No. 3087. | Tex. App. | Jun 11, 1925

* Writ of error dismissed October 5, 1925. *225 We have considered all of the many contentions presented in appellant's brief, and think none of them should be sustained.

While untenable objections were urged in the court below, and are urged here to the form of issues submitted to the jury, it is not claimed that the findings on the issues did not warrant the judgment rendered. The contention is that the findings were contrary to and not supported by the testimony. It is true, perhaps, that the findings, or some of them at least, were contrary to testimony appellant relied upon, but we think all of them were in harmony with, and sufficiently supported by, testimony appellee relied upon, and which the jury had a right to believe.

Over appellant's objection on the ground that it was hearsay, the court permitted appellee, as a witness, to testify that the physician (Dr. Swofford) he asked to treat him after he was injured reminded him that he was "a Frisco man," and had his "hospital and doctor's fees paid at the Frisco Hospital," and then advised him to go to that hospital "and have an operation." The testimony plainly, we think, was not subject to the objection urged to it. And as plainly, we think, the court below did not err when, over appellant's objection, on the ground that it was "the opinion and conclusion of a non-expert witness," he permitted appellee's wife to testify that appellee "appeared to be very healthy" when she married him (about a year before the accident occurred), and that he "appeared to suffer pain frequently," and "great pain at time," after he sustained the injury complained of. The rule is that "a non-expert witness may give his opinion on questions of apparent conditions of body or mind, sickness, health," etc. Cunningham v. Neal, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 613" court="Tex. App." date_filed="1908-03-24" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/cunningham-v-neal-3955946?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3955946">49 Tex. Civ. App. 613,109 S.W. 455" court="Tex. App." date_filed="1908-03-24" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/cunningham-v-neal-3955946?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="3955946">109 S.W. 455.

It appears from a bill of exceptions in the record that at the trial appellant had a motor in court similar to the one appellee was using at the time he was injured, and, while appellee was testifying as a witness, asked him to take the motor and "illustrate the appliance" and "show the work he was doing" and the "manner in which he was doing it" at the time of the accident. The court sustained an objection interposed by appellee's counsel, and appellant complains thereof and of the refusal of the court to require appellee to make the demonstration it asked him to make. We will not undertake to *226 determine whether the ruling of the court was erroneous or not, for, if it was, we think the error should be treated as harmless, in view of rule 62a for the government of Courts of Civil Appeals. It does not appear in the record whether the demonstration, had it been made, would have been favorable to appellant's side of the case or to appellee's, and hence we cannot say that the error, if it was one, "amounted (as, under the rule, it must to authorize a reversal of the judgment) to such a denial of the rights of the appellant as was reasonably calculated to cause, and probably did cause, the rendition of an improper judgment in the case."

In closing the argument in the case appellee's attorney commented on the failure of appellant to have a man named Red (who assisted appellee in work he did on the engine) to testify, and in the comment asserted the testimony showed that Red was still an employé of appellant, and was then present in court. Appellant objected to the argument, insisting the testimony did not show either that Red was working with appellee at the time he was injured or that he (Red) was still an employé of appellant at the time of the trial, or that he was present in court at that time. There was no testimony showing whether Red was an employé of appellant, or whether he was in court, at the time of the trial or not, but we are not prepared to say there was none showing Red to have been present when the accident occurred. The testimony of appellee as a witness as to that is not clear. It might be construed as meaning either that Red was or was not present then. It appears from the bill of exceptions that the comment of the attorney was predicated on the testimony as he understood it, and that he requested the jury not to consider what he had said, if their recollection of the testimony did not accord with his. In view of such request it is not likely appellant's rights were prejudiced by the argument objected to, and we think it should be treated as harmless so far as it was improper.

The contention of appellant that it was entitled to a new trial of the case because of evidence it discovered after the trial was over was based on the affidavit of one of its attorneys that "since the verdict of the jury has been rendered defendant has received information, in substance, to the effect that plaintiff's wife now is, and at the time of the trial of said case was, pregnant, and is about four months advanced in pregnancy, and defendant charges upon information and belief that such is a fact." The theory as to the materiality of the alleged newly discovered evidence was that it would contradict testimony given by appellee as a witness in the case as to the consequences to him of the injury he suffered. But it would not, as we understand the testimony of appellee to which appellant refers. However, if it appeared in the record in a proper way, and it does not appear in any way, that appellant could make such proof on another trial, and that it would contradict evidence appellee gave as a witness, we would overrule the contention on the ground, if none other, that it did not appear that appellant had used proper diligence to discover the testimony before the conclusion of the trial. What we have said was on the assumption that it appeared that appellant, in some way authorized by law, had invoked the power of this court to act in the matter. But it has not. There is no assignment in appellant's brief complaining of the action of the court below in overruling the motion for a new trial, and the matter as to the alleged newly discovered evidence was not presented to that court in any other way than as a ground for that motion.

There is no error in the judgment, and it is affirmed.

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