Abbott v. Keller
This text of 78 P. 377 (Abbott v. Keller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Opinion of the court by
While there are several assignments of error, we think it necessary only to consider two. That is, first, that the court erred in admitting testimony at the trial on behalf of the plaintiff which was illegal and incompetent over the objection of the defendant, and that the court erred in refusing legal and competent evidence offered on the part of the defendant. We have carefully examined the record, and fail to find any instance in which we think the ruling of the court on the admission of evidence was error, where an objection wras made and exceptions saved. The assignment of error which seems to be principally relied upon by the plaintiff in error in this case, is that the testimony does not reasonably tend to support the finding and verdict of the jury. In determining this, we have been compelled to carefully read the entire record, as no assistance was furnished us by counsel for'defendant in error. In fact, the interests of defendant in error seem to have been entirely abandoned in this court, and no brief of any kind or character has been filed. But, on an examination of the entire record, we find that there is a sharp conflict of testimony between Mrs. G. F. Keller, Mrs. Hardwick, Jesse Keller, and E. E. Warden, witnesses for the plaintiff, and Mr. Abbott, and Mr. Trimble, witnesses for the defendant. The jury, after hearing all of the evidence, seeing the witnesses face to face,, observing their manner on the stand, and carefully weighing their testimony, have ' found the issues in *283 favor of the plaintiff, and we are hot prepared to say from an examination of the record that there is no evidence-which reasonably tends to support their finding, and it is-not onr province, neither is it the desire of this court to weigh the testimony further than to ascertain if there is evidence which reasonably tends to support the verdict of the jury. This court will not, in cases where there is a conflict of testimony, decide on which side the preponderance of evidence is. That is a duty which devolves peculiarly upon the jury in the trial court, they having greater facilities, and being in a better, position to determine truth and detect falsehoods, than' this court' can possibly have from an examination of the testimony on paper.
From an examination of the record, believing a fair trial was had, and the right conclusion reached, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed, at the costs of the plaintiff in error.
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78 P. 377, 14 Okla. 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-v-keller-okla-1904.