Ghumm v. Josch

298 P. 751, 133 Kan. 16, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 9, 1931
DocketNo. 29,439; No. 29,600
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 298 P. 751 (Ghumm v. Josch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ghumm v. Josch, 298 P. 751, 133 Kan. 16, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 6 (kan 1931).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

Two appeals in the same case have been consolidated and will be considered together and as one. It involves a dispute as to a share of a corn crop, the action being brought to recover the value of the balance of such share. The defendant, by way of cross petition, asked damages for slander in seven counts, charging the plaintiff with having told others of defendant’s stealing, or having stolen, his corn. The jury returned $, verdict for plaintiff for $167.90 for balance of his share of the crop and also in his favor on the cross petition.

Defendant appeals, assigning four particular errors: admission of incompetent and prejudicial evidence on cross-examination; prejudicial remarks of the court in the presence of the jury; erroneous and confusing instructions given to the jury; and refusal of the court to grant a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence.

Two witnesses of the defendant were asked on cross-examination if they had ever been arrested. One of them answered in the affirmative and the other in the negative. Appellant urges that such was immaterial and could serve no purpose except to prejudice the jury and lessen the credibility of the witnesses. Shortly after these questions were asked and answers given, the court called the attention of the attorneys in the case, in the presence and hearing of the jury, to the records of that court showing that the negative answer given by one of the witnesses was not correct, reading from the return of the sheriff showing he had arrested that witness on a cer[18]*18tain date, and reproved attorneys for permitting such evidence to pass without notice when the records showed the same to be incorrect, and further stated that his attention had been called to another case in that county where the same witness had been again arrested. Appellant complains that such comment in the presence of the jury was highly prejudicial and harmful to the interests of the defendant, who had called this witness, tending to cause the jury to discredit and disbelieve the material statements of this witness, relying upon the ruling in the case of Walker v. Coleman, 55 Kan. 381, 40 Pac. 640, where the court did not approve of such comment and warned against the dangers thereof.

No objection was made to the questions asked these two witnesses about having been arrested and no motion was made to strike out either of the answers and withdraw them from the consideration of the jury; neither was any objection made to the comment of the court nor motion to strike it out and withdraw it from the consideration of the jury. Without such objection or motion at the time, appellant is not in a position to secure a reversal of the judgment, however serious the evidence and comment may have been.

“Objection should be made to incompetent evidence when it is admitted if its admission is to be relied on to secure the reversal of the judgment.” (Snyder v. Rankin, 120 Kan. 186, syl. ¶ 2, 243 Pac. 287.)

The same rule applies to prejudicial remarks of the trial court in the hearing of the jury.

Again, neither of these matters was included in the motion for a new trial, nor presented to the trial court on the hearing of that motion, and without thus affording the trial court an opportunity, by a fair presentation of the errors complained of, to correct any such errors or mistake in the court where the errors occurred, they cannot constitute a basis for reversible error.

“Error assigned on the alleged prejudicial attitude of the trial judge, not fairly presented to the trial court for its due consideration on a motion for a new trial, does not constitute a basis of reversible error.” (State v. Robinson, 124 Kan. 245, syl. ¶ 9, 259 Pac. 691.)

“Error cannot be predicated on remarks and comments of the judge in the course of a trial unless timely exception is taken thereto and brought specifically to the trial court’s attention by the presentation of a motion for a new trial covering the matters complained of, so that the trial court itself may have an opportunity to rectify any prejudicial consequences which may have flowed from its ill-advised observation in the presence of the jury, if any such were made.” (American Automobile Ins. Co. v. Clark, 122 Kan. 445, syl. ¶ 1, 252 Pac. 215.)

[19]*19It is insisted by appellant that the instructions given concerning the cross petition of the defendant for damages on account of slander are conflicting and contradictory. It is conceded that instruction No. 5 correctly states the law, but.it is contended that instructions 7, 8 and 9 state it differently and confuse the matter particularly as to proof of damages or injury by reason of the slanderous words alleged to have been spoken. The court in instruction No. 5 had told the jury that the language charged to have been spoken was called in law slander per se and if spoken falsely and maliciously was regarded as doing damage without any proof that actual damage resulted, and that in determining the injury done the jury should consider all the facts and circumstances and be guided by their own best judgment, considering, among other things, the standing and general reputation of the defendant for honesty and uprightness.

In the seventh instruction the court distinguished between nominal damages and substantial damages, concluding as to the former as follows:

. . but if no damages are shown to have resulted, nominal damages may be found against plaintiff, whereby he may be held responsible for a slander per se by a verdict of one cent or one dollar on each count, if any so proved by defendant against plaintiff.”

Appellant construes the last clause as referring to damages as if saying if any damages so proved. But this is not the most natural and reasonable construction of this clause. “If any” refers to slander, and the concluding clause is “if any (slander) so proved.” The introductory words of the entire expression limit the proposition to the situation where “no damages are shown.” No one should conclude that the court intended to close the sentence on the situation where “no damages are shown” with a provision “if any (damages) so proved.” The next and closing sentence of the paragraph is confirmatory of this most natural and reasonable view of the meaning of words used. “But if it appear that any slander was committed as alleged, you may properly render a verdict for substantial damages, if such appear to be proper.” The fact that the record shows that no evidence whatever was offered to prove either special or actual damages is further persuasive that the court was not referring to damages being proved, but to slander.

We have no fears about the jury understanding the correct meaning of the court in paragraph 8 of the instructions, where reference [20]*20was made to the slanderous words as follows: “steal, stealing, stole, etc.” The abbreviation “etc.” did not in any way extend the field nor cause the jury to speculate. A hasty reference to the cross petition reveals the use of two additional words of the same general meaning as the three mentioned by the court, viz., “stolen” and “thefts.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 P. 751, 133 Kan. 16, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ghumm-v-josch-kan-1931.