Opinion op the Court by
Judge LassingAffirming.
This is the second appeal of tjiis case. The former opinion in which the facts are set ont in detail is found in 121 Ky. 526, 89 S. W. 530, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 499, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 375.
Upon a retrial plaintiff recovered a judgment for $6,500, and the defendant company seeks a reversal of this judgment primarily upon two .grounds: First, That the trial court erred, to its prejudice, in refusing to permit an amended answer to he filed, in which, for the purpose of securing the closing argument, the defendant company admitted that the injuries complained of by the plaintiff, if any, were the direct and natural result of the gross negligence of the company, and further admitted that plaintiff had been damaged and offered to confess judgment in *486satisfaction of such, damages in the sum of $300; and, for the further reasons, that the trial court erred in permitting the witness Shegogg to testify to a conversation he had with the engineer, Robert Williams, about five minutes after the accident occurred, in which said Williams told the witness that the collision was caused by his failure to read his time card right. Appellant insists that had the trial court permitted the amended pleading to be filed it would have eliminated from the case every question save the extent of appellee’s injury and the assessment of damages therefor; that the evidence brought on the former trial showed conclusively that the accident was due to the gross negligence and carelessness of the employes of the appellant company; that, knowing that the evidence must be the same, the amendment was prepared- and offered in good faith, and that it was a substantial error highly prejudicial to the rights of appellant for the court to refuse to permit it to be filed. Section 134 of the Civil Code of Practice provides that: “Thfe cou-rt may, at any time, in furtherance of justice, on such terms as may be proper, cause or permit a'pleading or proceeding to be amended,” etc. Under this section of the Code the trial court would have been warranted in permitting the- amended answer to be filed had he, exercising a. sound discretion, been of the opinion that to permit same to be filed would have been in furtherance of justice. In the case of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company v. Ritter’s Adm’r, 13 Ky. Law Rep. 44, it is said: ‘ ‘ The defendant having made an issue which confessedly gave to plaintiff the com eluding argument to the jury, and earnestly fought the issue before the jury upon several trials, the court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to allow the *487defendant to file an amended answer abandoning this issue for the mere purpose of getting the concluding argument to the jury.” In the case before us appellant admits that the sole object, aim, and purpose had in offering to file the amended answer was to get the burden. On a former trial the pleadings had been completed, the issues made up, and, when so made, the burden was upon the plaintiff. The case had been tried out under the issues as thus presented, and we do not think that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to permit the amendment to be filed. Appellant insists that upon the former trial the pleadings had been so drawn by it, under the rulings of this court as they were then understood, as to warrant the trial court in holding that it had the burden, and hence the right, to make the closing argument, and that, in offering to file the amended answei. it was endeavoring to conform to the rulings of this court as laid down in the case of the Southern Railroad Company in Kentucky v. Steele, 90 S. W. 548, 28 Ky. Law Rep. 764; that the trial court, upon being informed that the amendment sought to be filed to make the pleading conform to the requirements of the rule as laid down in the Steele case, supra, should have permitted -it to be filed. To this reasoning we cannot agree. It is never the duty of the trial court to permit an amendment to be filed, save when, in the exercise of a sound discretion, the ends of justice will be furthered thereby. The better practice would be to hold that after the pleadings have been made up it would not be in furtherance of justice to permit an amendment to be filed for the sole purpose of shifting the burden to the party seeking- to be benefited thereby and get the closing argument to the jury.
