Crosby v. Seaboard Air Line Ry.

61 S.E. 1064, 81 S.C. 24, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 223
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 23, 1908
Docket6968
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 1064 (Crosby v. Seaboard Air Line Ry.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crosby v. Seaboard Air Line Ry., 61 S.E. 1064, 81 S.C. 24, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 223 (S.C. 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Jones.

This action was brought to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff, Addie Crosby, on July 6, 1904, as a passenger on defendant’s train, while alighting from the moving train at Midway, Florida, in obedience to the “wilful, unlawful and reckless” direction of the conductor.

The jury rendered a verdict in her favor for ten thousand dollars. The Circuit Court granted a new trial unless the sum of five thousand dollars be remitted therefrom. The plaintiffs remitted accordingly, and judgment was entered for five thousand dollars, from which defendant appeals on exceptions presenting the points we now consider:

1 1. During the progress of the trial the following occurred: The Court: “One of the jurors has stated to me that he is sick; will you go on with the eleven jurors by consent?” Mr. Smith: “I am willing.” Mr. Mc-Mahan : “I could not consent to go on.” Juror: “I will keep on rather than have anything about it.”

The appellant contends that this was a public request by the Court to 'excuse the sick juror, which indicates that it was proper to do so, and that this was prejudicial to defendant, as he considered it to be his duty not to go on without a full panel. The case was the last for trial at the term, and the other jurors had been discharged, hence it would have worked a mistrial and continuance to have excused the juror. Before doing this it was proper for the Court to consider its effect upon the business of the Court and the rights of the litigants. The inquiry was addressed impartially to all concerned, and it was with respect to a practice *27 not infrequently adopted by counsel in such emergencies. We see nothing improper in the action of the Court.

2 2. During the argument of Mr. Smith to the jury “he commented upon defendant’s refusal to let the case proceed with eleven jurors so as to excuse the sick juror, and he said, ‘They are afraid to go before the jury — you see how they tried to stop this trial.’ ” Mr. McMahan interrupted, “I object to his discussing my failure to consent to continue the case with eleven jurors.”

The Court: “Well, it is something that occurred in the case.”

Mr. Smith: “I will relieve my friend by not discussing the matter.”

It is contended that these references to defendant’s refusal to go on without twelve jurors was improper and prejudicial. In State v. Robertson, 26 S. C., 118, the Court refused grant a new trial because the trial Court had allowed the State’s attorney to go beyond the testimony and urge upon the jury that the defendant, prior to the time of the alleged rape, had committed an assault and battery on a woman and was dodging around evading arrest at the time of the alleged rape.

In State v. Williamson, 65 S. C., 242, 248, 43 S. E., 671, the solicitor in his closing argument to the jury spoke of the defendant, Williamson, as a thug, an assassin and a cowardly cur, and of the defendant, Snow, as a perjurer, and the trial Court did not, interfere upon the request of the defendant’s counsel. This Court in overruling an exception to this matter said: “It is undoubtedly the duty of the Circuit Court when appealed to, to repress any flagrant breach by counsel of the rules governing fair and legitimate argument, and for manifest abuse of discretion in this regard, from which it is probable that defendant was prejudiced, this Court would set aside the verdict. But we cannot say that there was an abuse of discretion in this case. The testimony taken was not set out in the case, and we cannot say *28 that there was no testimony in the case which might have made tolerable the rather severe language of the prosecuting attorney as a matter of inference and argument.”

In Kirby v. Tel. Co., 77 S. C., 404, 408, 58 S. E., 10, plaintiff’s counsel, in his remarks to the jury, said: “If a telegram were sent to Mr. Duncan, Mr. Nicholson or Mr. Farr, that the telegram would go to them with arms open, and the company would fall over itself to deliver the message to any prominent man in Union.” And, also, “That the newspapers of the State were constantly publishing, from New York to St. Augustine, articles about South Carolina juries not doing their duty when trying criminal cases, and that Mr. Sease, the solicitor, had remarked about it last week.” Two members of the Court concurred in the view that the language was highly prejudicial to the defendant, and that the trial Court abused its discretion in not repressing it. The judgment was reversed by the Court, however, on other grounds.

As a general rule, it is safest and wisest to leave such matters to the trial Court, and it will rarely happen that such discretion will be so abused as to justify an'appellate Court, not conversant with the surroundings, to reverse the judgment. The glow and heat of contest generally results in some unwarranted inferences and exaggerated statements, and it would be a hopeless task for the Court to attempt to confine argument to cold facts and colder logic.

Viewing the matter as it looks from the type of the record, the remarks of counsel were not warranted, since defendant merely exercised its plain right to insist upon a full panel. Still, the incident, which was the subject of comment, occurred in the trial and upon objection counsel desisted, before the Court had made any final ruling on the subject. This matter affords no ground for a new trial.

*29 3 *28 3. The Court properly overruled the objection to the introduction of the deposition of Dr. I. W. Martin, made on the grounds that the statute was not complied with (1) in *29 that the certificate of the notary merely stated that the witness was sworn and examined instead of stating that the witness was “cautioned and sworn to testify the whole truth and carefully examined;” (2) there was no certificate that the notary himself sealed up and directed and forwarded to the Court by mail and retained it in his possession until so mailed as required by statute.

There is nothing in the record to indicate non-compliance with the statute in any essential particular. The witness was sworn and examined in the presence of counsel for both sides pursuant to notice and agreement of counsel, and the certificate so shows. Section 2883 of the Code of Laws directs what the officer shall do with respect to retention of the deposition until he mails the same, with the notice and his certificate of the reasons for taking the same, but the statute does not require the certificate to show these things, and no effort was made to show failure of the officer to do his duty as required by the statute. Bulwinkle v. Cramer, 30 S. C., 157, 8 S. E., 689; Henderson v. Williams, 57 S. C., 3, 35 S. E., 261.

4 4.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 1064, 81 S.C. 24, 1908 S.C. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosby-v-seaboard-air-line-ry-sc-1908.