Price v. Hamscher
Price v. Hamscher
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
In calling the attention of the jury to the contentions of the parties the learned judge said that it was alleged and that it was a fact in the case that the plaintiff had not answered truthfully an important question asked him in the course of the trial. At the end of the charge, when presumably his attention had been called to the subject by counsel, the judge stated his recollection of the testimony and the reasons upon which his conclusion was based. These two parts of the charge are brought together in the first specification of error, and as they
The effect of the instruction complained of was doubtless prejudicial to the plaintiff. Did it do him an injustice by withdrawing from tho jury a disputed question of fact or by presenting a conclusion not fairly warranted ? While a judge may not decide a disputed question of fact when the averments of the parties in its support or denial are sustained by reasonable proof, he may express his opinion respecting the evidence, and at times it is his duty to do so: Repsher v. Wattson, 17 Pa. 365 : Kilpatrick v. Commonwealth, 31 Pa. 198; Leibig v. Steiner, 94 Pa. 466; Didier v. Pennsylvania Co., 146 Pa. 582; Heydrick v. Hutchinson, 165 Pa. 208. In Leibig v. Steiner, supra, it was said, citing Bitner v. Bitner, 65 Pa. 347, “ Yery strong expressions of opinion on the facts are tolerated, indeed sometimes may be necessary. Even entire accuracy in the statement of facts may «not be obtained, yet, if the case is left fully and clearly to the jury, under instructions not calculated to mislead, there is no fatal error.”
The action was to recover for money loaned. The defendant admitted the receipt of the money, but claimed that it had been paid him as wages. The conflict in the testimony of the parties could not be accounted for on the ground of a misunderstanding or failure of recollection as to the terms of the agreement. One or the other was willfully wrong. The circumstances of the payment, the nature of the services rendered and the relation of the parties to each other were important in arriving at the truth, and they were the subject of thorough investigation. The plaintiff was interested in the result of an action which the defendant had brought against a former employer to recover for injuries received in the course of his employment. He was to receive one third of the amount recovered. The only consideration for this agreement was the aid to be rendered in the litigation. The defendant testified that he had been induced to leave his former employer and bring the action by the repeated solicitations of the plaintiff, who promised to take him into his service and pay him wages until the termination of the litigation. The plaintiff evidently desired to suppress the fact of
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas H. Price v. Frederick Hamscher
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- 10 cases
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- Syllabus
- Practice, O. P. — Charge of court— Opinion of judge. While a judge may not decide a disputed question of fact when the averments of the parties in its support or denial are sustained by reasonable proof, he may express his opinion respecting the evidence, and at times it is his duty to do so. In an action to recover for money loaned, defendant alleged that the money had been paid to him by plaintiff as wages and not as a loan. The evidence showed that plaintiff was to receive one third the amount recovered in an action which the defendant had brought against a former employer for injuries received in the course of his employment. Defendant testified that he had been induced to leave his former employer and bring that action by the repeated solicitations oí the plaintiff, who promised to take him into his service and pay him wages until the termination of the litigation. When plaintiff was asked whether he had a financial interest in the damage suit he evasively answered, “I did not attend the courts, I was not down there.” To the direct question whether he was present at the trial, he stated that he did not testify in the case; that he had not been a witness. The record showed that he had been in attendance as a witness on a number of occasions when the case had been continued and had claimed witness fees. Held, that it was not error for the court to call the attention of the jury to the plaintiff’s testimony, and to express an opinion as to its truthfulness.