Buhidar v. Abernathy

541 S.W.2d 648
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 1976
Docket1026
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 541 S.W.2d 648 (Buhidar v. Abernathy) 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
Buhidar v. Abernathy, 541 S.W.2d 648 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

YOUNG, Justice.

In this automobile collision ease, Elias Buhidar sued Railey Paper Company, Inc., and its employee, Lyle Elmer Abernathy, for resulting personal injuries. Buhidar and Abernathy were each driving their automobiles in the same direction on a four lane street when Abernathy drove his car from the inside lane at an angle partially into the outside lane where Buhidar was traveling. A side-swipe type of collision between the two automobiles then occurred.

Trial was to a jury which found both primary and contributory negligence proximately causing the collision, and which found no injuries to or damages for the plaintiff. Based on the jury verdict the trial court entered judgment that plaintiff take nothing. From that judgment the plaintiff appeals.

This suit arose from a collision that occurred January 12, 1973. Thereafter, but before trial, the appellant was involved in two other automobile collisions. The first occurred in February, 1974; the second, in December, 1974.

By his pleadings and his evidence at the trial, appellant contended that he did not have significant back trouble before the January 1973 collision, but that the January collision caused him serious back difficulties which resulted in surgery, repeated hospitalization and severe permanent disability. He maintained that his weakened back was further aggravated by the two subsequent collisions. Additionally, he claimed that his back injury and disability caused him psychiatric depression, with suicidal tendencies, which in turn caused him to lose his ability to manage his business, consisting of beauty salons and wig sales and styling salons in four locations in the Corpus Christi area. All of this, according to him, produced the appellant’s eventual bankruptcy in 1974.

On appeal the appellant does not attack directly the jury findings. Instead, he levels his attack for reversal primarily on the trial court’s admission of evidence about his prior acts of misconduct. His position is that the evidence complained of was irrelevant and so inflammatory that a new trial is required.

Appellant Buhidar brings forward ten points of error. In his first three points the appellant urges that the trial court erred in admitting evidence: 1) that Buhidar had used marijuana; 2) that Buhidar had been court-martialed for being absent without leave from the armed forces in the late 1950’s; and 3) that Buhidar had been convicted on a hot check charge in the later 1950’s or early 1960’s.

In tliat regard, Dr. May, appellant’s psychiatrist, testified on direct examination that he began treating Buhidar in February following the automobile collision in January 1973. Dr. May told of the course of Buhidar’s mental condition from his first visit until his last visit in late 1974. According to the psychiatrist, Buhidar had *651 been in a severe emotional depression with suicidal tendencies at times, which required psychiatric hospitalization on one occasion. It was Dr. May’s opinion that Buhidar’s back problems were probably a precipitating factor in his mental illness.

On cross-examination, appellees’ attorney by separate questions inquired of Dr. May whether appellant’s court-martial, hot check conviction and marijuana use could have had any influence on appellant’s emotional difficulties. Dr. May answered in each instance that it could have but that it was his opinion that it did not. This evidence was admitted over appellant’s objection and after it had first been developed outside the presence of the jury.

Appellant argues that a party may not be discredited or impeached for specific acts of misconduct; that this evidence was so remote that its probative effect was outweighed by its probable wrongful effect on the jury. He cites several cases in support of these assertions: accusation of a crime, Austin Road Company v. Ferris, 492 S.W.2d 64 (Tex.Civ.App. — Ft. Worth 1973, writ ref’d n. r. e.); possession of marijuana, Texas Employers’ Insurance Ass’n. v. Garza, 308 S.W.2d 521 (Tex.Civ.App. — Amarillo 1957, writ ref’d n. r. e.) and General Ins. Corp. v. Handy, 267 S.W.2d 622 (Tex.Civ. App. — San Antonio 1954, writ ref’d n. r. e.); desertion from the army, Gulf, G. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Johnson, 83 Tex. 628, 19 S.W. 151 (1892).

We agree with the evidentiary principles set out in those cases, but we do not deem them dispositive of appellant’s first three points under consideration here. On the contrary, what we consider applicable here is the evidentiary principle about mental illness set out in 2 McCormick & Ray, Texas Evidence § 1532, page 379 (2d ed. 1956) as follows:

“ . . . With reference to conduct it may be said that practically every act of a person’s life throws some light on his mental condition, and therefore no limitation can be made as to the kinds of conduct receivable for this purpose. .

Essentially the same principle was approved in Miguez v. Miguez, 221 S.W.2d 293 (Tex. Civ.App. — Beaumont 1949, no writ).

There is another reason we decline to sustain appellant’s first three points. The complained of evidence was proper cross-examination of the psychiatrist as affecting the jury’s opinion of his credibility and an understanding of what he did or did not consider as a basis for his opinion. Hefley v. State, 480 S.W.2d 810 (Tex.Civ.App.— Ft. Worth 1972, no writ).

There is yet another reason we refuse to sustain these points. Appellant elicited evidence about Buhidar’s having a check returned to him for insufficient funds. This was in connection with his Small Business Administration loan payment. Further, on cross-examination, Dr. May injected his opinion about the use of marijuana that, if believed, negated any other evidence complained of about marijuana that might have been prejudicial to Buhidar. Consequently, if there was error in the admission of the evidence about acts of misconduct on the part of the appellant, it was harmless error. Rule 434, T.R.C.P. We overrule appellant’s first, second and third points of error.

In his fourth and fifth points, appellant insists that the trial court erred in refusing to allow appellant: 4) to present evidence in support of Dr. May’s testimony that infrequent use of marijuana was unrelated to appellant’s mental illness; and 5) to make a bill of exceptions on appellant’s offer of proof regarding the effects of marijuana.

After Dr. May had testified on cross-examination that appellant had used marijuana (over appellant’s objection), appellant’s counsel, on re-direct, then produced testimony from Dr. May that he saw no evidence of detrimental effect on Buhidar from smoking marijuana. By his next question, appellant’s counsel asked the doctor if marijuana smoked by appellant had had any more effect thán that smoked by appellees’ counsel. Appellees’ objection to that question was sustained.

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