275 Mass. 127 | Mass. | 1931
In argument to the jury the plaintiff’s counsel, assuming to quote from'the testimony, said: “Mr. Dangel arranged to have the title of the Atlantic Theatres property transferred back to the corporation; ... no stock of the Atlantic Company was then issued to any of these plaintiffs; . . . nothing but Melrose stock and bonds were issued; . . . the Melrose bonds were first mortgage bonds; and these were Mr. Dangel’s bonds he gave up, . . . the corporation did nothing to put these bonds in operation, . . . there is no evidence that they came from the corporation’s treasury. ‘I told him [the plaintiff FeinbergJ at the trial that Mr. Dangel was guilty of fraud’ . . . ‘they can’t restore to us what they took from us.’ The manipulations are all traced to Mr. Dangel’s office, and then he turns around and says after he gets their- property away from them, ‘these bonds that I gave you are worthless.’ . . . Mr. Dangel says he never countersigned a single bond, ... he took the authority to himself to control the entire corporation. ‘That is how Mr. Dangel ran this corporation. They put their money into his hands. The real man trying to evade responsibility is Dangel.’ ”
Counsel then read the attorney’s oath of office which is as follows: “I (repeat the name) solemnly swear that I will do no falsehood, nor consent to the doing of any in court; I will not wittingly or willingly promote or sue any false, groundless or unlawful suit, nor give aid or consent
At the colloquy between the judge and counsel for the defendant, which followed the argument of counsel for the plaintiffs, the judge, speaking in respect of the alleged statement, “I told him at the trial that Mr. Dangel was guilty of fraud,” said: “Mr. Whitman [plaintiff’s counsel] didn’t say that,” “he asked where he first got his informar tian that these bonds were illegally issued, and Mr. Dangel said, ‘I first got it from you, when you accused me of fraud.’ . . . He [Mr. Whitman] was simply quoting testimony that Mr. Dangel himself gave on the stand.” Of course the question whether counsel did or did not so state was for the jury. At the close of the argument the defendant’s counsel said to the presiding judge: “Now I am objecting to those portions of the argument and I am asking your Honor to instruct this jury on each one to' disregard them as not being proper and not compatible to the truth or to the evidence. “That Mr. Dangel has taken away this old man’s, this cripple’s money.’ The argument I claim is prejudicial, that they can’t be restored to their position.”
The judge did not instruct the jury to disregard any 0 portion of the argument, but instructed them: “It also happens in many cases, and may have happened in this case, that in arguing at the close of the evidence, counsel has quoted things as having been said or done by various witnesses. It is for you to say whether or not the evidence as quotéd is true. It is not what counsel says the evidence may have been. It is not what the court says the evidence
The reading of the attorney’s oath to the jury, and the direct or indirect appeal of the .argument of counsel for the plaintiff that its ethical standards of an attorney’s conduct should be adopted by them in determining what weight should be given the testimony of the witness Dangel, were manifestly prejudicial to the defendant and destructive of an impartial trial between party and party. The charge is clearly inadequate to overcome the natural dislike and prejudice which the reading of the oath and the argument of counsel would be likely to create in the minds of the jury toward the witness Dangel and his testimony. London v. Bay State Street Railway, 231 Mass. 480. Commonwealth v. Perry, 254 Mass. 520, 530. Commonwealth v. Cooper, 264 Mass. 368, 374. It is to be noted that Mr. Dangel was called as a witness by the plaintiffs, was not a party to the hearing on the issues that were framed to the jury, and that the bill of complaint had been dismissed as to him and the other defendants on the charges of fraud and misuse of corporate assets.
There is no question of law in the defendant’s exceptions to the admission or rejection of evidence, or in the refusal of the judge to give certain requested rulings and instructions, which is likely to arise upon a new trial of the issues as-framed. We therefore make no decision upon them.
• Exceptions sustained.