San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Wells
San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Wells
Opinion of the Court
W. P. Wells, the appellee, hereafter called the plaintiff, suffered a fracture of the patella, or kneecap, while in the employment of the appellant, hereafter called the defendant, and while in the discharge of his duties as a brakeman on one of defendant’s freight trains. He rested his right of recovery upon two grounds of negligence of the defendant, one of which was in permitting a hole to be in the ground in or near the track, into which plaintiff stepped while attempting to mount the caboose of the train upon which he was engaged, and which was in motion; and the other was the act of the engineer of said train in pulling out of the station at Sublime in an unusually rapid rate of speed, knowing that plaintiff would have to mount the caboose when it reached him. The defendant answered by general denial and by a special plea of contributory negligence. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, from which the defendant, after its motion for a new trial had been overruled, has appealed.
The assignment is followed by the proposition that the court should set aside a verdict which is against the great weight and preponderance of the testimony. We could well refuse to consider the assignment, because it is not followed by a sufficient statement under the rules. We decline to consider the proposition, for the reason that, while the assignment states that the court should have granted a new trial, because the evidence failed to show negligence of the defendant in the matters pleaded by plaintiff, the proposition is that the verdict should be set aside because against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence. In other words, the assignment is based upon an entire lack of evidence to support the verdict, while the proposition is that the verdict is against the great weight and preponderance of the testimony.
In Railway v. Raney, 86 Tex. 367, 25 S. W. 13, our Supreme Court says that an “assignment which asserts that there was no evidence before the jury upon which the verdict could be based does not call upon us to decide whether or not the evidence is sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury.”
The same court, in Railway v. Shelton, 96 Tex. 301, 72 S. W. 165, says: “The object in requiring assignments to be made, accompanied by propositions of law, is to direct the mind of the appellate court to the very point upon which it is claimed the trial court committed error; and, when a party has thus presented his case and specified his objections to the ruling of the trial court, he thereby waives any other objections which might have been presented under the assignment of error.”-
As we cannot consider the point raised by the proposition, we are confined to the question raised by the assignment: Was there any evidence upon which the verdict could have been based? We cannot say there was no evidence sufficient to submit to the jury the question of negligence on the part of the defendant in the particulars alleged by the plaintiff; but, on the contrary, an examination of the evidence in the record discloses that it was sufficient to require the submission of the issue to the jury. The assignment is overruled.
Prior to 1905, the appellate courts of this state passed upon numerous attacks made upon verdicts of juries, supported by affidavits of jurors setting up irregularities or improprieties of different kinds occurring in their deliberations, and uniformly denied the competency of such testimony to establish the alleged facts. Railway v. Ricketts, 96 Tex. 71, 70 S. W. 315, and authorities cited. But in 1905 the Twenty-Ninth Legislature (Acts 29th Leg. c. 18), by an amendment to article 1371, Revised Statutes, added the' following: “Where the ground of the motion is on account of misconduct of the jury or of the officer in charge, or because of any communication made to the jury, or because the jury received other testimony, the court shall hear evidence thereof, and it shall be competent to prove such facts by the jurors or others by examination in open court.” This amendment was adopted with a full knowledge, no doubt, of the rule announced in the Rickett’s Case, and was doubtless intended to abrogate the rule to the extent of making it permissible to prove by jurors, by an examination in open court, any misconduct of the .jury which might have affected the rights of the complaining party. But it is clear that the Legislature intended that any such' attack should be supported by evidence adduced in open court, where the juror could be subjected to a cross-examination by the opposing party, and that it was not intended to abrogate the rule that forbade proof by the ex parte affidavit of the jurors. If we are correct in this, it follows that the facts relied upon by defendant for a new trial could *647 not be established by the affidavits of the jurors attached to the motion.
We might add that the only effect the misconduct complained of could have had on the jury would be to cause them to return a verdict for a larger amount than they might otherwise have done; but appellant nowhere in his brief complains that the verdict is excessive.
We find no reversible errors in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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