93 S.E. 2 | S.C. | 1917
Lead Opinion
July 3, 1917. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action for damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the wrongful acts of the defendant.
This statement appears in the record:
"The issues made by the pleadings were whether the plaintiff's injuries were due to the defendant's negligence in failing to provide and maintain a safe place for the plaintiff to work in, or whether the plaintiff's injuries were due to his own contributory negligence in failing to observe the rules which had been made for his safety, or whether the plaintiff's injuries were due to his contributory negligence in failing to guard against the danger alleged in the complaint (which will be reported), and whether the danger to which the injuries of the plaintiff were due was one of the dangers which the plaintiff had voluntarily assumed." *390
The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $2,500, and the defendant appealed.
The first exception is as follows:
"In that his Honor held and ruled that evidence relative to the plaintiff's having contracted the disease of pleurisy on account of the injury complained of in the complaint herein was competent and admissible, and admitted such evidence over the objection of the defendant; whereas, his Honor should have held and ruled that, under the pleadings herein, the plaintiff should have been confined to the disease and injuries specified in the complaint, and evidence relative to pleurisy should have been excluded."
The appellant's attorneys do not contend that they were taken by surprise.
Section 224 of the Code provides that the Court may allow an amendment when it does not change substantially the claim or defense by conforming the pleading or proceeding to the facts proved.
The ruling of his Honor, the Circuit Judge, was intended to give the plaintiff the benefit of this section; and the appellant had failed to show wherein there was error prejudicial to its rights.
The second and third exceptions are as follows:
"In that his Honor held and ruled, over the objection of the defendant, that one of the attorneys for the plaintiff had the right to state to a witness that another witness had testified to certain matters and permitted the attorney so to do, when, in fact, the other witness had not so testified, whereas his Honor should have held that such a form of examination was inadmissible.
"In that his Honor permitted one of the attorneys for the plaintiff to put to a witness questions which assumed that certain matters had been testified to by another witness, when in fact such matters had not been so testified to, *391 whereas his Honor should have held that such a form of examination was inadmissible."
The record contains the following statement showing the manner in which these questions arose:
"John Love, being duly sworn, says: (Direct examination irrelevant.)
"Mr. Spigner cross-examining, the relevant portions of the testimony being as follows:
"Q. Mr. Boyd testified when anything went wrong Mr. Prince would report it to you, and your business was to look after the rooms and keep them in shape, and keep things out of his way; is that true? A. Yes, sir. Mr. Belser: I don't know counsel has any right to tell the witness in this case what Mr. Boyd testified. The Court: He has a right to call his attention to what the witness said. Mr. Belser: The witness does not know. The Court: I don't know either. Mr. Belser: He has got no right to state what Mr. Boyd said. The Court: I think he has the right to tell him what a witness said. Go ahead, Mr. Spigner. Mr. Spigner: That being the fact, your business was to keep things in shape and make the place reasonably safe for him? A. Yes, sir."
The syllabus in the case of State v. Taylor,
"On cross-examination of a witness, where all have been excluded, it is not error for counsel to give the witness an incorrect statement of what another witness on same side has sworn to, with a view to test the correctness of the memory or honesty of the witness."
In the case just mentioned, however, the facts did not render it necessary for the Court to decide whether the same rule was applicable, when it was the intention of the attorney to state the facts incorrectly.
In a note to section 780 of 1 Wigmore on Evidence we find the following quotation from Mr. Joseph Chitty, Practice *392 of the Law (2d ed.), 111, 901, which states the rule correctly:
"It is an established rule as regards cross-examination that a counsel has no right, even in order to detect or catch a witness in a falsity, falsely to assume or pretend that the witness had previously sworn or stated differently to the fact, or that a matter had previously been proved when it had not. Indeed, if such attempts were tolerated, the English bar would soon be debased below the most inferior of society."
It is shown, however, by the following statement in the argument of the appellant's attorneys that there was no intention to misquote Boyd's testimony:
"While, of course, there is no attempt or purpose to charge Mr. Spigner with having intentionally misquoted the testimony, still it must be noted from the standpoint of the defendant the effect was equally disastrous, even though the misquotation was purely unintentional."
It thus clearly appears that there was not an intentional misquotation on the part of the plaintiff's attorney. Furthermore, the statement of Boyd's testimony by Mr. Spigner, was substantially correct.
The next exception is as follows:
"In that his Honor held and charged the jury that the defendant, as employer, was bound to provide a reasonably safe place for the plaintiff, as employee, to work in." whereas, his Honor should have held and charged the jury that the defendant, as employer, was bound only to exercise reasonable care to provide a reasonably safe place for the plaintiff, as employee, to work in."
It is only necessary to cite the following cases to show that this exception cannot be sustained: Branch v. Railway,
Judgment affirmed.
MESSRS. JUSTICES WATTS, FRASER and GAGE concur in the opinion of the Court.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the disposition of all the exceptions, except the first, and concur in overruling that on the ground that the testimony objected to was admissible under the allegation of injury in the fourth paragraph and of its consequences in the sixth paragraph of the complaint. Youngblood v. RailroadCo.,