delivered the opinion- of the Court.
This is an action brought by appellee against appellant, to recover damages for a failure to use reasonable diligence to furnish a car by a certain time, for the shipment of stock from Duncanville to Indianapolis. The evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict, and the judgment must be affirmed unless the lower court committed such error of law as to prevent a fair and impartial trial of the issues by the jury.
The only error of law relied upon in the argument is the ruling of the court in permitting appellee to testify that the conductor of train ¡No. 83 said to appellee: “If they had let me go on, it wouldn’t have detained me over fifteen or twenty-five minutes; I am just as mad as you are about this delay.”
It appears from the evidence that the meeting place of two trains had been fixed at Duncanville, and that if this order had remained unchanged, the car intended for appellee would have been furnished him at the proper time; but that the meeting place was changed from Duncanville to Bobinson, by the train dispatcher, whereby a delay in furnishing the car occurred. To account for this change, ¡Nichols, appellant’s agent at Duncanville, was permitted to testify against appellee’s objection, that the change was made because the conductor of train ¡No. 83 had telegraphed the train dispatcher that it would take him thirty minutes to do his work at Bobinson, and that he could not pass the other train at Duncanville. This was hearsay, and clearly inadmissible; but the evidence, whether properly or improperly admitted, was before the jury at the instance of appellant, and appellant should not be heard to object to the proof of another statement made by the same conductor soon afterward, which was contradictory of the statement offered in evidence by appellant: As evidence in chief on the part of appellee, the statement of the conductor to appellee might have been objectionable under the law as laid down by G-reenleaf and Starkie, and as announced by the Supreme Court of this State. The declarations of an agent, not part of the res gestee, and merely narrative of a past occurrence, can not be received as proof of such occurrence. But the evidence objected to by appellant was offered in rebuttal and not in chief. Suppose the conductor (who did not testify in the case) had testified that the work at Robinson was such as to detain him for thirty minutes, and thereby render the passing of the other train at Duncan-ville an impossibility; could not a foundation have been laid for the impeachment of the conductor by asking him whether or not he had made to appellee, at a certain time and place, the statement to which appellant is now objecting, and could not this statement have been then introduced in evidence for the purpose of impeachment? But it may be said that the foundation was not laid. True; but why ? Because the conductor was not on the witness stand. Under such circumstances the lower court very properly permitted appellee to testify to the conductor’s statement, inasmuch as it contradicted his statement, as proved by hearsay evidence on the other side. If one fights with a club, he should not whimper because his opponent also makes use of a club.
It is worthy of observation that the only objection to this evidence in the record is that it is improper in rebuttal, which is an implied acknowledgment that it is proper evidence in chief. We think that the evidence is proper in rebuttal, if proper at all, and this disposes of the question. Where only a specific objection is made in the lower court, other objections should not be considered on appeal. The judgment is affirmed.