Beer v. Martel

55 S.W.2d 482, 332 Mo. 53, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 535
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 482 (Beer v. Martel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beer v. Martel, 55 S.W.2d 482, 332 Mo. 53, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 535 (Mo. 1932).

Opinion

*57 FRANK, P. J.

This suit was brought by Herman L. Beer to recover damages for alleged personal injuries. Beer died before the ease was tried in the circuit court and the cause was revived in the name of respondents as executors of his estate. The trial resulted in a verdict for defendant. On motion of plaintiffs the verdict was set aside and a new trial granted. Defendant appealed.

The verdict was rendered at the February Term, 1929. At the same term and within four days after the verdict, plaintiff’s motion for new trial was filed. At the following October Term, 1929, plaintiff’s motion for new trial was sustained on the fifteenth ground' thereof which reads as follows:

“Because the court erred in permitting the defendant’s attorney, in his argument to the jury, over the objection of plaintiffs’ counsel *58 to make statements of fact outside of the record and not based upon the evidence.”

During the term at which a verdict is rendered, circuit courts have inherent power to set the verdict aside independent of the filing of a statutory motion for new trial, and independent of the grounds alleged in such a motion, where one is filed. But where, as in this case, a statutory motion for new trial was filed but not acted upon during the term at which the verdict was rendered, the court, at a succeeding term, had no authority or discretion to set the verdict aside and grant a new trial except upon a ground or grounds alleged in the motion. [Gray v. Missouri Lumber & Mining Co., 177 S. W. 595, 596; Sutton v. Anderson, 326 Mo. 304, 322, 31 S. W. (2d) 1026.] In determining the propriety of the court’s action in granting a new trial in this case, we will confine ourselves to the grounds alleged in the motion for new trial.

In our view of this ease we should determine: (1) whether or not defendant’s counsel made an improper argument to the jury, and (2) if the argument was improper, does it: come within the fifteenth ground of the motion for new trial which the court specified as the reason for granting the new trial.

The argument in controversy is preserved in the record as follows:

“Mr. Blades': . . . here they want to get you to give a judgment to a Mr. Beer in New York.
“Mr. Buder: We object to that, if the court please, being improper argument. The- court ruled out whatever testimony this counsel sought to-elicit along-that line.
.“The Court: Objection overruled., ‘
“Mr. Buder: Note my exception.
“Mr. Blades: Mr. Beer, another one of the men who will profit by this transaction, who is a big business man, has his own place, and'a third brother-in-law married to the sister of the two brothers, who is vice-president, I believe, if I understood him right, of a South Side bank, and wanting to collect for pain and suffering of the old man in his grave now. If that old man was here, I wouldn’t say that, because he. might have a call upon you men for something, but why should they collect' for something that happened to the old man ?
“Mr. Buder-: If your Honor please, I object to that; that is contrary to the instructions of the court to the jury.
“The Court: The jury in its deliberations will follow the instructions of the court. You gentlemen are to form your judgment in this matter solely and only from the evidence given by the witnesses on the stand and the instructions given by the court.
‘ ‘ Mr. Blades : And that instruction tells you that under the law you are permitted to give these heirs of this estate' money for that, *59 but my argument to you is not that it is not true that technically by the law they could get it, but that they are not entitled to it. This man who suffered might have been entitled to it, but I say that Mr. Beer sitting over there is not entitled to collect for any suffering that his father had. ...”

This argument presents the casé to' the jury as though the heirs of deceased were the plaintiffs in the case and were demanding something to which they had no right. The facts are that the heirs are not parties to suit. In event plaintiff should recover a judgment, the amount recovered would go to deceased’s estate and.not to his heirs. The condition of deceased’s estate was not shown, and no showing was made that the heirs would profit by any judgment which might be recovered in favor of the executors of deceased’s estate. Herman L. Beers, the original plaintiff, died subsequent to the institution of the suit. As his death was not caused by the negligence of defendant, but resulted from natural causes, the cause of action survived to his personal representatives who are entitled to enforce the same rights and recover the same -damages which deceased might have recovered had he lived. [Sec. 3280, R. S. 1929; Longan v. Kansas City Ry. Co., 299 Mo. 561, 253 S. W. 758, 761.]

In this character of a ease, who the heirs were, where they lived, and their occupation and position in life was entirely foreign to any issue in the case. It was improper, misleading and prejudicial to parade before the jury the fact that deceased’s heirs, who were not parties to the suit, were big business people and that an effort was being made to get the jury to give them a judgment because of their father’s injury and his consequent pain and suffering. Such an argument was wholly beside the issues in the case and was calculated to mislead and prejudice the jury against plaintiffs. Otherwise stated, the law will not permit counsel in his argument to the jury to make a defense which the pleadings and evidence do not justify.

The substance of the first objection made to counsel’s argument was that it was outside of the record and improper. This objection was overruled and an exception was saved. Appellant contends that the argument was not outside of the record because evidence was introduced, without objection, showing who the heirs were, where they lived and the business in which they were engaged. Conceding that these facts concerning the heirs are in the record without objection, just as appellant contends, that did not justify counsel in making the argument which he did make. Counsel may properly comment on any fact in the record so long as such comment has a legitimate bearing on any issue in the case, but counsel may not make an unfair, misleading and prejudicial argument on immaterial facts which happen to get into the record without objection, and justify the argument on the ground that the facts about which he argued were in the record.

*60 Having reached the conclusion that counsel’s argument was improper, misleading and prejudicial, we will next determine the contention of appellant that the court was not warranted in granting a new trial on the fifteenth ground of the motion, namely, “Because the court erred in permitting the defendant’s attorney, in his argument to the jury, over the objection of plaintiffs’ counsel, to make statements of fact outside of the record and not based upon the evidence.”

Trial courts have a wide discretion in passing upon motions for new trial.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 482, 332 Mo. 53, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beer-v-martel-mo-1932.