Fisheries Co. v. McCoy

202 S.W. 343, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 283
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1918
DocketNo. 5954.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 343 (Fisheries Co. v. McCoy) 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
Fisheries Co. v. McCoy, 202 S.W. 343, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 283 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinions

Gould C. McCoy sued The Fisheries Company, J. W. Munn, and W. L. Moody, Jr., for damages for personal injuries suffered by appellee while in the service of The Fisheries Company. Munn and Moody, respectively president and secretary-treasurer of the company, and each a *Page 344 trustee therein, were sued on the theory that they were personally liable because of the character of the company and their relations to it. The Fisheries Company pleaded a general demurrer and contributory negligence. Munn and Moody pleaded general denial, denied under oath the existence of any partnership, and by special plea set up the articles of association of The Fisheries Company providing that there should be no personal liability of the shareholders and trustees for any debts or damage incurred by the company, in connection with a written instrument executed by plaintiff in consideration of his employment by the company, in which he acknowledged notice of such provision for nonliability, and agreed to look to The Fisheries Company and its assets alone for satisfaction of any debts or damages incurred by it to him. Special exceptions to this plea were sustained, excluding it entirely, and upon answers of the jury to special issues judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff against all of the defendants for $20,746. All of the defendants appealed.

The first contention is that the court erred in refusing to add to the question whether plaintiff suffered any injuries the inquiry, "If so, which of said injuries did plaintiff suffer?" The proposition is to the effect that in the state of the evidence as to injuries suffered by plaintiff, and in view of the manner in which the cause was submitted in the charge, the defendants had the right to an affirmative statement by the jury of the injuries found, as requested by defendants and the refusal of such request was the denial of such right prejudicial to them. This proposition is very general. It leaves it to us to read the testimony and examine the charge, and to then deduce, if we can, a theory showing that defendants were prejudiced by the refusal of their request. We gather, however, from the argument that the theory relied upon by appellants is that it was important to their rights to have the jury state whether it found that plaintiff suffered a dislocation and curvature of the spine, in order that their findings as to the amount of damages could be reviewed. No authorities are cited in support of the assignment.

The rendition of a verdict so large that it shows on its face to be the result of prejudice or passion constitutes error requiring a reversal of the judgment unless a suitable remittitur is entered. Does that fact entitle the defendant in a personal injury case to require that the jury name the different injuries they find plaintiff to have sustained? If so, as the consequences found to follow from injuries are frequently more important than the injuries, and the testimony more conflicting with regard thereto, would defendants also be entitled to have the jury state what consequences they find would follow from each injury, and would it also be proper to have them state the amount of damages they allow for each injury? There may arise exceptional cases in which there is a sharp conflict as to whether or not an injury was sustained, which injury would be so important as an element of damages that if found to exist a large verdict would be permitted to stand, and if not found to exist only a small verdict would be justified. In such cases a very plausible argument could be made in favor of the propriety of submitting an issue inquiring whether such injury was found to have been suffered. Under our statute it is proper to submit such issues as, if answered favorably to plaintiff, will make out a case entitling him to a judgment. It is an issue whether plaintiff suffered injuries and what amount will compensate him for the injuries suffered. It may also be said that there is an issue as to each injury alleged and that is true, but to have the jury pass on each injury can serve no purpose except to furnish a basis for impeaching the verdict as to compensation allowed. If the jury found against plaintiff on certain injuries, they would be eliminated as a basis for the compensation allowed. Their finding as to each injury would be attacked as unsupported by evidence and if any one of such attacks was sustained, the finding as to compensation would fall, and in self-defense, under such a system, the plaintiff would probably be compelled to ask that each injury be valued separately.

When a case is submitted on a charge calling for a general verdict, the defendant does not have the privilege of requiring the jury to append to its verdict a list of injuries they find to have been sustained, so it cannot be said that such privilege is really essential to the administration of justice.

We believe it can be safely said that as a general rule the court is not required to submit a separate issue as to each injury, and we incline to the view that he would in no case be required to do so. But, even if it be held that under exceptional facts an issue should be submitted as to a particular injury, it would not be proper to attempt to get at the matter by asking the jury to describe all injuries found by them to have been suffered. In such cases an appropriate issue should be framed with regard to the particular injury in question. We have heretofore held that it was not error to refuse a request to have the jury name all injuries found to have been sustained. Andrews v. Wilding, 193 S.W. 192. As before stated there may be exceptional cases requiring a modification of the doctrine applied in that case; but in general we think such inquiries of very little value, and calculated to make the trial of cases on special issues so complicated and difficult as to destroy the value of the statute. In this case, while defendants, as before stated, were anxious to ascertain whether the jury found *Page 345 plaintiff to have suffered a dislocation or curvature of the spine, they did not frame an issue pertinently presenting the question, but wanted to elicit from the Jury a description of all injuries found to have been sustained by plaintiff. We have examined the facts, and conclude that, even if it were proper to submit such an issue, defendants were not harmed by the ruling of the court. Plaintiff, according to the undisputed testimony, suffered such permanent injuries to his arm and jaw, attended with great pain and suffering, as would have entitled him to a very large verdict. He also sustained injuries to his back from which he suffered considerable pain, and the jury would have been bound to have made a general finding at least with regard to such injuries, and had they made such a general finding we would not have known what consequence they found would follow such injuries, and would not have been able to hold the verdict excessive. The jury could not have done less, and we cannot assume that they would have taken the pains to state that they found no curvature of the spine and no dislocation of the vertebræ, even had they reached such a conclusion. Whether the jury described the injury in general terms or in technical language, in either event it would have been impossible to tell what consequences they thought would follow from the injury. The assignment, to say the least, presents no error requiring a reversal of the judgment, and it is overruled.

By the second assignment complaint is made of the failure of the court to give the following special charge:

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 343, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisheries-co-v-mccoy-texapp-1918.