Freeman v. Bennett

195 S.W. 238, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 507
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1917
DocketNo. 1773.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 238 (Freeman v. Bennett) 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
Freeman v. Bennett, 195 S.W. 238, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 507 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

WILLSON, C. J.

(after stating the facts as above). The action of the trial court in admitting and excluding testimony is the basis of the assignments numbered 1 to 13, inclusive, in- appellant’s brief. The contentions presented by these assignments will be disposed of in the order in which they are made in the brief.

1. The claim that the court permitted appellee as a witness to testify over appellant’s objection to a statement she made to third persons about being engaged to appellant is not supported by the record. It appears from the bill of exceptions that appellee testified without objection on the part of appellant that she made such a statement, and that appellant’s objection was to her testifying as to who it was she made it to. Therefore this court is not called upon to determine whether the testimony of appellee that she had made such a statement was inadmissible and prejudicial to appellant or not. Certainly, if it was error, after she had testified that she made the statement, to permit her to say to whom she made it, the error was not one which should cause a reversal of the judgment. It appeared from the bill that appellee made the statement to her sister, her stepmother, Mrs. Eddins and Mrs. Smith. It has been held that it is permissible to show by the testimony of the plaintiff in a suit like this that she had communicated to her family the fact of her engagement to the defendant. Lewis v. Tapman, 90 Md. 294, 45 Atl. 459, 47 L. R. A. 385.

2. It was not error to permit appellee to testify that about all she owned “which could be called property’’ was a lot in Hugo. Vanderpool v. Richardson, 52 Mich. 336, 17 N. W. 936; 4 R. C. L. 174.

3. If it was error to refuse to permit appellant to prove by appellee on his cross-examination of her whether she wrote him from Durant that she was “going to work in the post office there September 1, 1915,” or not, it should be treated as harmless. Appellant himself testified, without contradiction, that appellee so wrote him, in effect, from Durant. It was not claimed the testimony excluded was material for any other purpose than to discredit appellee’s testimony that the agreement between her and appellant was that they would marry “in the fall of 1915.” Appellee’s going to work in Durant at the time stated would not have been inconsistent with her engagement to marry appellant in the fall, and the testimony would have tended very remotely, if at all, to prove that she and appellant had not agreed to marry then. The exclusion of the testimony, we are sure, was not “reasonably calculated to cause, and probably did cause, the rendition of an improper judgment in the case.” Rule 62a (149 S. W. x) for the government of Courts of Civil Appeals.

4. The contention made that the court permitted Dr. Crook to testify to the contents of a report' he made covering' the birth and death of appellee’s child is not supported by the record. It appears from the bill of exceptions that what Dr. Crook did testify was that he “made the report just like she (ap-pellee) said.” He was not asked to do so, and did not undertake to state the contents of the report.

5. Appellant having testified that he did not know exactly when he “stopped associating” with appellee, but knew when it was that he refused to go with her, and that it was on the occasion of a party at Blaine Rattan’s on January 22, 1915, to which he was invited by Mrs. Miller, complains because the court would not permit him, over appellee’s objection that it was immaterial, to testify further that Mrs. Miller requested him to accompany appellee to the party. The court did not err in sustaining the objection. How the fact that Mrs. Miller requested appellant to accompany appellee to the party could possibly be material to any issue in the case we fail to see, and appellant in his brief suggests no reason why it was material.

6. The refusal of the court to permit appellant, over appellee’s objection that same was immaterial and about a collateral matter, to testify that in his candidacy for the nomination for county clerk in 1916, “No issue was made against him except the charges made against him in this case,” was not error. As we view it, there is nothing in the record which would have authorized the court to enter upon an inquiry as to the issues in appellant’s race for county clerk.

7. If it was error to refuse to permit appellant, on his cross-examination of the witness Stell, to prove by the witness whether he had opposed the candidacy of his half-brother for the nomination of district attorney and helped to defeat him, because his half-brother was appellant’s friend and supporter, it was not error sufficient to justify *241 a reversal of the judgment. The only purpose of the testimony was to show ill feeling of the witness toward appellant. This was shown sufficiently by Stell’s testimony that he fought appellant in his campaign for renomination as county clerk in 1916, felt ill toward him, and had voluntarily come from another’ county than that in which the trial was had to testify as a witness against him.

8. The part excluded' of the answer of the witness Mason to the'third cross-interrogatory propounded to him plainly was not responsive to that interrogatory, and the court properly excluded it as evidence.

9-12. So the court properly excluded the testimony of the witness Mason that he shows certain compromising letters which he claimed to have received from appellee to T. D. Starnes, an attorney at Greenville, “in order,” quoting the witness’ language, “that I might ask his advice as an attorney in order that he might advise me.” Appellee denied having written the letters, and the testimony excluded evidently was intended to strengthen that of the witness to the contrary. Plainly it would not have tended in the least to do so, and we agree with appellee that the court did not err when he excluded the testimony. Perhaps it would have been permissible, as corroborating Mason, to have Shown by Starnes that the former exhibited such letters to him, but certainly testimony by Mason that he had exhibited such letters to other persons could add no strength to his testimony that he had received such letters. It may be, had appellant proposed to follow up the testimony by that of Starnes, showing that such letters had been exhibited to him by appellant, the testimony should not have been excluded; but it does not appear that appellant expected or could have made such proof by Starnes.

13. The court should have excluded the statement of the witness Crook that he lost confidence in appellant because the latter in a conversation with him about appellee after the birth of. her child “misrepresented some little things” to him. The statement was not in response to the question propounded to the witness, and was also inadmissible on other grounds. But we think it very unlikely that the error operated to prejudice appellant’s rights. It appears from the bill of exceptions that the statement of the witness was not made in response to any question asked him, and that when he made it the court on his own motion interrupted the examination of the witness, declaring: “Gentlemen, I will give notice now we are not going to try out those; of my own motion I will efface those, because we will not take the time to try out those quibbles, and if the objection is not made the defendant will be bound;” whereupon appellant’s counsel stated: “We are perfectly willing for him to answer,” and the court further said: “I will give you notice now that we will not go into .it. Gentlemen, conclude it there.

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Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 238, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-bennett-texapp-1917.