First Nat. Bank v. Hix

164 S.W. 1035, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 1035 (First Nat. Bank v. Hix) 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
First Nat. Bank v. Hix, 164 S.W. 1035, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

At the beginning of the cotton season of 1907, the First National Bank of Wellington, Collingsworth county, Tex., furnished the money to E. M. Hix, to purchase cotton for the cotton season of that year. At the expiration of the cotton season, Hix closed his overdrafts at the bank by the execution to the latter of a note for the sum of $604.10, representing his loss. At the beginning of the cotton season of 1908, Hix, desiring to continue the same business, procured three sureties, Couch, Roberts, and Wilkins, to sign his note for the sum of $1,000, payable to the same bank; Hix and the sureties contending in this case that the purpose of the $1,000 note was that of indemnity to protect the bank to that amount for the cotton business for that year in the event of loss by Hix, and the bank asserting that, in accordance with its understanding with Hix, the $1,000 note was for the purpose of discharging the $604.10 note, and the balance, $395.90, was to be used as a margin against his cotton purchases for 1908. At the end of the cotton season of 1908, Hix, as a result of his operations in cotton, had to his credit the sum of $312, which the bank applied upon the $1,000 note, leaving a balance of $688, which latter sum was merged into a new note, executed by Hix, and the same sureties as upon the $1,000 note. This last note was successively renewed several times by Couch and Roberts, as sureties to Hix. Wilkins, on account of his removal from Wellington, refused to execute the first renewal, and this suit is by the bank against Hix, Couch, and Roberts, upon the last renewal.

The sureties, Couch and Roberts, also contend that the first execution of the $688 note was induced by the representations of the bank to the effect that Hix had suffered a loss for the cotton season of 1908, and the successive renewals of said note by them was with the same understanding, carrying out the alleged original purpose of the $1,000 note executed as indemnity for the business of that year; that the cotton business of 1908 realized a profit instead of a loss; and that said note was fraudulently obtained and was without consideration. The bank, plaintiff in error, assigned the following, submitted as a proposition: "The court erred in refusing to set aside the verdict of the jury and the judgment thereon and grant to plaintiff a new trial, because of the fact that one of the jurors who tried the case, to wit, one Westfall, the foreman of the jury, after having heard all the evidence and arguments of counsel and having been given the charge of the court, and after having retired to the jury room and having considered and deliberated on said case, and while the same was still in the hands of the jury, went home with one of the defendants, O. L. Couch, and spent the night with him, and (obtained) supper, bed, and breakfast, free of charge," etc. The objections in the brief of defendant in error — the same criticisms having been leveled to the nine assignments of plaintiff in *Page 1037 error — are untenable as preventing our consideration of the particular specification of error. The assignment is succinct and appropriate, whether considered for the twofold purpose of an assignment and a proposition, and the subjoined statement is apt and sufficiently comprehensive, and neither could be considered as argumentative.

The evidence upon the hearing of the motion for a new trial, without contradiction, sustains the assignment, and the trial court should have vacated the verdict and set aside the judgment.

We believe the Supreme Court of Georgia, in Walker v. Walker, 11 Ga. 205, expressed the true rule in matters of this kind, and the evidence of the actions of the juror and the conduct of the litigant in that case were very similar to the facts here: During a will contest one of the jurors was entertained by the contestant at the latter's home and expense. The court said: "It is true, the affidavit of the juror was produced, in which he states that his verdict was not influenced by the kindness and hospitality of the caveator (contestant); but we place our judgment on the principle of the common law, which we consider a safe and salutary rule. When a juror has been impaneled to try a cause, and during the trial, and before he has rendered his verdict, he shall be entertained, by either of the parties, at their expense, and the verdict be in favor of the party so entertaining the juror, the verdict will be set aside. Graham on New Trials, 96, 97, 98, 99, and cases there cited. This rule is indispensably necessary to preserve the purity and integrity of jury trials in our courts, and cannot be too strictly enforced." (The textbook cited is not accessible to us.)

The case of Ensign v. Harney, 15 Neb. 330, 18 N.W. 73, 48 Am.Rep. 344, discloses that, after adjournment of a trial from Saturday to Monday, two of the jurors requested and obtained from one of the attorneys of the parties, as a favor, the latter's horse and buggy to carry them home and return the following Monday. This proceeding was defended on the ground "that the transaction was open and above board, and not done with the intention of exercising an influence on the jurors, and that in fact it did not have any influence upon them in making up their verdict." The Supreme Court of Nebraska said: "Unless fair-minded, unbiased jurors can be selected, a trial becomes a mere farce, dependent, not upon the merits of the case, but upon extraneous circumstances, such as the bias, prejudice, or interest of the jury. * * * Where a juror is accepted as being impartial, he must remain so during the trial. To permit him to accept favors from either party is to place him under obligations to such party, the tendency of which is to bias his judgment. Nor is it material that such favors were not intended to influence the juror, as it cannot be determined how far they may have had that effect, and such conduct will vitiate the verdict."

Chief Justice Fisher said, in the case of Marshall v. Watson,16 Tex. Civ. App. 127, 40 S.W. 352, where it was shown that some of the jurors during the trial dined at a restaurant upon the invitation, and at the expense, of one of the parties: "If a practice of this character was permitted to go unchallenged, it would be difficult to draw the line, and say when it should cease, and the best policy to pursue is to prevent it altogether. It is impossible, in cases where questions of this kind arise, to determine whether harm or injury or improper influence resulted, and an effort to ascertain the truth in that respect would be altogether speculative." Numerous authorities are cited by Justice Fisher, sustaining the rule announced in that cause and adopted here, including the authorities more extensively quoted from and cited by us, and additional to which we cite the following cases: Johnson v. Hobart (C. C.) 45 F. 542; Perry v. Bailey, 12 Kan. pp. 419, 420; Railway Co. v. Welch, 12 Ind. App. 433, 40 N.E. 650.

The trial court was very probably influenced by that portion of the statute of 1905 on the subject of new trials, reading as follows: "Where the ground of the motion is on account of misconduct of the jury or the officer in charge, or because of any communication made to the jury, or because the jury received other testimony, the court shall hear evidence thereof, and it shall be competent to prove such facts by the jurors or others, by examination in open court; and if the misconduct proven, or the testimony received, or the communication made be material a new trial may in the discretion of the court be granted."

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 1035, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-v-hix-texapp-1914.