Hall v. Jones

195 S.W. 399, 129 Ark. 18, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 624
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 30, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 399 (Hall v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Jones, 195 S.W. 399, 129 Ark. 18, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 624 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellee sued appellants for damages, both compensatory and punitive, to compensate an injury sustained by her as the result of the loss by fire of her home and its contents. She alleged that appellants had hired one Stray Waddell to burn her house in order that they might collect the insurance thereon and apply it to the debt due them by appellee. She recovered judgment for $500 compensatory, and $300 punitive, damages, and this appeal has been prosecuted to reverse that judgment.

A reversal is asked upon four grounds. First, that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury. Second, that an erroneous instruction was given on the measure of damages. Third, that incompetent evidence was admitted. Fourth, that prejudicial error was committed by the court in permitting counsel for appellee to make certain remarks in the presence of the jury and certain statements in his closing argument. We will discuss these assignments of error in the order stated.

It is earnestly insisted that the evidence does not support the verdict. That it is sufficient only to arouse a suspicion of appellants’ guilt, and that a satisfactory explanation was offered by appellants of the incriminating circumstances. Appellants denied the offense charged with great vehemence, and offered explanations of the various circumstances offered in proof in support of the charge of guilt. Had these explanations been credited by the jury, a verdict could not have been returned against appellants. Manifestly, however, these statements were not accepted, and it remains only to determine whether the evidence against appellants, when given its highest probative value, together with all inferences reasonably deducible therefrom, is legally sufficient to support the verdict.

This evidence may be summarized as follows: Appellee purchased from J. H. Hall a house and lot in the city of Hot Springs, on May 23, 1911, for the consideration of $1,700. In payment therefor, she conveyed to Hall a 160-acre tract of land, which was treated as a cash payment of $500, and she executed twenty promissory notes, each for $60, one to become due every six months, and all to bear interest at the rate of 8 per . cent, per annum, from date until paid; but there was a verbal agreement that, if she could make her payments at the rate of $10 each per month, no interest should be charged. There was also an agreement that appellee should keep the property insured, and that the policy should be made payable to appellant J. H. Hall as his interest might appear, and, pursuant to this agreement, appellee took out two policies, for $500 each, with loss payable to Hall. Five of the purchase money notes had been paid, leaving a balance of $900, exclusive of interest, when appellee defaulted in her payments. Upon complaint of this fact being made to appellee, who is a colored woman — by Hall, she explained her default by saying that she had been unable to secure roomers for her house, when Hall asked if she would furnish rooms to white men, and she stated she would do so, and Hall promised to assist her in securing white men to take her rooms. A few days later, a crippled white man named Stray Waddell, applied to appellee for a room. This man was a notorious police character, and had served more than one term in the penitentiary. He had a piece of paper in his hand, upon which appellee’s name and street and telephone number were written, and this street number was “3,” a number used only by appellant, as he had four or five cottages on the same lot, all of which were given the same street number by appellant. Appellee’s number appeared in the telephone directory as No. 4, but appellants had never recognized this number. Appellee asked Waddell if Hall had sent him to her, and received a negative answer. Waddell was accepted as a lodger, and went away promising to return the next day, but he failed to do so. On the night of the next day, an attempt was made to burn the house, but the fire was discovered before it had gained much headway, and a fire company which* arrived promptly extinguished the fire before much damage had been done. The evidences of an incendiary origin of the fire were so patent that the insurance companies undertook to cancel the policies, but Hall demanded the five days ’ notice provided for by the policies, and, in discussing this first fire with appellee, Hall told her she would have made money if she had let the house burn. Two days after the first fire, Waddell returned and occupied his room. The next morning appellee left early for her work, and a short time afterward Waddell was seen leaving the house, and as he left he was observed to stop and look back, and in a very short time flames burst through the windows and the roof. A short distance away Wad-dell met a party who told him the house was burning, but Waddell made an indifferent remark and proceeded on his way.

W. H. Hall and appellee had a conference just after the fire, and upon Hall’s advice appellee reported the occurrence of the fire to the chief of police. When she had given a description of her lodger to the chief of police, that officer said the man she had described was Stray Waddell, whereupon Hall insisted that such was not the case, and assigned as a reason for his definite opinion that Waddell was not the man described, the fact that the neighbors near the scene of the fire had given a description of the lodger which did not describe Waddell. The Halls were dealers in second-hand goods, and they admit their introduction to Waddell consisted in the purchase from him of a handbag which proved to have been stolen, and was reclaimed by the owner before the fire. The Halls explained, however, that they were unaware of the fact that the bag had been stolen. Hall admits that Wad-dell pawned clothes with him on several occasions after the fire. It was shown that Waddell had no money on the day before the fire, while on the morning of the fire he had at least two ten-dollar bills, and some change. Hall testified at the trial of this cause that he did not believe Waddell was the man described by appellee because, on the morning of the fire, Waddell was at his store, and, crippled as he was, he could not have walked from the scene of the fire to Hall’s place of business between the time of the fire and the time Waddell was at Hall’s store. Hall testified that he changed a ten-dollar bill for Wad-dell, and the inference is that this was done about the time the fire was raging. Appellee’s house was about one and a half miles distant from appellant’s place of business; but street cars ran from near the house to appellants ’ store. It is appellee’s theory that this evidence was false and was the proof of an alibi which had been arranged.

A witness testified that, while the house was burning, and before the fire department had arrived, J. H. Hall, who was at his place of business one and a half miles away, called over the phone and inquired about the fire, and, upon being told that it was the house of appellee, was heard to laugh. W. H. Hall testified that he was the party who talked with this witness over the telephone, and that he had learned of the fire from a man named Smith, who told him that smoke was boiling up over the mountain in the direction of the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 399, 129 Ark. 18, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-jones-ark-1917.