Holmon v. City of Orangeburg
This text of 110 S.E. 674 (Holmon v. City of Orangeburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The appellant in its argument states the case as follows:
“This is an action to recover damages for personal injuries'alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the alleged negligence of defendant. The particular delict alleged, and that to which the testimony was directed, was the maintenance by the city of an alleged water ‘cut-off’ on and near the edge of a sidewalk of one . of its streets. The answer was a general denial of the allegations of the complaint. The case was first tried before Hon. I. W. Bowman, Circuit Judge, with ,a jury, at the June, 1919, term of Court of Common Pleas for Orange-burg, and resulted in a directed verdict in favor of defendant. Plaintiff appealed, and the judgment of the-lower Court was reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial. 113 S. C., 489; 101 S. E., 834. The case was then tried before Hon. James E. Peurifoy, Circuit Judge, with a jury, at the March term of Court of Common Pleas for Orangeburg County, and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff *365 in the sum of $5,000. In due time the defendant’s attorneys made a motion before the Court to set this verdict aside, on the ground that one of the plaintiff’s attorneys, in the course of his argument to the jury, used the following language: ‘That he had on yesterday heard a conversation between a visiting attorney and Mr. Hawes, the city engineer, in which conversation Mr. Hawes had stated that they had voted a $1,000,000 bond issue on the city for the purpose of -improving the streets and sidewalks, and that the visiting attorney, in reply to Mr. Hawes, had stated, “If you put upon the city of Orangeburg a bonded debt of $1,000,000 to repair the streets and sidewalks, the streets and sidewalks of Orangeburg must be in a devil of a fix” ’ which language, defendant’s counsel contended, was unsupported by the record, was prejudicial, and was made and stated to the jury over previous objection to counsel going out of the record in referring to streets and sidewalks in other parts of the city, and after the Court had cautioned plaintiff’s said attorney to confine himself to the record and the testimony, which motion was overruled. The defendant in due time served notice of its intention to appeal, and also its proposed case and exceptions. The plaintiff then proposed an amendment to the case and exceptions, and the defendant gave notice that it disallowed the proposed amendment.
“The matter was then submitted to Judge Peurifoy for settlement. He thereupon passed an order disallowing the proposed amendment, and adjudged that the proposed case without the said amendment be the case for appeal.”
Points and Authorities
“Exception 1 should be sustained. The testimony complained of showed that the defendant, after the occurrence of the accident resulted in the injury complained of, took additional precaution to prevent the recurrence of such an accident, made the sidewalk wider at the place of the ac *366 cident. Such testimony, particularly in this case, is inadmissible for that purpose.”
*367
III. The next assignment of error is:
It is always bad practice to go out of the record. It can do no good and it may make harm. Where it is calculated to do harm, it will be treated as prejudicial, and a new trial granted. This Court does not see how the remarks could have done any harm. The Circuit Judge, who was in the atmosphere of the trial,, did not think so. The words of themselves did not tend to excite passion, or to arouse prejudice, nor were they calculated to appeal to unworthy motives. The words in themselves did not *368 tend to prejudice the appellant’s case. We cannot find prejudicial error. This exception is overruled.
The fifth exception has already been considered. The exceptions to the settlement of the case need not be considered.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
110 S.E. 674, 118 S.C. 361, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmon-v-city-of-orangeburg-sc-1922.