Rooker v. Parsley
Rooker v. Parsley
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the court by
This case was twice tried. The appellant prevailed upon the first trial, and the court granted the appellee a new trial. Upon this ruling is based one of the assignments of error.
The general rule is, that the appellate courts will not review the action of a trial court granting a new trial. It is only where it is made to appear, and that very clearly and plainly, that substantial injustice was certainly done that the ruling will be disturbed. A party asking the reversal of a cause, upon the ground that a new trial was erroneously awarded, must present an unusually strong case. This is not such a case as will authorize an interference by an appellate court.
The appellee succeeded upon the second trial. Appellant moved for a new trial, his motion was denied, and this appeal brings the question of the correctness of that ruling before this court.
Appellant offered to prove, during the progress of the trial, statements made by James L. Beck, who had testified as a witness upon the former trial. The statements of which appellant made offer of proof, were made by Beck in the course of his testimony. The court refused to permit the evidence offered to be introduced, and as the counsel for the appellee has not furnished us with a brief, we can have only such information of the grounds upon which the court based its rulings, as we are able to glean from the record itself.
As we gather it from the objection stated by appellee, the proffered evidence was excluded upon the ground that it was hearsay. The appellant proved by two witnesses that they had attended a funeral; that they were sent to do the undertaker’s work at the interment of a man named James L. Beck ; that they placed a dead man in a hearse and conveyed him to the grave, and that the man
For the error in excluding this evidence the judgment must be reversed.
The judgment is reversed, and cause remanded with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.