85 Mo. App. 575 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1900
— This action is by the indorsee against the maker of a promissory note. It was begun before a justice of the peace, where the plaintiff recovered, and appealed to the circuit court, where plaintiff again had judgment, but a new trial was granted on the ground that plaintiff’s attorney made improper remarks in addressing the jury. This order having been appealed from by plaintiff presents the only question of review in this court.
Defendant’s counsel renewed his exception to these remarks, and the court a second time censured -plaintiff’s attorney for his reference to the decision of the justice. Under this state of the record we perceive no error in the action of the trial court in awarding a new trial upon the repetition by plaintiff’s attorney of the foregoing remarks. The necessary tendency of such a statement was to lead the jury to believe there was no merit in the defense to the suit on trial, and that defendant himself was an untruthful witness, since the justice had decided against him on that ground. The very purpose of the law in allowing a trial de novo on an appeal from a justice, is to have an investigation of the merits of the matters in controversy, free from the influence of any thing happening before the justice, and wholly independent of his findings of fact or conclusions of law. Obviously this purpose was thwarted when the jury were in effect asked to decide against defendant because the justice had done so. Counsel should have refrained from such' a statement. It pertained to a matter which could not have been shown in evidence, hence any allusion to it Was unwarranted by the scope of the legitimate record in the circuit court. That it was an unfair auxiliary to the argument of plaintiff’s counsel results from the well known effect of judicial opinion upon the deliberations of juries when its weight is cast in the scale containing the case of one of the parties to the suit. This sensitiveness of juries and their quick response to what they may imagine to be authorized statements of the law, should not be taken advantage of in the course of argument addressed to them. If so, the trial court should not hesitate to set aside a verdict in favor of the offending party, especially when, as in this case, the previous warning of the court has