Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Co. v. Black

89 S.W. 1087, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 415, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 89 S.W. 1087 (Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Co. v. Black) 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
Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Co. v. Black, 89 S.W. 1087, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 415, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 171 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This is an action for damages by Miss Black against the Street Railway Company for injuries sustained while a passenger on one of the appellant’s cars. Verdict and judgment was in her favor for $3,000.

The grounds of negligence alleged were that the defendant- Street Railway Company was negligent in constructing the steps of its car upon which passengers and particularly ladies, are compelled to step in getting on and off the cars; that the steps were constructed of wood, leaving an opening therein-from the top extending through the same; that in attempting to alight from said car she stepped on a banana peeling, which caused her to slip on and down the wooden step above mentioned, and that the toes of her foot slipped through the wooden step so negligently-left, causing her to fall violently, and in the fall the bones of her toes and ankle were dislocated and broken; that the defendant company negligently left a banana peeling on the floor of the car, between the seat on which she was sitting and the one immediately in front of her, and that in the hurry in getting on said car and off the same, she did not see the banana peeling — did not know it was there, and stepped on it, which caused her foot to slip on the wooden step and get caught in the hole as alleged.

The case is reversed on account of the error pointed out in the twelfth assignment. The bill of exceptions which presents this question is as follows:

“Be it remembered that on the trial of the above numbered and entitled cause, plaintiff’s attorney propounded to Miss Tommie Black, the plaintiff, substantially the following question: If she had ever had any heart trouble prior to the accident, and she answered that *418 she had none. Then counsel for the defendant asked her if she was not.- more unfortunate than most young ladies, if she had never had any heart trouble, and if she did not think there was yet hopes for her. To this she replied that she had no time to devote to sentiment; that she had to work for a living and her only thought had been to support herself and her widowed mother. That -during the progress of "the trial the witness Jack Goldman was placed on the stand by the plaintiff and testified, among other things, to the fact that there was a banana peel on the. floor, between the seat on which Miss Black sat at the time of the accident and the one immediately in front of her; and he testified to having seen her after she had fallen, and assisted in putting her on the car again and taking her to her home, and that he observed that the banana peel between the seats, about which he testified had been stepped on. Defendant’s counsel, on cross examination, asked him substantially if he did not state to Mr. Jones, one of the employes of the defendant company, at a certain time and place (naming them) that the banana peel on defendant’s car had not been stepped on. To this the witness replied that he had made no such statement; he had made the same satement to Mr. Jones that he had made on the trial. After having laid this predicate, the defendant did not introduce the witness Jones to contradict said Goldman. In this state-' of the record, while defendant’s counsel, B. E. L. Knight, Esq., was making his argument to the jury, in discussing the testimony of the witness Jack Goldman, in reference to the banana peel having been stepped on, he used substantially the following language: ‘I do not like a witness like Goldman, who will make one statement to me on outside of the court house, and make another statement inside of the court house.’ Plaintiff’s counsel in concluding the argument for the plaintiff, referring to this statement of Mr. Knight, used substantially the following language: ‘That Mr. Knight knew that his conduct-was not fair to the witness; that if he intended to intimate to the jury that the witness had made a statement to him (counsel) different from what he had made in the court room on the trial, that he should laid the predicate to have contradicted him, and then got on the witness stand and testified, and not undertake to supply his lack of testimony by his statement as counsel; and added that they had laid one predicate to contradict Goldman by the witness Jones, but the jury had observed that the witness Jones had not been brought forward.’ To this Mr. Knight, counsel for the defendant, stated in the presence of the court and the jury, that the witness Jones was sick in bed and unable to come, whereupon counsel for the plaintiff retorted that if that were true he ought to have asked to have the case postponed, until that witness’s presence could have been secured, and that he (counsel for plaintiff) would not have opposed it; and then added: “That was an unfair argument for Bob to use (meaning Mr. Knight); if he wished to use an argument of that character he should have waited until he had an able-bodied plaintiff to oppose him, and should not have used such an argument in a case like this where the plaintiff is a .poor girl,., compelled to support a widowed mother, and where his client is a rich corporation.”’ To this argument by plaintiff’s-counsel, defendant, by W. B. Harris, its counsel, then and there in open court *419 objected, for the reason that it was highly prejudicial to the interests of defendant for plaintiffs counsel in his argument to get out of the record and comment upon the relative wealth of the contesting parties and to comment upon the fact that plaintiff was not able-bodied and was compelled to support a widowed mother, and verbally asked the court to instruct the jury that such remarks were improper and not to consider same, which request was in an undertone to the court and not heard by the jury. The court overruled defendant’s said objection, but not in a tone to be heard by the jury, and refused and failed to instruct the jury that such remarks were improper and refused to instruct the jury to disregard the same, and the defendant then and there in open court excepted to the said remarks of plaintiff’s counsel, and then and there excepted to the court’s failure and refusal to sustain its said objection and then and there excepted to the court’s failure and refusal to instruct the jury that said remarks were improper and to disregard the same, and here now tenders its bill of exception, and asks that .the same be allowed and approved and made a part of the record herein, which is accordingly done.”

. The special ground of objection urged in this bill of exception is contained in the following language: “That it was an unfair argument for Bob to use (Meaning Mr. Knight, whom it appears was an attorney for the appellant); if he wished to use an argument of that character he should have waited until he had an able-bodied plaintiff to oppose him, and should not have used such an argument in a case like this, where the plaintiff is a poor girl, compelled to support a widowed mother, and where his client is a rich corporation.” The evidence in the record as to the main facts of the case, those determining whether or not the Street Railway Company was guilty of negligence, and whether the plaintiff was injured to the extent alleged, was conflicting; and if the jury had returned a verdict in favor of the appellant on the. facts as shown in the record, we are free to state that we could not have disturbed it. Row the question arises whether or not, in view of the evidence in this condition, the argument of the counsel as stated was of a nature calculated to influence the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W. 1087, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 415, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-consolidated-electric-street-railway-co-v-black-texapp-1905.