Gildehaus v. Jones

200 S.W.2d 523, 356 Mo. 8, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 540
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1947
DocketNo. 39800.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 200 S.W.2d 523 (Gildehaus v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gildehaus v. Jones, 200 S.W.2d 523, 356 Mo. 8, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 540 (Mo. 1947).

Opinions

Action for $9,763.44 for personal injuries alleged to have been proximately caused by defendants' negligence in driving a tractor-trailer truck into collision with the automobile driven by plaintiff at the intersection of Sulphur and Chippewa Streets in St. Louis, July 14, 1945. The plaintiff's case was submitted to the jury upon negligence under the humanitarian rule; the jury returned a verdict for defendants; and plaintiff has appealed from the judgment subsequently rendered.

Plaintiff-appellant contends that, at the outset of the trial, she was placed in a prejudicial position by the disclosure to the jury of the fact she was insured against property damage to her automobile; it is said a mistrial should have been declared for that reason. Plaintiff-appellant further assigns errors of the trial court in permitting defendants-respondents to cross-examine plaintiff concerning her marriages, and concerning another claim for personal injury; and in the refusal of plaintiff-appellant's proffered Instruction No. 1.

Plaintiff's petition was originally in two counts, for personal injuries and for damage to her automobile. Plaintiff had a contract of insurance protecting her against property damage to her automobile, and the Insurance Company was permitted to intervene in the action upon a theory of subrogation. Thereafter, plaintiff dismissed the count for property damage, whereupon the court entered an order rescinding the order permitting the Insurance Company's intervention. These orders were entered in the Assignment Division (Division No. 1, Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis). Counsel for the Insurance Company did not understand the order allowing intervention had *Page 11 been rescinded, and appeared in the trial court (Division No. 7) and made an opening statement telling the jury of Insurance Company's intention to prove that plaintiff had a contract of insurance under the terms of which her car was insured for $675; that the car was damaged to the extent of $475 of which plaintiff, under the terms of the policy, was to pay the first $22.50; and that the Insurance Company had an interest "in that automobile to the extent of $452.50." The judge of the Assignment Division, having learned counsel for the Insurance Company had failed to apprehend the order permitting intervention had been rescinded, appeared near the trial courtroom and signified a wish to speak with the trial judge and counsel in chambers. The trial judge and his official reporter, the judge of the Assignment Division, and counsel retired to the trial judge's chambers; the judge of the Assignment Division reiterated the ruling rescinding the order allowing Insurance Company's intervention; and the trial judge announced the Insurance Company would not be permitted to further participate in the trial. (Counsel for the parties, plaintiff and defendants, do not agree as to the import of further conversation between the trial judge and counsel for the parties.) [525] The trial judge and reporter, and counsel for the parties plaintiff and defendants then returned to the trial courtroom and into the presence of the jury; and the trial judge orally advised the jury that "at the beginning or outset of the trial, we had three parties litigant; there are now remaining only two of those parties, namely, the lady here as plaintiff, and Jones and the driver as the defendant." The trial court further told the jury the Insurance Company was no longer in the case, "not by reason of anything done by the parties to this litigation but by reason of a legal ruling" made by the judge of the Assignment Division, and that they, the jury, were not to "take into consideration in any manner whatsoever the question of any damages to the automobile involved in the accident, property damage." Plaintiff objected to the action of the court in orally stating to the jury "that the element of property damage is out of the case for the reason that the statement would imply that some arrangement or agreement had been reached by or between the parties . . . to settle or dispose of the plaintiff's claim for damages to her automobile." Plaintiff in her motion for a new trial assigned error of the trial court in refusing "plaintiff's request to discharge the jury after orally instructing the jury in substance and effect that the question of insurance was no longer in the case."

[1] No request for a declaration of a mistrial, because of any question of insurance being prejudicially present in the case, shows in the transcript of the record as originally prepared by the court reporter and tendered to counsel for their approval. Upon the record as shown by the transcript as originally prepared, the error assigned herein (of refusing to declare a mistrial on the ground plaintiff's insurance *Page 12 was prejudicially present in the case) should not be considered herein upon appeal because such transcript does not show plaintiff's counsel made known to the court that plaintiff desired the declaration of a mistrial upon that ground (Civil Code of Missouri, sec. 122, Laws of Missouri 1943, p. 389, Mo. R.S.A. sec. 847.122); however, plaintiff's counsel refused to agree to the transcript so prepared, contending a request for a mistrial upon that ground had been made in judge's chambers, and filed a motion (supported by affidavits) to correct the transcript to so show. The trial court considered the motion and supporting affidavits, and heard the testimony of the reporter upon the question; overruled the motion to correct the transcript; and certified the transcript, as originally prepared and tendered by the reporter, to be a correct transcript of the proceedings in the cause. Plaintiff contends that, "under the circumstances," the request for a declaration of a mistrial should have been shown in the transcript, and that the trial court erred in overruling plaintiff's motion directed to that end.

Where a full transcript of the record upon appeal is filed, it is not necessary for the trial judge to authenticate it, if it is agreed to by the parties. Of course, if they cannot agree as to any part of it, the difference must be settled by the judge and he must sign it. Connoley v. Beyer Crushed Rock Co. et al.,355 Mo. 684, 197 S.W.2d 653; State ex rel. National Outdoor Advertising Co. v. Seehorn, 354 Mo. 170, 188 S.W.2d 657. See also Appellate Provisions of the 1943 Civil Code Act, Honorable Laurance M. Hyde and Honorable James M. Douglas, 15 M.B.J. 56, at page 60.

We hold the transcript of the record as originally prepared by the reporter which is authenticated by a certificate signed by the trial judge, and transmitted to this court under the seal of the clerk of the trial court, is to be considered true and quite as if the parties had agreed to it. Civil Code of Missouri, sec. 135(a), Laws of Missouri 1943, p. 393, Mo. R.S.A. sec. 847.135(a). The trial judge's authentication of the full transcript of the record, like a trial judge's settlement of the former bill of exceptions, which settlement was tantamount to the approval of the bill, should be considered the act of the trial judge as a judge and in the exercise of a judicial power, his action to be dependent on his memory and existing aids. In the authentication of the full transcript, the trial judge acts under the solemnity of his official oath, and we will presume he has faithfully and honestly performed his duty. State v. Munch,57 Mo. App. 207; Bauman v. C.I.T.

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Bluebook (online)
200 S.W.2d 523, 356 Mo. 8, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gildehaus-v-jones-mo-1947.