Birkman v. Fahrenthold

114 S.W. 428, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 335, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 428 (Birkman v. Fahrenthold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birkman v. Fahrenthold, 114 S.W. 428, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 335, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 368 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

— The action is by Mrs. Fahrenthold upon a liquor dealer’s bond, against Henry Birkman as principal and his sureties on such bond. The trial was had on plaintiff’s third amended petition, wherein she alleged that the defendants were liable to her for eight infractions of said bond, because Birkman, his employe and agent, sold and permitted to be sold, gave and permitted to be given, at his place of business, to her husband, Herman Fahrenthold, liquors denounced in said bond, while he was an habitual drunkard, and also made such sales and gifts after she had served notice upon him in writing, through a peace officer, not to sell to her said husband.

Defendants answered by general and special demurrers, general denial, denial that said Fahrenthold was ever an habitual drunkard; that notice not to sell to him was never served on Birkman, and, if served, it was withdrawn by plaintiff, and she had given her full consent to Birkman to sell to her husband; and that Birkman made no sales nor gifts to him until after such withdrawal and permission. Defendants *341 also pleaded conspiracy between plaintiff and husband, and estoppel. The verdict was against defendants for $2,500.

The first assignment of error goes to the overruling of the general demurrer. The substance of the propositions under this assignment is that what is known as the Baskin-MeGregor Act had the effect of repealing the former statutes on the subject. An opinion of the court, in a case recently decided, discusses and disposes of this matter, and we refer to it for reasons and authorities for overruling this assignment. Johanna Fahrenthold v. Tell, ante, 110.

The second is that the special exception was good, which complained that there was no allegation by plaintiff that the notice not to sell was served by the officer delivering said notice to Birkman. The allegation was that Miles, constable of precinct No. 4, Colorado County, served said notice on Birkman, without stating that he delivered it to him. The allegation was in language - used in the statute, and service by delivery being what was meant by the word “served,” the allegation covered it.

The third assignment is addressed to the testimony of Mrs. Fahrenthold and of Hugo, her son. The former was, over objection, permitted to testify: “I attended to his business when he was drunk — the tinner’s business. I did the selling and a great deal of work. I made stove pipes and put up stoves, and I made valleys and different things with my own hands.” The son, as follows: “In the business she, my mother,- sold things, and made stove pipes and things like that. She made the work and soldered it together.”

The proposition is that this testimony was irrelevant and calculated to prejudice defendants’ cause. It appears that there was testimony showing that Fahrenthold’s business was hardware, and tinner by trade, and he would not work while he was drinking, and she would do the work then. This testimony was without objection, and it tended to show that she did what the business called for during such periods.

Without more, this would furnish facts for a legitimate argument to the jury that she did all the things recited in the testimony as above objected to. We think the testimony came within the rule that defendants can not complain of its admission when substantially the same testimony was allowed to go in without objection.

The fourth, and some of the kindred assignments briefed along with it, complain of plaintiff being allowed to testify: “He would get his six-shooter and cock it, and be mad at me and the boy, and tell us to go to hell.” And of the son testifying: “When papa was drunk he would try to run us out and cursed us, and does everything like that. He would try to do different things; he would make threats. He threatened to kill us, and everything like that.” “Papa said he was going to kill her on that occasion if she did not get him some place where he could get whiskey.”

It was testified to that, when sober, he was a good man and a good father, but would mistreat his family when drunk, and that during the last three years he was drunk most of the time. Sometimes for three days he would be all right, and then get drunk and stay drunk two or three weeks. When he was drunk he would treat his wife and son anyway- — just as bad as a man could treat them. This testimony of Mrs. Fahrenthold and son was not objected to. It embraced testimony broad *342 enough to imply that objected to, and for this reason alone the judgment ought not to be disturbed on account of it.

One of defendants’ pleas was: “That plaintiff and her husband fraudulently connived and entered into a conspiracy in order to obtain said liquor for her husband with the intention and for the sole purpose of fraudulently mulcting these defendants in damages.” Upon such an issue the testimony would have been both relevant and material, as the husband’s conduct, if as narrated by said witnesses, would tend to refute such a plea. We have not investigated the testimony to ascertain whether or not there was evidence offered in support of this plea. We presume not, as there was no submission of it, and the plea was manifestly no defense; but defendant having pleaded it, plaintiff was warranted in anticipating that defendant would rely upon it. The judge, in the absence of any objection that defendant had not introduced any evidence on the subject or any declaration that he would not do so, was warranted in treating the plea as seriously interposed, and under these circumstances the court can not be said to have committed error at that time in overruling the particular objections. The presence of such testimony in the case, coming in under these circumstances, would not invalidate the trial, even though defendant did not afterwards undertake to substantiate the plea, the court’s attention not being directed to the matter any more during the trial.

The fifth assignment is that the court erred in not excluding the following testimony of plaintiff while testifying in regard to the return home of her husband from Birkman’s saloon, where she followed him and where she testified she saw him take a drink: “He did not go home right away, but in a little while came, and when he did he cursed me more than ever, and told me he would kill me if I tried that again.” “He said he would kill me if I followed him again. I do not remember any other threats; I said he got a pistol,” because irrelevant, immaterial and inflammatory, and calculated to arouse the sympathies of the jury and inflaming to their minds. This conduct of Fahrenthold was relevant to the plea of conspiracy between the husband and wife, as explained above. The same is true of the evidence dealt with by the sixth, seventh and ninth assignments.

In this connection, and in addition to what is above held, we may state that the testimony complained of by the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh assignments was rendered unobjectionable by reason of the fact that appellants reproduced the same testimony in effect through cross-examination of the witnesses. Eastham v. Hunter, 98 Texas, 565.

The eighth is that there was error in permitting Owen Heyer, who stated that he lived close to plaintiff and her husband, to testify: “I ran out several times to see what was up. I heard tables and chairs flying around and furniture knocking about. I could see what it was and got' back home fast.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 428, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 335, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birkman-v-fahrenthold-texapp-1908.