City of Newkirk v. Dimmers

1906 OK 96, 87 P. 603, 17 Okla. 525, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 7, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1906 OK 96 (City of Newkirk v. Dimmers) 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.

Bluebook
City of Newkirk v. Dimmers, 1906 OK 96, 87 P. 603, 17 Okla. 525, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 65 (Okla. 1906).

Opinions

Opinion of the court by

Gillette, J.:

There are many assignments of error set forth in the motion for a new trial and petition in error which have manifestly been abandoned by the plaintiff in error, as only four propositions are discussed in its brief, the first being refusal of the court to give instructions asked by the plaintiff in error.

Second: Excessive verdict, appearing to have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice.

Third: Error on the part of the court in propounding certain questions to a witness introduced on behalf of the plaintiff in error, which tended to reflect upon the veracity of a certain other witness, and the truth of such other witness’s testimony.

Fourth: Error in permitting plaintiff to prove the amount she paid out for medicine and medical attendance instead of their character and reasonable value.

We will notice the third of these propositions first.

It will be remembered that the plaintiff in error, defendant in the court below, was defending the action upon the ground, among others, of contributory negligence and a witness, Minnie Eads, had testified that the horse drawing the buggy which the defendant in error was thrown from and injured, went into a mud hole in the street, at the place where the buggy axle-tree broke, in a fast trot or on a lope,' that there was no ditch across the street, but that here was *528 a mud bole on tbe west side of the street. This testimony, if accepted by the jury trying the case, would leave the plaintiff with but little ground for recovery. The city attorney of the city of Newkirk, Mr. Hill, was afterwards offered as a witness on behalf of the defendant city, and upon his cross examination the following colloquy is shown to have occurred:

Cross-examination by Mr. Martin:

“Q. Mr. Hill, are you the gentleman who trained that little girl that was a witness yesterday?
“A. No sir, I am not. She was not trained.
“Q. She -said you trained her; what do you say to that ?
“A. She didn’t say so.
“Q. Do you say she said you did not examine her be- . fore she went on the witness stand?
“A. Once I examined her and once Mr. King.
“Q. Did you know that little girl was going to swear, there was no ditch across this road, or water there?
“A. No sir, I didn’t know it.
“Q. You know that was not true, didn’t you?
‘■‘A. Well, I knew there was some water there at the time I was there.”

By the Court:

“Q. Didn’t you know it was muddy?
“A. Yes sir. I never talked with her about it.
Q. Didn’t you know what she was going to testify to here?
“A. Simply-
“Q. Answer the question.
“A. No sir, I did not.
“Q. Isn’t it a fact that you procured her to testify?
. “A. Some one brought her to me-
*529 “Q. Answer that.
“A. No sir.
“Q. You knew it Ayas muddy?
“A. Yes sir.
“Q. You were there the next day.
“A. Yes sir, or the second day afterwards.
“Q. And yet you permitted her to tesitfy that to this jury.
“A. Well-
“Q. Answer that.
“A. Yes sir, Mr. King examined her.
“Mr. King: I want to object to the remarks of the court.
“The Court: What remarks ?
“Mr. King: In regard to procuring witness.
“The Court: I asked him if he did procure her.”
“Q. Did you procure her to testify?
“A. No sir, I did not.
“Q. You knew she was going to testify.
“A. No sir, not on that point.
“Q. You knew it was muddy there?
“A. Yes sir, on that east side.
“The Court: I want to ask Mr. Hill another question,
“Q. This statement that you did not procure the little girl what is her name?
“A. Minnie Eads.
“Q. You did not procure her to testify to any of the-facts she testified to?
“A. Somebody brought her to Mr. King- and myself as to the speed of this rig. That is all I asked her about.
“The Court: I was not intending to reflect on counsel or anything of the kind. I only wanted him to explain that.
*530 "Mr. King: I am satisfied your Honor did not intend that, but I thought the jury might misunderstand it.
“The Court: I wanted Mr. Hill to explain that, whether he procured the girl to testify to that, or whether she was brought here in the ordinary course. I doffit want the jury to understand that the court was intending to reflect upon Mr. Hill, but simply wanted him to explain that."

The objection made on behalf of the plaintiff in error as shown above is sufficient to bring the question of error here presented before this court for review, notwithstanding the 'declaration it was not intended to reflect on counsel.

It is impossible to read the testimony here quoted without reaching a conclusion that the testimony of Minnie Eads was by such examination criticised as being untrue and as having been “procured," in fact false.

We presume the time will never come when, in a court ■of justice the receipt of testimony believed to be false, will not, by those chargeable with the conduct of the court, be received with regret, almost with horror, because an offense •of this Idnd strikes at the very foundation of justice, and the impulse to expose it at once almost irresistable; but, in the trial of -a cause before a jury it is the province of the jury alone to weigh the testimony of witnesses and give to, it such credence as in their judgment they believe it entitled to, uninfluenced by the judge before whom the cause is being tried.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1906 OK 96, 87 P. 603, 17 Okla. 525, 1906 Okla. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-newkirk-v-dimmers-okla-1906.