Court Opinion

ID: 8191459
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:14:29.379361+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:37.510666
License: Public Domain

The following opinion was filed June 17, 1914:
MaRshalu, J.
Questions raised by counsel which are not referred to in what follows have been examined and passed as inconsequential because either not involving any error at all, or any of prejudicial character.
Minor matters which constitute the res gestee of a major *176subject are things so closely connected therewith as to he substantially involved therein and to explain or illustrate it. Andrews v. United States C. Co. 154 Wis. 82, 142 N. W. 487. It follows, as counsel for appellant contends, that there must be a material major circumstance in order that there be' evidentiary res gestee, and that the latter are not, primarily, competent to prove the former.
Here, contrary to the contention of counsel, the substruc-tive element essential to give rise to illustrative features appeared. It was an injury, inflicted by physical violence, to the head of the deceased, resulting in his death. That was, clearly, the principal fact within the rule stated. Insurance Co. v. Mosley, 8 Wall. 397. The circumstantial evidence of that was, in view of the expert evidence, quite satisfactory. There were physical indications of an injury to the head of the deceased which were first noticeable several weeks before his death-and were progressive in manifestation up to the happening of that event. The autopsy which followed showed a recent rupture of a blood vessel under the table of the skull, the escape of blood, the formation of a blood clot on the brain and consequent complications, eventuating in death. There was believable expert evidence to the effect that the wound in the head was of some days’ or weeks’, more probably the latter, standing and, within reasonable probability, was inflicted at the time of the claimed happening thereof and was produced hy external violence. Any one of several circumstances might produce such an injury, but the evidentiary indications in the particular case pointed to external violence. There was conflicting evidence but fair room therein for the jury to have reached the conclusion that the deceased was wounded at the time he ceased working and complained, as he left his post, that he had been hurt by the lever.
So we reach the question of whether the evidence that the deceased declared, momentarily after he left his post, with a manner indicating pain in the head, that he had been hurt by *177the lever, was matter of res gestas. That occurred a few minutes after he was seen at his work in a normal condition and just after he deserted his place, holding his hand to his head indicating that he was suffering from pain therein.
There is no definite limitation as to time and circumstances by which to determine when a minor circumstance is involved in a major matter so as to illustrate and explain it. There is a dividing line, dependable upon the circumstances of each particular case, determinable by the court as matter of law. On one side the circumstance is relevant and competent and entitled to more or less weight according to the nature of the case. On the other side, it is mere hearsay and not competent. On which side it should be placed in any particular situation is matter of competency; therefore, as in any other such case, the decision in respect to it is unassailable except for manifest error. Emery v. State, 101 Wis. 627, 78 N. W. 145; Hupfer v. Nat. D. Co. 119 Wis. 417, 96 N. W. 809; Kavanaugh v. Wausau, 120 Wis. 611, 98 N. W. 550. If the trial judge reasonably concludes that the circumstance is within the field of res gestes, he is justified in admitting the evidence and leaving the weight of it to the jury. In the language of the writer, speaking for the court on another occasion :
“Since a minor circumstance cannot be properly said to be a part of the res gestee as to the major matter, unless it is so connected with the latter as to speak for itself, as it is said, indicating the character of the main fact, such minor circumstance, in order to fall within the field of res gestas, must necessarily be undesigned, and so must have an unbroken causal relation to the main subject of inquiry. At the point where that causal relation is so interrupted by time or other circumstances that what lies further on no longer appreciably illustrates the character of the main fact, is the boundary line between what is and what is not res gestee. There is no controlling rule as to the length of time between the happening of the main fact and that of the minor incident claimed to characterize the former, by means of which the validity of *178the claim in that regard can even be established prima facie, The time which is sufficient to break the chain under some circumstances would not be under others. Under some the time might be very brief and under others it might be considerable. When the claimed evidentiary circumstance is so far disassociated with the main fact as not to be appreciably considered an incident of it, it is mere hearsay, not res gestee ” Johnson v. State, 129 Wis. 146, 152, 108 N. W. 55.
It is evident from the foregoing that the evidence in question was proper. The citations amply illustratively support that. Andrews v. United States C. Co. 154 Wis. 82, 142 N. W. 487, is another apt illustration. There, momentarily after a person had been fatally shot in the presence of a second person, upon others coming upon the scene, one of the witnesses of the tragedy made declarations respecting the occurrence. Here there was not the time for reflection or opportunity and motive for making up a story, or circumstances of deliberate relation of a past transgression, which was said in the Johnson Case to render a matter too remote to be within the boundaries of res gestee. There were, on the contrary, pretty fair indications that the declaration was impulsive, voicing the cause of an existing circumstance which was so recent as to in effect include the minor incident.
