not an authority in support of ’the first ruling of the trial court in this case. The reasoning of a court and propositions ruled must be read in the dry light of the facts of the case and the issues on trial. [State ex rel. v. St. Louis, 241 Mo. l. c. 238, et seq.]
Formal Tender of Evidence: Material. III. It is argued by appellant’s counsel (and the record shows) that after the adverse ruling excluding the opinion, plaintiff made no formal tender of the evidence she expected the witness to give. That, in other words; the record d°es n0^ s^low the testimony excluded was material. Let us look to that. If the court had not granted a new .trial and plaintiff was here on appeal without any showing of what the witness would testify, the case would present a phase not before us at this time — a phase more than once ruled. This case is different. It is an appeal from an order granting a new trial and must be judged from- the viewpoint of the wise and wide discretion allowed to a trial judge in granting a new trial where he believes justice has suffered at his hands. The trial judge in *192this case thought so and we are asked to say he had no right to think so. We cannot very well rule that way.
But, aside from that view, the point is disallowed to appellant because this record does indicate what the testimony of O’Loughlin would he. In his voir dire preliminary to the question finally ruled out, it is shown that his opinion would he the car was running from fifteen to sixteen miles per hour. Not Only does that appear, but something more appears, viz., the whole trend of his examination, together with the ruling of the court and the objections of counsel, proceeded on the theory on all sides that his testimony would show a violation of the speed ordinance. Haying secured the exclusion of the testimony on that theory, it is too late to now insist that the record does nof show the excluded'testimony to he material.
On the whole record, the premises considered, the order granting a new trial should be affirmed and the cause .remanded to be proceeded with on the new trial awarded below. It is so ordered.
All concur.