City of Shawnee v. Sparks

1910 OK 200, 110 P. 884, 26 Okla. 665, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 12, 1910
Docket591
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1910 OK 200 (City of Shawnee v. Sparks) 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 Shawnee v. Sparks, 1910 OK 200, 110 P. 884, 26 Okla. 665, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 117 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

TURNER, J.

On September 17, 1906, Daniel P. Sparks, defendant in error, sued the city of Shawnee in the district court of Pottawatomie county in damages for personal injuries. Iiis petition substantially states that defendant is a city of the first class under the laws of the state; that Tenth street in said city is an open public highway extending through the same from east to west; that Broadway street is an open public highway extending through said city from "north to south and intersects Tenth street; that along the west side of Broadway street at its place of intersection with Tenth street there is a footway and sidewalk crossing said street; that said streets and sidewalks are under the control of said city; that about January 12, 1906; under the supervision of said citjr and under its ordinances and franchises, some person to plaintiff unknown excavated a ditch about seven feet deep and two feet wide along and in Tenth street and across the footwalk along the west side of Broadway street where it crosses Tenth street, and that said city, well knowing said ditch was dangerous, permitted it to remain open without proper-light, guard, or signal; that on or about 10:30 o’clock on the night of January 12', 1906, plaintiff while proceeding along Broadway *667 street, using due care and caution and without fault on'his part, fell into said di'teh, and was badly' injured and incapacitated to labor for about six'months, to his damage, $11,650. After answer filed, in effect, a general denial, and a plea of contributory negligence, there was trial to a jury which resulted in judgment for plaintiff for $3,500, and defendant brings the case here.

In his opening argument to the jury Mr. Freeling, counsel for plaintiff, said:

“Gentlemen of the jury, the city of Shawnee does not care whether you return .a verdict against it or not. If you do return a verdict against it, it has its remedy against the Shawnee Gas & Electric Company. Why, gentlemen of the jnry, P. 0. Cassidy, the city attorney, is not here looking after the interests of the city in this case”- — ■

to which statement defendant at the time objected and excepted, whereupon the court failed to state whether the same was sustained or overruled, but admonished the jury not to consider the statement so made as to the interest or the lack of interest of defendant in the case as affecting its liability, nor the absence of Judge Cassidy, the city attorney, but to determine the question of liability from the law and evidence. -After attorneys for defendant had argued the cause to the jury, Mr. Williams, another attorney, closed the argument for plaintiff, and in so doing said:

“The defendant will not lose anything by a verdict against it for damages in this case, as the defendant had a contract with the Shawnee Gas & Electric Company to reimburse the defendant, and hold it harmless, and protect it against any claim or -judgment against it on account of any accident that might happen to anyone through or by the carelessness of the Shawnee Gas & Electric Company”—

to which defendant objected and excepted, whereupon the court said:

“Gentlemen of the jury, you will not consider statements of counsel made in their argument outside of the record. You will consider only the evidence before you and the instructions of the court.”.

It is assigned that the court etred in overruling defendant’s *668 motion for a new trial, alleging as ground therefor misconduct of counsel in making said statements. When counsel for plaintiff made the statement in effect that defendant did ’ not care whether judgment, went against it or not, and to emphasize his statement, referred to Judge Cassidy as not being there looking after the interest of the city in the case, he made statement of a materia] fact not in evidence and so braced it with a physical fact as to violate the right of a fair trial.

In Bullard v. Boston & M. R. R., 64 N. H. 27, 5 Atl. 838, 10 Am. St. Rep. 367, defendant’s counsel, in his argument to the jury, commented on the fact that one of plaintiff’s consulting physicians had not been called as a witness. No argumentative reply was made, but plaintiff’s counsel said that the physician had not been called because he found from conversation with him that he had not examined the plaintiff, and could give no testimony as to her condition. To this defendants excepted, the court sustained the exception and told the jury to disregard the statement, whereupon counsel.said he1 would “take it all back.” There was verdict for plaintiff. On appeal the Supreme Court, in granting defendant a new trial, said:

“If this hearsay proof of a material fact had been received from a witness, its unrevoked admission would have been corrected by a new trial. The physician conversed without the moral and legal sanction of an oath, and without the test of cross-examination. His conversation, not provable by a witness,- was proved by a person not a witness, not sworn, and not subject to cross-examination. Had the plaintiff’s whole case been proved in the same-way, the error, though extended in fact over more ground, would not have.been raised to a higher degree of illegality. If the plaintiff could retain a- verdict obtained or enhanced by her counsel’s unsworn assertion of inadmissible hearsay in argument;, the actual wrong done the defendants would be no greater were it accomplished by other persons giving the jury the same kind of proof privately and criminally. The court had no more authority to admit the hearsay, and dispense with the oath and the opportunity for cross-examination required by law, than to render judgment without any form or pretense of trial, upon a rumor casually heard in the street. The law does not transfer the defendants’ *669 property to the plaintiff as damages without a fair trial, and in a legal sense a trial is not fair when such statements as were made in this ease have any influence favorable to the party making them. He is therefore bound to do everything necessary to be done to rectify his wrong, and restore to the trial the fairness of which he has divested it. He is legally and equitably bound to prevent his statement having any effect upon the verdict. Thié he cannot do without explicitly and unqualifiedly acknowledging his error, and withdrawing his remark in a manner that will go as far as any retraction can go to erase from the minds of the jury the impression his remark was calculated to make. But it is by no means certain that the jury will, at his request, disregard the fact stated. It is necessary they should be instructed that the unsworn remark is not evidence, and can have no weight in favor of the party improperly making it. It is the, duty of the wrongdoer to request such instructions. Th.e other party does his duty when he objects to the wrong inflicted upon him, and- does not allow it to be understood that he waives h'is objection. In spite of the fullest and frankest retraction, and the most explicit and emphatic instructions to lay the remark entirely out of consideration, the trial may not be fair. It may not be in the power of the retracting' counsel and the court to remove the prejudice. Their combined and vigorous exertions may not control the-mental operations of the jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 200, 110 P. 884, 26 Okla. 665, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-shawnee-v-sparks-okla-1910.