Eully appreciating the rule that, in a case of this sort, recovery cannot properly rest upon mere conjecture but must be grounded on evidence fairly warranting a finding to a reasonable certainty, without going into the details of the evidence to demonstrate the soundness of our conclusion, we are constrained to say that, while no one saw the injury inflicted upon the deceased and there is no direct evidence of how the blow was struck, which the evidence tends to show was delivered upon his head, there are many circumstances pointing, quite persuasively, to the particular cause of the blow claimed. There is ample evidence that the levers were liable to unexpectedly fly up in such a way that such an injury as the one said to have been inflicted was within reasonable probabilities. There is no evidence of the deceased having been otherwise *179struck on the head. True, there was no affirmative evidence that he was not guilty of contributory negligence, but none was necessary. Presumably, in the absence of any evidence ’ to the contrary, he was in the exercise of ordinary care at the time he was hurt. That appellant was negligent in subjecting its employee to the danger created by the levers, if it were as serious as there is evidence tending to prove, does not seem to be denied. Certainly the jury was amply warranted in finding that the appliance deceased worked with was not reasonably safe. Appellant knew, or ought to have known, such condition, and we are constrained to hold, there is warrant in the evidence for the finding that such condition proximately caused the death of the intestate.
It is contended that the recovery for loss to the mother of the deceased is improper because the deceased was an illegitimate. It is useless to review the conflict of authority on this point. The policy of our written law is to give an illegitimate, as regards the mother, substantially the same status as a child born in lawful wedlock. That was the situation when the 'law as it now exists respecting recoveries for loss accruing to ancestors by the negligent killing of their children, was enacted. The legislature must have appreciated that in providing for a recovery for the benefit of the lineal ancestors in default of there being lineal descendants. Sec. 4256, Stats. The statute is general. It makes no discrimination between lineal ancestors of illegitimates and those of legitimates. The former have inheritable and descendible blood as to the mother. Secs. 22Y3, 22Y4. That is not so as to the father, especially in the absence of a statutory acknowledgment of paternity or legitimization by marriage. So while there is reason for éxcluding the father of an illegitimate from the privileges of the statute there is none as to the mother.
Questions as to the status of the maternal ancestor of an illegitimate in a case of this sort have been treated variously, as counsel for the parties concede; but as the subject is gov*180erned, by statute, judicially construed, we need not take time to refer to decisions elsewhere. The decision here must rest upon our' own statute, viewed in the light of the legislative purpose in enacting it.
The trial court evidently made a mistake in giving the instructions which might well have prejudicially confused and misled the jury. The infirmity is so obvious that the wonder is that it was not promptly called to the court’s attention. Probably the judge intended to decide against appellant on the contention that the mother of an illegitimate child is not within the privilege of the statute and to give, the limit of the recovery in the words of counsel’s second request, as a proviso to the one, that there could be no recovery at all. The first request was appropriate if the mother of deceased was not within the privilege of the statute, and likewise in case of the evidence not warranting a finding of pecuniary loss. By giving the two as separate sentences, the effect was to instruct both ways, — that there could be no recovery at all, and that there could be but not in excess of such sum of money as would measure the pecuniary benefits which, with reasonable certainty, the mother would have received from the deceased had he lived. It may be that the- part commencing with the word “unless” and covering the subject of recoverable loss, was read as a proviso to the part which, by itself, denied any light of recovery on the evidence, and that the reporter of the court made the mistake of uniting the two as we find them in the record. But let that be as it may, it is considered that no hurt was done. If the evidence warranted a recovery the standard by which to determine the amount was properly stated.
In case of a claim made by the ancestor under the statute there is no presumption, from the mere relationship of the parties, that the parent is a pecuniary loser by the wrongful termination of the child’s life, except for the period of minority. Therefore there can be no recovery for the period after minority in the absence of evidence showing, to a rea*181sonable certainty, snob loss, and, with some reasonable probability, the amount of it. Potter v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 21 Wis. 372; Wiltse v. Tilden, 77 Wis. 152, 46 N. W. 234; Tuteur v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 77 Wis. 505, 46 N. W. 897; Thompson v. Johnston Bros. Co. 86 Wis. 576, 57 N. W. 298.
