47 S.W.2d 907 | Tex. App. | 1932
The commissioners' court of McLennan county, acting in the name of the state of Texas and in its behalf, presented to the judge of the county court at law, McLennan county, a petition for the condemnation for *908 highway purposes of certain land owned by appellant, Fred Acree. The land sought to be condemned was described therein by metes and bounds. The Federal Land Bank of Houston, a private corporation, and N.M. Gay were each alleged to hold a lien on said property. Commissioners were duly appointed to assess the value of the land sought to be taken and the damages, if any, resulting from such taking. Said commissioners qualified by taking the oath required by law. After due notice to both owner and lienholders, they held a hearing and made an award, assessing the value of the land taken at $2,049.25 and the damage resulting to the remainder of the tract not taken at $900. Said award was to appellant, Gay, and the Federal Land Bank jointly, and contained no provision for the distribution of the sums so awarded. The same was duly filed in said county court at law. Appellant, Fred Acree, being dissatisfied with the award of the commissioners, promptly filed objections thereto. Neither of said lienholders filed any objection to such award. No citation on the objections of appellant so filed was issued or served on either of said lienholders. Neither of them appeared or participated in the trial of this cause, but said Gay was called as a witness by appellant and testified in his behalf at such trial.
The jury, in response to special issues, found that the value of the 11.71 acres of land taken was $125 per acre, and that the remainder of the tract was not damaged by such taking. The court entered judgment on the verdict in favor of appellant, Gay, and the Federal Land Bank jointly for the sum of $1,463.75, and against them in favor of the state of Texas for the land taken, describing the same by metes and bounds. Said judgment, like the award of the commissioners, was a joint one and contained no provision for the disposition of the amount so recovered. Appellant filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and he thereupon perfected an appeal to this court.
Said Gay thereafter, within the time allowed by law, filed his petition and bond for writ of error, secured service on such petition, took out a transcript and filed the same in this court as a separate appeal. Thereafter this court, at the instance of the parties, entered an order consolidating said appeals.
Appellant, and plaintiff in error Gay both assign as error the action of the court in proceeding to hear and determine the issues arising on the objections of appellant to the award of the commissioners, without service of citation on said Gay and the Federal Land Bank. As hereinbefore, stated, the commissioners awarded to appellant, Gay, and said bank gross compensation for the land taken and for damages to the remainder of the tract in the sum of $2,949.256 Appellant, Acree, alone filed objections to said award. No citation on such objections was issued and served on either Gay or the bank. Neither of them entered an appearance in the trial of the case. The court, nevertheless, proceeded to trial on the issues raised by the pleadings of the state and appellant, and, in accordance with the findings of the jury thereon, entered judgment reducing the total compensation awarded to the sum of $1,473.65. Subdivision 6 of article 3266, Revised Statutes, provides, in substance, that, if either party shall be dissatisfied with the decision or award of the commissioners, he may file objections thereto, "and thereupon the adverse party shall be cited and the cause shall be tried and determined as in other civil causes in the county court." The service of such citation, unless service thereof be waived, is absolutely necessary to enable the court to hear and determine the cause. Fitzgerald v. City of Dallas (Tex.Civ.App.)
Appellant presents an assignment in which he complains of improper argument by counsel for appellee and of the refusal of *910
the court to permit him to introduce testimony rebutting the charge made therein. The testimony shows that the right of way condemned in this proceeding runs diagonally through appellant's tract of land, and that said tract is bounded on one side by Dutton street. Counsel, in the closing argument, stated to the jury that appellant Acree had refused to settle with appellee in connection with the widening of Dutton street and would be right back in court again trying to get $600 an acre for his land. Appellant's counsel objected to such statement because it was unsupported by any evidence and was highly prejudicial. He further requested that he be permitted to refute the same. Counsel for appellee then withdrew said statement and asked the jury not to consider the same. The court admonished the jury not to consider said statement for any purpose, but refused appellant's request to be allowed to refute the purported fact stated therein. There is no contention that such statement was supported by any testimony in the case. Such argument injected into the case a wholly irrelevant and prejudicial statement of fact, which statement remained wholly uncontradicted. The effect of the argument was to charge appellant with a covetous desire to obtain exorbitant compensation for the taking of his land. Such charge was reasonably calculated to prejudice him in the eyes of the jury as a litigant, as well as to discredit his testimony as a material witness in his own behalf. The argument complained of by appellant was improper and must work a reversal of the judgment if, under all the circumstances, there is any reasonable doubt of che harmful effect thereof. Whether there is such doubt is a question of law and not of fact. Bell v. Blackwell (Tex.Com.App.)
The other matters complained of by appellant will probably not arise in the same way, if at all, at a subsequent trial.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded as to all parties.
ALEXANDER, J., took no part in the consideration and disposition of this case.