Blankenship v. Sutherland

324 S.W.2d 592, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2446
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 1959
Docket15493
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 324 S.W.2d 592 (Blankenship v. Sutherland) 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
Blankenship v. Sutherland, 324 S.W.2d 592, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2446 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

This is a suit for damages (personal injuries) allegedly sustained in an automobile collision. Involved were the cars of plaintiff Sutherland and defendant Blankenship, occurring May 31, 1957, at the intersection of Jackson and Austin Streets, Dallas. Upon trial to a jury and their answers to special issues, a plaintiff’s judgment was *593 rendered for $8,000, interest and costs. Defendant has appealed from said final order after overruling of amended motion for new trial.

Points of appeal are now listed: The court’s error, (1) “in refusing to grant defendant’s motion for a mistrial timely presented after plaintiff’s witness, Dr. Clark, injected the existence of insurance into the case;” (2) “in granting judgment upon an excessive award of damages;” (3) “in submitting Special Issue No. 9 over objection that there was no evidence whatsoever in the record that the hospital expenses inquired about were necessary;” (4) “in refusing to submit defendant’s requested Special Issues No. A-l and A-2, which were in accordance with defendant’s pleadings.”

These points will be discussed in order. During direct examination by plaintiff’s counsel of his own witness Dr. Clark the following occurred:

“Q. What was the amount of your bill, Doctor? A. Our charges there for office calls, X-rays and hospital treatment was $159.00, total.
“Q. And over what period of time was that, Doctor ? A. That was from June 3 to September 23 when I wrote this letter for the insurance company, that it was our opinion that he would have permanent partial disability.
“Q. All right.” (Emphasis ours.)

At that juncture, counsel for defendant approached the bench and moved for a mistrial. The jury was then excused with ensuing discussion between court and respective counsel, defendant counsel being first requested to dictate his motion, as follows:

“Now comes the defendant, John P. A. Blankenship and moves this Honorable Court to grant a mistrial herein for the reason that during the testimony of Dr. Arthur Clark, a witness for the plaintiff, and upon direct examination by Counsel for plaintiff, the doctor volunteered a statement that he had made a report for the insurance company in this case. The precise words being as stated in the record above and that such volunteer statement on the part of the doctor who is plaintiff’s witness and upon direct examination by plaintiff’s counsel, is highly prejudicial and is to the effect of informing the jury that the defendant is protected by liability insurance, and that such constitutes reversible error and cannot be cured by an instruction to disregard. And that no adequate relief whatever is available to the defendant, nor can the defendant obtain a fair and impartial trial with the jury after such statement has been made in the presence of the jury and heard by each of them. Wherefore the defendant respectfully prays this Honorable Court to grant a mistrial herein and discharge this jury and let us proceed with another trial.
“The Court: Let the record show that after a conference with Counsel, and it being considered that the doctor did not state whether the report to the insurance company was for the purposes of covering the hospitalization or surgical benefits under a personal policy of the plaintiff, or whether there was reference to the insurance company of the defendant, the Court overruled the motion of the defendant with the statement that the jury would be instructed in this regard whereupon the Court instructed the jury as follows: Ladies and Gentlemen: I will instruct you at this time that you will not consider in this case whether the plaintiff or the defendant has any insurance coverage or any financial responsibility. Therefore, you are not to consider for any purpose the last statement from the Doctor about the report to a company. In other words, this is a suit between E. F. Sutherland and John P. A. Blankenship, and you are not concerned with arrangement either *594 or both of these parties made. Therefore, you will not consider for any purpose the last statement of the Doctor about the report to a particular individual or company. All right, proceed.
“The Court: Anything else you want in the record, Gentlemen ?
“Mr. Johnson: If the Court please, I think you have covered it. I want the record to show that the Court * * * that is, I want to be sure that the Court ought not to grant him a bill showing the doctor’s statement referred to the insurance company in this case. That was the language of his motion, that the doctor’s answer was to the effect that he made a report to the insurance company in this case, meaning the case here on trial, and as I think you have pointed out adequately enough, but it cannot be done too carefully that the doctor’s statement does not carry that necessary implication, but as point out by the Court, and I think more reasonably than the other, that it referred to some insurance that the plaintiff in this case had rather than the defendant’s, because it is not to be assumed that a man’s personal physician is making a report to the defendant’s in the case.
“The Court: Let the record further show that plaintiff’s counsel, during the conference and after the motion of the defendant’s, asked permission of the court to interrogate the witness before the jury regarding the question of making a report for a hospitalization or an accident insurance policy which might have been carried by the plaintiff himself, but that the Court would not permit plaintiff’s counsel to go further into the matter, and instructed the jury in the words as shown heretofore in this record.
“Mr. Carlton: I would like for the record to also show an objection to the instruction given for the reason that it only emphasizes the question of insurance as raised by the doctor’s testimony and that it did not and could not overcome the prejudice and harmful effect and only emphasizes the same.
“Mr. Johnson: I think the record should show here that this is the first time that objection is made. It was not made at the time.”

Upon return of the jury, they were given the instruction as above indicated and the trial proceeded.

Above reflects the entire record relative to the error complained of; it not being claimed that the jury thereafter discussed anything about insurance. It further appears that the mention of insurance by the witness was casual and inadvertent, not elicited by appellee’s form of inquiry; the statement not revealing whether the insurance company mentioned was appellant’s rather than the insurer, if any, of appellee. “It is a matter of common knowledge that juries are more inclined to render verdicts against defendants, and for greater amounts, if they know or have reason to believe that the defendants are protected by insurance. Judicial notice will be taken of this fact.

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Bluebook (online)
324 S.W.2d 592, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenship-v-sutherland-texapp-1959.