The general nature of the evidence required in such a case as this is such as will indicate present or probable future dependence of the ancestor upon pecuniary assistance from the-child, competency and disposition to respond to parents’' needs, and the probable extent of such needs. As evidence in-such a case must, necessarily, point far into the future, it can never be otherwise than quite general and the result such fair-estimate as the judgment of the jury can reasonably make, keeping in view, as the circuit judge suggested, that compensation must be limited to only such as will measure the reasonable expectancy, as shown by the evidence, which the parent had at the time of the fatal event of pecuniary contributions by the child during the continuance of the joint lives, in view of the parent’s age, the need upon the one side, and the-competency and disposition on the other, having due regard to the habits, the previous accomplishments, the ability and disposition to work and earn money, the present possessions, the liability to have personal family needs, and all other circumstances bearing on the question.
In view of what has been said, is there any evidence in this-case to warrant the finding that the mother of the deceased lost the sum of $1,500, or any sum, by his death?
There was a general exception to the verdict and proper-motions made and exceptions to rulings to raise the question discussed at this point, though on the argument counsel only urged as ground of excessiveness, the illegitimacy of the deceased. However, it is proper to consider any other ground there may be, within the exceptions and evidence, and that, should be done where justice clearly demands it. This court’s duty is not limited by the reasons assigned for reversing or sustaining a decision complained of. It extends as far *182as the justice of the case, as shown by the record, requires. To see that justice prevails is the overshadoVing controlling function of the court. To effectuate that the court aims to always ignore technicalities, and often goes beyond the mere claims of counsel, avoids or corrects their mistakes and negli-gences and those of the trial court as well, and proceeds to a finality, often regardless of counsel’s concessions to the detriment of their clients, or their stipulations beyond their competency.
As indicated in the statement, the deceased was about thirty-seven years of age when he died. ITis habits were such that his expectancy of life was below normal though probably greater than that of the mother. Her expectancy was about sixteen years. The deceased commonly used all his earnings for his own support and pleasure. He had no accumulations and was accustomed to abandon his work and indulge in dissipation for a considerable period after each pay day and even'to neglect paying his board bills. His mother, as late as about a year before he died, tried to have his employer aid her in recovering out of his wages compensation for her having expended money to pay his passage to this country. She was in good health and had a large family of sons and daughters who were living with or near her, all of adult age, or nearly so, and in good health. Four of her children, three sons and a daughter, lived with her. Her husband was somewhat infirm but able to do light work. There is an absence of evidence that she needed any assistance from the deceased, or expected any, or that he was competent or disposed to furnish any, except she said: “He would bring me money when he had it. He would give me some every month or so. I did not keep any account of how much he gave me, $5 or $10 at a time. I most always asked him for money. When he had it, why, he gave it to me.” That needs to be considered in connection with all other evidence, the fact that there is no corroboration of it and that she endeavored, as before stated, only about a year before her son *183died to have his employer aid her in recovering ont of his wages his passage money to this country; that the times when the contributions were made were quite remote and could not be remembered with any definiteness as to frequency, time, or amount.
Now how could a jury conclude from the basis stated, to a reasonable certainty, that the death of the deceased caused a pecuniary loss to his mother of a present value of $150 per year or an equivalent of about $12 per month during her natural life ? We are constrained to hold that there is no such basis. There is little or no room in the evidence for holding that deceased was competent or disposed to contribute to his mother’s support, or that she was in need thereof, or had any reasonable ground to expect pecuniary benefit from him of any substantial amount. It does not seem that the jury comprehended the court’s instructions in respect to the matter. The situation shown by the evidence hardly seems favorable enough to warrant more than a belief in mere possibility that, had the deceased lived, he might have been of pecuniary assistance to his mother. Such recoveries must have a more substantial basis than that to rest upon. Therefore, we are constrained to hold that it would be unjust to appellant to burden it with any recovery for loss of pecuniary benefits to the mother of deceased attributable to its fault.
By the Court. — The judgment on the cause of action for recoverable loss under the statute, sec. 4256, is reversed, and the judgment for damages caused to the deceased is affirmed. The record is remanded to the circuit court with directions to dismiss without costs as to the cause of action under the statute. No costs are allowed to either party in this court, except cleric’s fees which are awarded to appellant.
Each party moved for a rehearing. The motions were denied on October 6, 1914, without costs except that defendant was required to pay the cleric’s fees.