Huber v. Thomas

19 P.2d 1042, 45 Wyo. 440, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 18
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1933
Docket1772
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 P.2d 1042 (Huber v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huber v. Thomas, 19 P.2d 1042, 45 Wyo. 440, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 18 (Wyo. 1933).

Opinion

*445 RiNER, Justice.

This proceeding in error was instituted by the plaintiffs in error to bring before this court for review the record in an action commenced in the District Court of Na-trona County by Eleanor M. Thomas, as plaintiff, against Paul Huber, Table Supply Company, a corporation, and Central Trading Company, a corporation, as defendants. The corporation last mentioned having been dismissed from the ease, the action proceeded against the two remaining defendants with the result that plaintiff obtained a judgment against them entered upon the general verdict of a jury. The parties will hereinafter usually be referred to as aligned in the court below, or by their respective names.

On the 7th day of February, 1931, in the City of Casper, Wyoming, the Table Supply Company was engaged in the retail grocery business and Paul Huber was its manager. The business was of the type generally known as a “ cash and carry” store, where customers themselves selected their purchases from the stock for sale and then paid for the articles as they passed employees of the Table Supply Company stationed for that purpose near turn-stiles at *446 convenient locations in tbe store. A man by the name of Walter R,. Scbroyer employed by Huber, had charge of the fruit and vegetable department of the company.

On the date aforesaid, Sehroyer, in the Municipal Court of the City of Casper, verified a complaint against Mrs. J. C. Thomas, the plaintiff above named, charging her with a violation of certain provisions of an ordinance of that city, to-wit, that she, ‘ willfully and unlawfully secreted goods and chattels belonging to the Table Supply Company. Upon that complaint a warrant was issued and Mrs. Thomas, having a short time before been arrested and taken to the municipal court, was there required to give bail for her subsequent appearance to answer this charge. The case was tried on February 11, 1931, and being found not guilty, Mrs. Thomas was thereafter in due course discharged. Subsequently she brought this action for malicious prosecution against the defendants above named, which was concluded in the District Court as hereinbefore described.

Section 89-1705, Wyo. Rev. Stat. 1931 provides:

“No person shall be disqualified as a witness in any action or proceeding, civil or criminal, by reason of his interest in the event of the same, as a party or otherwise; and every person shall be in every such case a competent witness, except as otherwise provided in this article. But such interest or connection may be shown to affect the credibility of the witness. Any person who is a party of record in any civil action or proceeding, or any person for whose immediate benefit any such action or proceeding is prosecuted or defended, or his or its assignor, officer, agent, or employe, or the person who was such officer, agent or employe at the time of the occurrence of the facts made the subject of the examination, or in case a county, town, village, or city be a party, any officer of such county, town, village, or city, may be examined upon the trial of any such action or proceeding as if under cross-examination, at the instance of adverse party or parties or any of them, and for that purpose may be compelled, in the same manner and subject to the same rules for examination as *447 any other witness, to testify; bnt the party calling for such examination shall not be concluded thereby and may rebut the evidence given thereon by counter or impeaching testimony.”

At the trial, and during the course of the presentation of the plaintiff’s case in chief, Walter R. Schroyer, who had been subpoenaed as a witness in the cause by the plaintiff, was called by her to the stand for cross-examination under the authority of the statute above quoted. He was then no longer in the employ of the Table Supply Company. As this examination of Schroyer progressed, he gave testimony more and more in aid of plaintiff’s side of the issues in the case and adverse to that of the defendants. It is hardly possible to read his testimony thus given and not conclude that he was a witness in fact friendly to the plaintiff and hostile to the defendants concerning material and relevant matters in issue. When counsel for defendants was afforded an opportunity to examine this witness the trial court ruled:

“I do not understand that you have a right to go into anything except to clarify anything brought out on cross-examination. ’ ’

Thereupon counsel responded “That is all I had in mind.” When the latter thereafter undertook to interrogate Schroyer by leading questions, upon objection being made by plaintiff’s counsel that this was improper redirect examination, the court further ruled:

“My understanding is that if a witness on cross-examination makes an ambiguous statement, or doesn’t complete his statement, that you may clear that up, but that is all, he is called for cross-examination and you can’t go into it. ”

Whereupon counsel remarked:

*448 “You are right, your Honor. It is necessary in this proceeding here to call this man as our witness. I would like for the court, if it is a proper procedure, to advise him that he should remain in court until we call him. ’ ’

At the court’s direction, Schroyer remained in attendance on the trial, and was thereafter called to the stand as a witness for the defendants. Towards the close of his testimony as such witness, their counsel sought to ask him questions in the nature of cross-examination, and apparently to lay a foundation for his impeachment. Plaintiff objected to this line of questioning as an attack by the defense upon their own witness, and her objections were sustained by the court. Defendants’ counsel then offered to prove by Schroyer as a witness:

“That, had the witness, W. It. Schroyer been permitted to answer the question just asked he would have stated to the jury that on the afternoon of November 4, 1931, he told the said S. S. Combs that unless defendant Paul Huber paid him three hundred dollars by Monday, November 16th, that he would blaze him in court on this case; that he would not remember anything which would help defendants, and that he was in position to either make or break the Table Supply Company by his testimony. ’ ’

This offer of testimony, upon plaintiff’s objection, was excluded by the court and the ruling is assigned and argued as error.

In State Bank of Wheatland v. Bagley Brothers, 44 Wyo. 244, 11 P. (2d) 572, this court held that one who had been made a defendant in an action to foreclose a mortgage and who by his answer had admitted all of plaintiff’s claims in the suit, was, although formally so, not an adverse party within the proper construction of Section 89-1705, supra, so as to authorize his cross-examination by the plaintiff. It was there pointed out that the true test of the right to call a party for cross-examination *449 under this statute was whether he was “actually” an adverse party to the one who invoked the law.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State ex rel. West Park Hospital District v. Skoric
2014 WY 41 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2014)
Keats v. State
2003 WY 19 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2003)
Seamster v. Rumph
698 P.2d 103 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1985)
State v. Sodergren
686 P.2d 521 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1984)
Diamond Management Corp. v. Empire Gas Corp.
594 P.2d 964 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1979)
Rodarte Ex Rel. Rodarte v. City of Riverton
552 P.2d 1245 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1976)
Kosmicki v. Swick
468 P.2d 818 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1970)
Wheatland Irrigation District v. Short
339 P.2d 403 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1959)
Husted v. French Creek Ranch, Inc.
333 P.2d 948 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1959)
Consumers Filling Station Co. v. Durante
333 P.2d 691 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1958)
Bradburn v. Wyoming Trust Co.
63 P.2d 792 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1936)
Gale v. School Distrcit No. 4
54 P.2d 811 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 1042, 45 Wyo. 440, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huber-v-thomas-wyo-1933.