This appeal arises out of a third-party damage suit in which the Appellant prevailed below on the issue of liability. The damages awarded by the jury, however, were less than Apрellant had previously received under workmen’s compensation insurance. As the insurer was entitled under law to reimbursement up to and including the amount of its insurance payment, the Appellant here received nothing by virtue of the general jury verdict. His assignments of error, therefore, relate to the issue of damages.
Appellant was injured on or abоut November 5, 1964, on U. S. Highway 69 in Hardin County, Texas. Appellant was driving a truck-trailer vehicle which Ap-pellee, an out of state corporation, had leased to Appellant’s employer. The accident and injury resulted from a jackknifing of the trailer and the truck after Appellant was forced to apply the brakes of the trailer. The Appellаnt claimed below and the jury found that the Appellee failed to properly repair the brakes although it knew that the brakes were faulty and was obligated under the leasе agreement to repair them.
Appellant here claims that 1) the trial court erred in empaneling prospective jurors which were not chosen by the jury commissioner in accordance with federal law as defined by recent case authorities, 2) the trial court erred in failing to allow full disclosure of the Appellant’s Workmen’s Compensatiоn claim involving the same accident as an exception to the general rule in Texas, 3) alternatively, the trial court erred in allowing defense counsel to read from а *877 portion of Appellant’s deposition in the workmen’s compensation case, and 4) the trial court erred in allowing a highway patrolman to testify as to Appellant’s speed at the time of the accident.
I.
Appellant relies principally on this Court’s recent case of Rabinowitz et al. v. United States, 5 Cir.,
The principle asserted is that a federal jury should be “a cross-section of the community and truly representative of it.” Glasser v. United States,
Appellant recognizes that Rabinowitz and Brooks were criminal cases that concerned the impermissible exclusion or inclusion of a particular race. He argues by analogy that Rabinowitz and Brooks control in situations of economic classes as well as race.
As a determinative issue in this case, this serious and far-reaching question is not properly and adequately presented.
The record reflects that the only effort by Appellant to raise the issuе of the general manner of selecting jurors prior to his Motion for New Trial occurred “in chambers.” This is shown in the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law filed by the Trial Judge; the inference frоm this Court entry in light of the silence of the record is that the objection as made there was oral. It is not denied that this objection in chambers was not made in the presence of Appellee’s counsel. The eventual Motion for New Trial was over-ruled. The Motion did spell out in some detail the economic or employment status of the jurors that served and the circumstances which allegedly operated to exclude or minimize prospective jurors of a lower economic status. Such post-trial allegatiоns standing alone do not, however, constitute reviewable evidence before this Court.
In the Trial Court’s entry constituting its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law a statement on the manner оf selecting a federal jury panel in the Beaumont Division of the Eastern District of Texas is included. The Trial Court’s entry reads, inter alia,
“* * * The Jury Commission followed Title 28, Sections 1861, 1862 and 1864, U.S.C. and the key-man system was used. When lists of prospective jurors were received from key-men, the jury Commissioner and the Clerk of this Court mailed to each prospective juror a questionnaire approved by the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. Upon return of the questionnaires to the Jury Commission, same were examined by the Commissioner and the Clerk and only those questionnaires reflecting disqualification or exemption under either Section 1861 or Section 1862 were not used. Jury cards were made from those questionnaires of jurors seleсted by the Commission for placing in the jury wheel. When cards were completed, the Jury Commissioner and the Clerk placed cards in the jury wheel, alternately. When Order was receivеd by the Jury Commission from the Court, the Jury Commission selected a jury panel from this wheel by drawing from such wheel by the Commissioner and the Clerk, alternately, the number of names designated in the Court’s order. This group of jurors constituted the panel to try *878 jury cases and these jurors were drawn in the manner prescribed under Title 28, Section 1864, U.S.C.”
This proof of record which is in pri-ma facie compliance with the controlling federal statutes does not bring instant case within the proscription of Rabino-witz. This is so even assuming arguendo the strict application of that authority to the economic-status-of-jurors question in civil litigation.
Rule 7(b) (1), Federal Rules оf Civil Procedure, provides, inter alia,
“An application to the court for an order shall be by motion which, unless made during a hearing or trial, shall be made in writing, shall state with particularity the grounds therefor, and shall set forth the relief or order sought. * * *”
A challenge to the entire jury panel, even „if otherwise properly presented, is untimely and impermissible if it is brought on after commеncement of the trial. Frazier v. United States,
II.
1. Appellant urges an exception to the general rule in Texas, which is too fundamental to require citation of authorities, that the question of insurance coverage cannot be raised before a jury in a personal injury action. The general principle applies with equal force in respect to workmеn’s compensation benefits. Myers v. Thomas,
2. Appellant’s remaining contentions, evidentiary in nature, point to no error warranting reversal of the judgment below. That Appellee’s defense counsel should be permitted to read from a deposition of Appellant’s in the previous workmen’s compensatiоn proceeding, in the circumstances and in the manner it was done, is supported by the rule permitting impeachment by prior inconsistent statements. Sawyer v. Willis, Tex.Civ.App.,
The opinion evidence of the highway patrolman as to the speed of the vehicle prior to impact, to which Appellant here objects, was in fact brought out by his own trial counsel on cross-examination. Appellant’s cited case of Salem v. State, Tex.Cr.App,,
The judgment below is affirmed.
