Gillespie v. Doty

135 So. 211, 160 Miss. 684, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 224
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1931
DocketNo. 29087.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 135 So. 211 (Gillespie v. Doty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillespie v. Doty, 135 So. 211, 160 Miss. 684, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 224 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

An automobile driven by the appellee was struck and the appellee was injured by an automobile driven by a servant of the appellant, and this suit is by the appellee for the recovery of damages therefor. The case was tried twice in the court below. In the first trial there was a judgment for the appellant, which was set aside by the court, and a new trial granted, in which a judgment was rendered for the appellee. The proceedings in the first trial were preserved by a bill of exceptions, and one of the errors assigned is that the order setting aside the first judgment and granting the appellee a new trial should be reversed and that judgment reinstated. After the rendition of the first judgment, the appellee filed a motion for a 'new trial, setting up as grounds therefor misconduct of the jury, the verdict is contrary to the evidence, error in the granting of instructions to, and in the admission of evidence offered by, the appellant. *691 The new trial was granted on the first of these grounds.

The trial of the case was begun on Thursday. The jury, in accordance with the custom of the court, were not placed in charge of bailiffs, but were allowed to separate, and were under no restraint during the recesses, of the court. The case continued through ¡Saturday, on the morning of which the court of its own motion placed the jury in charge of two bailiffs, and thereafter kept them together until the conclusion of the trial. The evidence offered in support of the charge of misconduct of the jury discloses at most that some of the jurors were impatient with the attorneys for the appellee because of what they deemed their slowness in the production of evidence, desired to adjourn from Friday until Monday, and resented the court’s not so doing.' While this evidence was being introduced, the following colloquy between counsel and the court occurred:

“Mu. Witty (of counsel for the appellee): With all deference to the court and for the purpose of our record, we ask that the court state into the record if it is not a fact that this trial started on Thursday morning and the court as customary in the trial of civil cases, did not at the ' outset of the trial require the jury to be kept together during the adjourned noon hour and at night during the first two days of the trial, and permitted the jury to separate; that on the morning of the third day which was Saturday, November 17, 19'28, the court did for reasons satisfactory to the court, change that rule and from that time on to the end of the trial, require the jury to be kept in charge of two bailiffs, and if that is true, we respectfully ask the court to state into the record, why that was done.

“Mr Odom (of counsel for the appellant): We object to that statement.

“Court: That was the facts with reference to the jury but the court now declines to make any statement as to his reasons for so doing.

*692 “Mr. Witty: We are not criticising the court but what happened here was so patent to the court that without any testimony being offered, the court saw fit to do that.

£ £ Court : The court has already spoken. Exception by plaintiff. ’ ’

The court, in sustaining the motion for a new trial, rendered the following judgment: £ £ This day came on to be heard plaintiff’s motion for a new, trial and the court, after hearing the testimony and after further being duly advised by personal observations made by the court of the conduct of the jury during the trial of this cause heretofore had during the present term of this court, and prior to the submission of the case to the jury, is of the opinion that said motion should be sustained and it is, therefore, considered and so ordered and adjudged that said motion be and it is hereby sustained and that the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court heretofore rendered in this cause at the present term of this court be, and they are hereby set aside, and that the plaintiff be and he is hereby awarded a new trial of said cause, to all of which defendants except, and defendants are allowed sixty days from this date to file its bill of exceptions herein.”

The evidence as to the misconduct of the jury is, as counsel for the appellee practically Concede, insufficient to justify the granting of the new trial; consequently the ruling of the court thereon must be sustained, if at all, on facts which the trial judge personally knew, but which do not appear in the evidence. The question then is, “May a judge determine an issue between litigants by invoking his personal knowledge of facts not disclosed by the evidence ? ’ ’ This question was answered in the negative early in our judicial history by our predecessor, the High Court of Errors and Appeals in Smith v. Moore, 3 How. 40, wherein it was said that: “It is a settled maxim, that a judge has a private and a judicial *693 knowledge. But he cannot give a judgment upon his jrivate knowledge; for he is obliged to give it according to law and what is proved. If he has a private knowledge of a fact, he may be sworn as a witness, and then the parties have an, opportunity to examine and cross-examine him, and to introduce explanatory or counteracting proof.” This ruling is in accord with the weight of judicial authority, as will appear from an examination of 5 Wig-more on Evidence (2 Ed.), section 2569; 1 Jones on Evidence (2 Ed.), section 470’; 23 C. J. 62. The new trial should not therefore have been granted because of any misconduct on the part of the jnry.

But it is said by counsel for the appellee that the appellee was entitled to a new trial for the other reasons set forth in his motion therefor, and therefore the order granting the same should be affirmed, though a wrong reason was given therefor.

The evidence discloses that the Lexington-Pickens public road runs north and south, and is entered from the west at right angles by the Richland-Ebenezer public road, which runs east and west; the former is about two feet higher'at the point of junction than the latter; and a few trees and weeds grow along the north side of the Richland-Ebenezer road. According to the evidence for the appellee, he wa.s driving his automobile over the Richland-Ebenezer road, intending to turn into and proceed north on the Lexington-Pickens road. He stopped about nine feet from the latter road, looked north up that road, of which he had a clear view for four or five hundred feet, and, seeing no vehicle approaching, drove slowly into the Lexington-Pickens road, turned first slightly to the right and the left, heading north. After he entered the latter road, he saw the appellant’s automobile approaching from the north, something over four hundred feet away on the east side of the road, at a rapid rate of speed; it had passed an automobile parked on the west side of the road four or five hundred feet *694 north of'the crossing and veered to the east, its left side, of the road in order to pass, traveling at the rate of speed variously estimated by the witnesses at from over fifty to seventy miles an hour. The witnesses who testified to this fact did not see the collision, and did not see. the appellant’s automobile return to the right side of the road.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 So. 211, 160 Miss. 684, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillespie-v-doty-miss-1931.