Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. White
Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. White
Opinion of the Court
Appellee, Olan Washington White, brought this suit against appellant,' Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him on account of negligence of the appellant, while working for appellant as a switchman in its yards ’at El Paso, Tex.
Appellee alleged that on July 28, 1917, while he was attempting to descend from one of appellant’s box cars, the handhold or grab-iron, one of the appliances placed and used by appellant on the side of its box cars to assist in descending from the car, pulled off, or became detached from the side of the car, and that by reason thereof he was thrown down p.nd received the injury of which he complained.
On the issues submitted the jury found in-favor of appellee, and assessed his damages at $11,000, and’judgment was so entered.
Ramsey testified in part:
In 1917 he was working for the Southwestern. He knew White at that time. White went to-work on the engine with him. Did not know where White lived when he first knew him. Visited White the following Sunday after White was injured. He then saw that White was-bleeding at the left ear. He sat down alongside of the bed. Noticed nothing else about his head; noticed nothing that indicated his-mental condition. His appearance was “like a man that was pretty badly hurt.” Was acquainted with White before the accident and had occasion to observe his appearance. “Noticed lots of difference” in his appearance before the injury and afterwards. “He wasn’t like a man that was at -himself. I talked to *266 him very little. As to his appearance prior to his injuries with reference to strength and activity, his appearance was good; he was a large man, and his appearance as to health good. I have seen Mr. White since that time occasionally when I came in. As to his appearance now with reference to size and flesh as to what it was prior to his injuries, he is not at all the same man that he was when I first met him when he worked in the Southwestern.” Met White once in ■ the summer of 1918 before he had the operation performed. “As to his physical appearance at that time, I thought he was very poor. As to what I meant by that, he had fallen away in weight, and he walked around like a man that was all in, I would judge. As to his appearance prior to his injuries with reference to whether he was an active man, slow or quick, he was active.”
Jones testified that—
He became acquainted with White in 1907 in Wichita Falls; knew him there about three years. Did barber work for him during that time. Witness came to El Paso in 1916, and-saw White in El Paso in 1917. In Wichita Falls witness had occasion to observe White as to appearance in weight and physical condition ; noticed “that he was a big, husky guy.” In June, 1917, in El Paso, prior to his injuries, as to his physical condition, “he appeared to be in the same condition that he did when he lived at Wichita Falls. As to what he weighed when I first became acquainted with him, I figure he would weigh somewhere in the neighborhood of 165 pounds. I have seen him a number of times since the time he claimed to have received his injuries. As to his appearance now with reference to his physical condition, he doesn’t appear to be the same man that he was before. He doesn’t look to be as heavy as he was before. As, to his movements and his general condition in regard to health, he doesn’t move as brisk as he did before; he doesn’t seem to have the energy that he did before.”
We think the evidence of the witnesses is not subject to the objections offered. The witnesses each knew White and saw him just before and just after his injuries, and the evidence given is their personal observations of outward manifestations of condition open to all who came in contact with appellee subsequent to his injuries, and we think competent as showing White’s physical condition at that time. Cunningham v. Neal, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 613, 109 S. W. 455, in which a writ of error was refused; Railway v. Brown, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 57, 69 S. W. 1010.
Appellant’s third, fourth, fifth, and sixth assignments are directed to remarks of counsel made to and in the presence and hearing of the jury during, and as a part of, the argument to the jury. Appellant assigns the remarks as harmful and prejudicial error.
“It appears from the uncontroverted evidence in this case, gentlemen of the jury, that he was working because he had to. I tell you, necessity knows no law. The man worked because he had to. We all have to work because we have to. We have to earn a living. We have to do it in some way and do it honestly.”
It might be observed here that no issue was made in the case as to whether appellee was a man with or without means, nor was it an issue in the case that appellee was working because he had to. It is claimed by appellee that the remarks were rendered proper by reason of certain evidence introduced by appellant. On cross-examination of appellee he stated that he signed a name other than his own to an application for employment, and on redirect examination, in explanation why he did so sign the application, he said:
“When a fellow is having litigation with a railroad company he can’t get work. I have to support my wife and baby and that is the only means I had to get employment was to work under an assumed name. * * * I have no means or resource to support my wife, baby, and myself. * * * I had no means of support, and I foEowed this raEroad work practically all my Efe, and I had no other way of making a living for my family, and that is the reason that I made these false statements in the application, in order to get employment.”
The question as to the admissibility of the evidence offered, as to the application or the statements contained therein as primary or original evidence, is not before us; nor is the above-quoted evidence of appellee in explanation thereof. It seems to us, however, conceding, for the purpose of the assignments only, .that the application for employment, with its false statements therein, and the evidence of appellee in explanation thereof, were properly before the court (which we do not decide and by no means concede), and raised issues of fact to go before and to be considered by the jury, the remarks of counsel complained of are well within the proof. It seems to us from the record presented here that, if appellant is in a position to complain of the above remarks of counsel, the language used by counsel is in the verbiage of the witness; the jury had heard, without objection, the evidence of the facts referred to in the remarks made, and we cannot think that the remarks alone, if objectionable, could have influenced the verdict.
It is the insistence here that where the undisputed evidence shows that appellee’s wife first called in Dr. Moore, and where the character and reputation of Dr. Moore were not assailed, and no evidence offered in any way reflecting upon his reputation or standing as a physician or surgeon, it was harmful and prejudicial error for counsel to state, and to insist upon stating, to the jury as above, that Dr. Moore is a fake doctor. The question as to whether Dr. Moore was or was not a fake doctor was not an issue in the cases, was not raised by the evidence or argument of opposing counsel, and it 'seems to us the remark was a clear violation of rule 39, applying to arguments of counsel on the facts in trial courts. True, while Dr. Moore was not a party to the suit, he was an important witness for appellant, having personally examined appellee and testified to the result of his examination. The question then is presented: Was appellant prejudiced by the remark? The remark did not involve the statement of any fact, nor did the evidence in the case carry even a damaging suspicion of the truth of the opinion expressed, but was only the expression of an opinion of the attorney. The remark does not seem to us calculated to inflame the minds of the jury or create a prejudice against appellant. Had- the remark met with the approval of the court, or had not been vigorously excluded, and the attorney repremanded by the court, it might have appeared to the jury that the court was at least in sympathy with the expression used; but the court promptly excluded the remark from the consideration of the jury, and held counsel in contempt of the court’s ruling for its repetition, and punished him by a fine. We have considered this assignment in connection with the seventh, and have concluded that it was error for counsel to make the remarks complained of, but that the remarks made by counsel did not prejudice the appellant.
Finding no reversible error, the case is affirmed.
<g=»For other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
Reference
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published