JOHN BRUNO, APPELLEE, V. EDNA L. KRAMER, ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE OF HARRY EWING KRAMER, DECEASED, APPELLANT
No. 35570
Supreme Court of Nebraska
March 13, 1964
126 N.W.2d 885 | 176 Neb. 597
AFFIRMED.
Joseph H. McGroarty and Haney, Walsh & Wall, for appellant.
Heard before WHITE, C. J., CARTER, MESSMORE, YEAGER, SPENCER, BOSLAUGH, and BROWER, JJ.
WHITE, C. J.
This is an appeal from a judgment in a personal injury case arising out of an automobile accident on North Eleventh Street in Omaha, Nebraska. It originated as a claim against the estate of the decedent Kramer, who was killed in the accident involved. On appeal from county court, the trial of the claim was consolidated with the trial of the case of Bruno v. Gunnison Contractors, Inc., ante p. 462, 126 N. W. 2d 477, an original action in district court. Each case was separately docketed, separate pleadings were filed, a separate verdict by the jury was rendered, and came to this court on separate records, briefs, and arguments.
A full review of the facts as to the accident may be found in our former opinion in Bruno v. Gunnison Contractors, Inc., supra. We will only review the facts and issues necessary to fully understand the question present in this case. An area on the west side of North Eleventh Street in Omaha was torn up for sewer construction. Decedent Kramer, going south, turned to the left and east of a barricade warning of the obstructions, proceeded about 150 feet south of the barricade on the east side of North Eleventh Street, and ran head-on into the plaintiff who was going north on North Eleventh Street.
Error is assigned in the trial court‘s order consolidating the cases for trial. Plaintiff Bruno was permitted to testify, over objection raised under the dead man‘s statute,
Error is assigned because of misconduct of counsel in final argument. The record reveals that no motion for mistrial on account of the alleged misconduct of counsel was made by this defendant and, consequently, it is not before us for consideration.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
CARTER, YEAGER, and BROWER, JJ., dissenting.
In our opinion the dead man‘s statute is given too broad an application in Fincham v. Mueller, 166 Neb. 376, 89 N. W. 2d 137. We think the rule therein stated should be modified by giving a reasonable definition of the word “transaction” as used in