*488As to whether or not the trial court erred to the prejudice of appellant in permitting the witness Shegogg to detail a conversation which he had with the engineer Williams almost immediately after the accident, a question fraught with no little difficulty is presented. If this conversation was so closely connected and identified with the accident that it may he properly considered to form a part of the res gestae, then the trial court did not err in permitting it to go to the jury. On the other hand, if it was not so intimately connected with the accident as to form a part of the res gestae, it should not have gone to the jury, and the trial court erred. In the case of Hermes v. Chicago, etc., Railroad Co., 80 Wis. 590, 50 N. W. 584, 27 Am. St. Rep. 69, “res gestae” is defined as meaning the “circumstances, facts and declarations which grow out of the main fact, contemporaneous with it, and serve to illustrate its character.” And in the case of Coffin v. Bradbury, 3 Idaho (Hash.) 770, 35 Pac. 715, 95 Am. St. Rep. 37, it is said: “Time is not necessarily a controlling element, or principle in the matter of res gestae, and declarations made under circumstances to warrant the court in presuming that they grew out of the litigated issue and illustrate the true character of the transaction, and were dependent upon it, were not designedly made or devised, for a self-preserving purpose, are evidentiary facts, and not within the rule applicable to hearsay evidence. Such declarations are admissible, although not made at the exact time of the occurrence of the principal fact in issue. ’ ’ In the case of Butler v. Manhattan Railway Company, 143 N. Y. 417, 38 N. E. 454, 26 L. R. A. 46, 42 Am. St. Rep. 738, the court held that an insulting remark made by a. brakeman' immediately after inflicting an injury upon • a *489passenger, by his neglect, is not admissible against his employer unless calculated to unfold or qualify the principal act. In the case of Leahey v. Cass Avenue, etc., Railway Company, 97 Mo. 165, 10 S. W. 58, 10 Am. St. Rep. 300, it was held that a declaration to be a part of the res gestee need not be coincident in point of time with the main fact to be proven. It is sufficient if the two are so nearly connected that the declaration, in the ordinary course of events, can be said to be the spontaneous exclamation of the real cause, or the subsequent declaration and the main fact at issue, taken together, form a continuous transaction, then the declaration is admissible, but a mere subsequent declaration is not of itself a sufficiently connecting circumstance to make it admissible. In the case of Keefer v. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, 201 Pa. Stats., 448, 51 Atl. 366, 88 Am. St. Rep. 822, it was held that “no fixed time or distance from the main occurrence can be established as a rule to determine what shall be part of the res geste. Each case must necessarily depend on its own circumstances to determine whether the facts offered are really a part of the same continuous transaction. ’ ’ This seems to us to be the sound rule. It must be determined from the facts and circumstances surrounding each particular case as to whether or not, statements made after the happening of the event are to be considered a part of the res geste. In the case of Floyd v. Paducah Railway & Light Company, 64 S. W. 653, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 1077, this court held that the declaration of a motorman made at the place of the collision a few minutes after it occurred, to the effect that he had seen plaintiff for 150 yards, and that he 'made no effort to apply the brakes until the collision was about to occur, was admissible as *490a part of the res geste, as the declaration grew out of the transaction and formed a part thereof. Applying this rule to the case before us, the declaration of the engineer, Williams,-made in not less than five minutes after the accident to the first person, so far as the record shows, who got to him, while he was lying upon the bank within a few feet of the wreck, may properly be considered a part of the res gestae, and, being such, the trial court did not err in permitting it to go to the. jury.
We are further of opinion that appellant was not prejudiced because of the introduction of this testimony, for the reason that it is practically conceded by the pleadings and other proof in this case that the accident complained of was due to the fact that those in charge of the engine which moved out on to the track, one of them being the engineer, Williams, had make a mitsake in reading their time card, and that because of this mistake, and due solely to it, the accident occurred. This being true, the testimony as to what the engineer, Williams, had said upon this point, was merely cumulative.
Appellant also complains that the court should have defined gross negligence to be the absence of slight care, and that this instruction should have been given in lieu of instruction No. 2; but it is a. sufficient answer to this objection to say that the court upon the last trial gave to. the jury the same instruction upon this point as was given upon the former trial. Hence instruction No. 2 was, under the oft repeated rule of this court, the law of this case upon that point.
There was a sharp conflict in the testimony.as to the extent of plaintiff’s injuries. This question was submitted to a properly instructed jury, and, as we find no error in the record prejudicial to the substantial rights of appellant, the judgment is affirmed.