210 S.W. 247 | Tex. App. | 1919
V. J. Vick sued Frank Andrews, as receiver of the St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Railway Company, to recover damages for personal injuries which he sustained on February 9, 1914, while engaged as an employé of such receiver in carrying, with five coworkmen, a heavy end sill, alleging that while he was so engaged he slipped on a piece of carbon, or other obstructing material, and fell, and that such end sill fell on him. Negligence was charged in the following respects: (1) In failing to cause or permit said end sill to be carried on a push car or cart; (2) in causing or permitting an insufficient number of inen to carry such sill; (3) in causing or permitting said carbon or other obstructing material to be and remain in the pathway of such carriage, whereby the place was made not reasonably safe for the work.
The plaintiff on November 7, 1916, amended, and made the St. Louis, Brownsville & Mexico Railway Company a defendant, alleging that since plaintiff’s injury the property held by the receiver had been, by order of the court in which the receivership was pending, turned back to said company subject to the assumption by it of all obligations of the receiver.
The defendants answered by general demurrer, general denial, plea of assumed risk, and contributory negligence.
A judgment in favor of plaintiff against both defendants for $5,000, directing execution against the company alone, was entered upon the verdict^ returned by the jury in answer to special issues submitted. The company alone appealed.
The sixth' seventh, and eighth assignments complain of the failure to submit special issues. The statements contain no testimony which would call for the submission of such issues. As briefed, the assignments present no error and are overruled.
A motion has been filed to strike out the bill of exceptions which relates to misconduct of the jury on the ground that it was not filed during term time, and in support of the motion the case of Smith v. Texas Power I & Light Co., 206 S. W. 119, is cited, which | ' sustains the contention, and follows many cases by the Court of Criminal Appeals.
This court has heretofore considered bills of exception of this kind filed after term time, and, although we have given careful consideration to the opinions in the cases relied on, we are still of the opinion that the bill of exceptions should be considered. It is true that neither article 837, Code Cr. Proc., relating to new trials for misconduct in criminal cases, nor Rev. St. 1911, art. 2021, relating to misconduct in civil cases, contains any provision for making the testimony taken on such a hearing a part of the record; so other statutes must be examined to ascertain how such a record is to be made. We respectfully submit that the matter under investigation in all cases has been the construction of statutes relating to bills of exceptions and statements of fact, and that there can be no merit in the suggestion submitted in the Smith v. Power Case, to the-effect that the enactment of a statute permitting a new trial in civil cases for misconduct carried with it in any way a construction relating to the time for filing bills of exception and statements of fact.
In the case of Black v. State, 41 Tex. Cr. R. 185, 53 S. W. 116, the case referred to in all subsequent cases on the subject, it was held that the language in article 1379 (R. S. 1895), referred to in the opinion as article 1377, the number under a previous revision, to the effect that, “after the trial of any case, either party may make out a written statement of the facts given in evidence on the trial,” referred “exclusively to the statement of facts adduced on the trial of the case itself,” and had no application to issues of fact formed on grounds set up in the motion for a new trial. The case was decided October 25, 1809. At that time there was a statute (article 1381, R. S. 1895) which provided for an order allowing not exceeding 10 days after adjournment in which to file a statement of facts, but there was no provision for filing bills of exception after term time. Article 1365, R. S. 1895, provided that “it shall be the duty of the party taking any bill of exceptions to reduce the same to writing, and present the same to the judge for his allowance and signature during the term and within ten days after the conclusion of the trial.” In the case of Railway v. Joachimi, 58 Tex. 454, it was held that the trial was not concluded under said statute until the motion for new trial was overruled; that “as long as the case stands opon for the consideration of. the court at the term during which the trial occurs, it cannot be considered as concluded.” This decision was approved in Palmo v. Slayden & Co., 100 Tex. 13, 92 S. W). 796. These cases indicate that it could plausibly have been held that testimony taken on a motion for new trial could properly be embraced in “a statement of the facts given in evidence on the trial.” '
“These matters must be made of record during the term of court; there is no statute authorizing such matters to be perpetuated in papers filed subsequent to the term.”
The fact that such language was used at a time when there was no statute permitting the filing of bills of exception after term time and in connection with a holding that the proper way to perpetuate the testimony was by bill of exceptions was not commented on, nor explanation offered why it would apply after statutes had been enacted allowing 30 days after term time in which to file bills of exception. In the Bailey Case the court quoted from section 7, Acts 31st Leg. c. 39 (1st Ex. Sess.), as follows:
“When an appeal is taken from the judgment rendered in any cause in any district or county court, the parties to the suit shall be entitled to and they are hereby granted 30 days after the day of adjournment of court in which to prepare or cause to be prepared and to file a statement of facts and bills of er-option.”
The court then said:
“It is thus seen that all which relates to filing bills of exception and statements of fact is in the same section and is upon the same footing.”
It then quotes from the Black Case. It is evident that the language quoted places “bills of exception” upon the same footing, with respect to time of filing, with the statement of facts containing the evidence taken on the trial proper, and not on the same footing with statements of fact containing evidence not taken on the trial,,but on the hearing of a motion for new trial. In all subsequent decisions, so far as we have been able to ascertain, the question is treated as settled in accordance with the holding in said two cases.
Under our liberal practice it has been held that a statement of facts may serve the purpose of a bill of exceptions, but the bill of exceptions cannot serve the purpose of the statement of facts. Roundtree v. Galveston, 42 Tex. 623; Stephens v. Herron, 99 Tex. 67, 87 S. W. 326. This idea has been embraced in rule 56 for district and county courts (142 S. W. xxi), as to evidence admitted over objection, and it appears that such rule has not been revised since the statute was changed with respect to the time for filing bills of exception.
The theory appears to be that, there being no form prescribed for a bill of exceptions, the authentication incident to approval of a statement of facts includes the verification essential to make a valid bill of exceptions. Our courts, in view of this, have not been disposed to quibble over whether testimony taken on the hearing of a motion for new trial is perpetuated by means of a statement of facts or a bill of exceptions, always bearing in mind, however, that if a statement of facts is to answer the purpose of a bill of exceptions, it must be filed within the time prescribed for filing bills of exception. It is true that at the time the courts established this doctrine and rule 56 was enunciated the statement of facts, like the bills of exception, was copied into the transcript, but the courts have apparently considered this unimportant, and still hold that the statement of facts may embrace bills of exception.
We have therefore deemed it necessary to consider the motion on its merits. We regret that we are unable to agree with the Court of Criminal Appeals and the Court of Civil Appeals of the Seventh District on the question,. but, believing that the practice heretofore pursued by this court is correct, it is proper that we should adhere thereto, even though by so doing a conflict in decisions results. The motion to strike out the bill of exceptions is overruled.
“Just like I stated before, you couldn’t help but keep that before you, the attorney’s fees; at least, it came up with me.”
There can be no doubt that the matter of attorney’s fees was injected into the minds of the jurors, that it was done deliberately to accomplish a certain purpose, and that the purpose was actually accomplished. The testimony of Sims and Muil creates in our minds a conviction that they were actually influenced by the discussion of attorney’s fees to agree to the verdict returned in the case. Muil’s statement that he believed he would have agreed to $5,000 anyway is only important as a circumstance to be considered in connection with his other testimony on the issue whether he was influenced by the improper discussion, and his testimony as a whole leaves no doubt on that issue in our minds. His belief concerning what he would have done had no discussion taken place cannot make the verdict a good one. A new trial should have been granted. We have heretofore had occasion to consider the effect of
The judgment will be affirmed, provided a remittitur of one-half thereof is filed within 15 days; otherwise it will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
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