59 A.2d 496 | Md. | 1948
This case has been heard on motion to dismiss the appeal because appellant's brief and appendix do not properly present any question for review in accordance with the rules of this court. The case is an appeal by claimant from a judgment for employer and insurer, entered October 24, 1947, reversing an award, made by the State Industrial Accident Commission on June 17, 1947, of compensation to claimant at $10.00 per week for 300 weeks. Claimant was the mother of the employee, who was killed by an accident in the course of his employment on May 28, 1945. Two issues were submitted to the jury: Was claimant (1) partially or (2) wholly dependent on decedent for support at the time of his death. The jury answered both questions "No". The testimony was conflicting. The issues were clearly submitted to the jury in a charge to which no objections were made.
Until about 1941 decedent, who never married, supported claimant, who lived and still lives at Cambridge, Massachusetts. The testimony is in conflict as to whether after 1941 he supported her, either wholly or partly, until his death. About 1942 in Baltimore he began living with a married woman, who has two children. She lived with him, ostensibly as his wife under his name, until his death, and after his death collected group life insurance as his widow. Claimant testified that she was supported by decedent from 1941 until his death. Daughters of claimant testified that claimant received from him, or he sent her, money as late as 1944 or 1945. For employer and insurer his paramour testified that while they lived together he gave her his pay envelope or cashed his pay checks in her presence and turned over the money to her, she gave him a few dollars a week as he needed it and used the rest for rent and food and for herself and one or both of her children, and there was no money he could have sent to claimant. At times, when *603 he was not working, she worked and supported the household.
Appellant's brief states the questions presented as (1) whether a witness's testimony contrary to her previous testimony and flatly contradicted has any evidential value, (2) whether claimant is a dependent of decedent under the Workmen's Compensation Act, Code 1939, art. 101, § 1 et seq., and (3) whether the court should have granted claimant's motion for a directed verdict and her motion for judgment n.o.v. None of these questions is properly presented, if indeed they could be raised at all on this appeal. The first is a question for the jury, especially as to alleged conflict between testimony before the court and previous testimony before the commission.Florentine v. State,
Appellant's appendix sets out, without any explanatory context, two letters from the woman to one of decedent's sisters, dated December 3 and 8, 1945, i.e., *604
six months after his death. On cross-examination of the woman these letters were offered by appellant and excluded by the court. One contains, in a postscript, the statement, "Mike [decedent] was only working there a little bit more than a month. He had just come back to Baltimore and went to work". Appellant argues that this statement would have discredited the woman's testimony that they had lived together continuously for three years before his death. The lower court apparently saw no contradiction of her testimony in this statement. To find reversible error in this ruling, it would be necessary for us to find (a) contradiction of the woman's testimony and (b) abuse of discretion in excluding cross-examination on matters, irrelevant in themselves, admissible (if at all) only to discredit the witness. Appellant's brief indicates that the court allowed considerable latitude in cross-examination to discredit the woman. In this and other respects, the scope and extent of cross-examination is ordinarily within the trial court's discretion, reviewable only in case of abuse of this discretion.Marino v. State,
Rule 39, sec. 1 of this court provides that appellant's brief shall contain an appendix which "shall contain such parts of the record as he desires the Court to read." We have repeatedly held that this rule means just what it says (Strohecker v.Schumacher,
In the case at bar the transcript and appellant's appendix contain copies of proceedings in the woman's divorce case, not offered in evidence but filed in the lower court on January 10, 1948, i.e., two months after the judgment and the instant appeal. Rule 18 of this court provides that "it is not necessary for the record on appeal to be approved by the lower Court or the judge thereof." The parties must file in the lower court designations of "the portions of the record, proceedings and evidence" to be contained in the record on appeal. This rule is not designed to impose judicial duties on the clerk. We think, however, that the clerk might properly have refused to incorporate in the record on this appeal these divorce proceedings or any other palpably foreign matter which is not in any sense a "portion of the record, proceedings and evidence" in the instant case.
Appeal dismissed, with costs. *606