17 Tex. 62 | Tex. | 1856
Two grounds of error are assigned, 1st. The improper exclusion of evidence; 2nd. The refusal of a new trial.
The answer of the witness to the 5th interrogatory was excluded, it seems, on account of the generality and want of relevancy of the question ; and the succeeding answers to the 11th inclusive, were also excluded because they were based on the 5th. The force of the objection to the deposition is not
A part of the answer to the twelfth interrogatory was excluded, because irrelevant to the issue. But it is not perceived why it was so held. It was averred in the answer, that, after the land became vacant, by reason of the failure of the plaintiff to return the field notes, he, the plaintiff, located another certificate upon the land. This averment the answer of the witness certainly conduced to prove ; and it cannot be doubted that it was a material fact, upon the question of damages.. A part only of the answer of the witness to this interrogatory is given : but that which is given appears to us to have been erroneously excluded. It would have been more satisfactory if the entire answers of the witness had been copied into the record. The bearing of the deposition might then have appeared in a very different light. But from what appears of the testimony of the witness in the statement of facts, and the part of his answer to the twelfth interrogatory, in the bill of exceptions, it seems difficult to avoid the conclusion that the" Court erred in excluding his testimony.
In considering- the remaining error assigned, the refusal of the Court to grant a new trial, it is to be observed, that the motion for a new trial does not question the general sufficiency
Reversed and remanded.