Lange v. Lawrence

259 S.W. 261
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1924
DocketNo. 7088. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 259 S.W. 261 (Lange v. Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lange v. Lawrence, 259 S.W. 261 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This suit resulted from a collision between automobiles owned and being driven at tbe time by tbe respective parties. Lawrence claimed to bave been injured in tbe collision, and in a trial before a jury recovered judgment against Lange for $2,500.

It is shown in a bill of exception that:

“After the voir dire examination of the jury panel had been completed by counsel for both the plaintiff and defendant, counsel for plaintiff propounded the following questions to the panel: ‘Have any of you gentlemen or are any of you gentlemen or any of your relatives connected in any way with any liability insurance company, or have you or do you own any stock in an insurance liability company?’ Counsel for defebdant thereupon objected to said question as irrelevant and immaterial and highly prejudicial to the defendant, in that it served to suggest to the minds of the jury that an insurance company was involved in the case, and that an insurance company was to bear the burden of the loss if there were any burden to be borne, and moved that the panel be discharged. The jurors were then instructed to retire, whereupon the court, after hearing the argument of counsel for plaintiff and defendant, overruled the defendant’s objection to said question and defendant’s motion to discharge the jury panel. * * * ”

This bill was qualified by tbe trial court in this way:

“When the question quoted in this bill of exceptions was propounded and when objection was made to it by counsel for defendant, counsel for plaintiff stated that the question was asked in order that plaintiff might obtain valuable information which was necessary'for him to strike the jury and select a fair and impartial jury before whom to try his case. No intimation was made that defendant had insurance and the question was general as. shown by tbe question copied in this bill of exception.”

We are thus confronted with tbe question of whether or not tbe incident described was of such nature as to require reversal of the judgment rendered in favor of tbe party precipitating that incident. It should bo stated at tbe outset that, so far as tbe record shows, no liability insurance company, nor any kind of insurance company, is or has ever been concerned in the litigation, directly or otherwise.

It was, of course,, wholly immaterial whether or not appellant was insured against liability in this case, and appellee would not bave been permitted, in the face of exception or objection, to plead or prove the existence or nonexistence of that fact. It has been repeatedly held to be error for the parties to ask any questions or make any statement within the hearing of the jury from which the jurors would infer, or which would suggest to them, that the defendant in such case carried liability insurance, or that an insurance complhny, and not the-defendant, would have to pay any judgment the injured person might recover against the defendant. The ■'reason for this well-established rule is too ob *262 vious and has been too often stated to require restatement here. No. 7089, Tarbutton v. Ambriz, decided by this court February 6, 1924, 259 S. W. 259; Levinski v. Cooper (Tex. Civ. App.) 142 S. W. 959; Carter v. Walker (Tex. Civ. App.) 165 S. W. 483; Fell v. Kimble (Tex. Civ. App.) 154 S. W. 1070; Brewing Co. v. Voith (Tex. Civ. App.) 84 S. W. 1100; Houston, etc., Co. v. Smith (Tex. Civ. App.) 160 S. W. 435; City of Austin v. Gress (Tex. Civ. App.) 156 S. W. 535; Gordon Jones Co. v. Lopez. (Tex. Civ. App.) 172 S. W. 987. The practice of asking such questions, or making such suggestions, is condemned by the courts of this state, and particularly by this court. See the Tarbutton, Lopez, Voith, Smith, and Carter Cases, supra.

Of course there may be cases in which an insurance company’s interest may be disclosed as an incident to legitimate inquiry into the facts of a case, as, for instance, where the agents of the insurance company testily in behalf of the insured, and their connection with the insuring company is brought out on cross-examination, or when the activities of such agents are so interwoven into the defense as to- result in the disclosure-of the company’s interest, then the defendant ought not to be heard to complain of such disclosure. Such was the case in Carter-Mullaly v. Bustos, 187 S. W. 396, decided by this court. Nor will a judgment be reversed where the objectionable question is propounded, and it does not appear that it “took” with the jury, and the evidence was such that no other judgment could have been rendered, anyhow, as was held, by this court in Railway v. Shaklee (Tex. Civ. App.) 138 S. W. 188.

In this case, however, the objectionable question was propounded to the jury out of a sky entirely clear of issues having any possible relation to the question propounded, and the incisive subtlety of the question did not render its object less obvious. In the analogous case of Houston, etc., v. Smith, supra, it was aptly said by this court that—

“The courts do not look with favor upon such practice, and, where it is fairly apparent that the course of counsel in such a case was for the purpose of fixing in the minds of the jury that the defendant carried such insurance for its protection, and that, in case they found’ a verdict for plaintiff, an insurance company, and not the local defendant, would be obliged to pay the damages, the cases have uniformly been reversed. This rule is founded upon the most substantial reasons of justice. Theoretically, of course, it should be true’ that the ultimate result would be the same, and that the verdict of the jury would accomplish real and impartial justice. But, practically, it cannot he doubted that the interjection of such really immaterial, but apparently significant, facts into a case tried before a jury has a tendency to influence the size of their verdict, if not the course of their deliberations. Jurors, unfortunately, cannot be stripped of the frailties of human nature when they enter the jury box, and they carry into their deliberations as jurors prejudices and prepossessions of which they themselves are often unaware. Appel-lee lays stress upon the fact that the questions asked were upon the voir dire, and that they were therefore clearly within his legal right in testing the qualification of the juror. Broad latitude is allowed’ in examining jurors upon the voir dire; but justice and good faith always mark its limit. * * * What could have been the purpose of such inquiry if not to impress upon the mind of the jury that defendant did carry such insurance? And what effect could have been expected, except that it would have some bearing upon their minds in passing upon the facts in the case? Even if it be conceded that the juror in question might, because "of his business, have been influenced in his judgment favorably to defendant, if the defendant carried such insurance, he could not have been so influenced if he was entirely ignorant upon the subject. There was nothing in the pleading to raise a suspicion in his or any other mind that such a policy was held by defendant, and any effort to so plead would not have been permitted. No evidence could be offered to show that such policy existed, and any effort to introduce such evidence would have been promptly suppressed. Appellee’s counsel knew that he would not be permitted to make such a fact an issue in the ease, nor . in any manner directly bring it to the attention of the jury. He will not be permitted to do by indirection what he cannot do by direction.”

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lange-v-lawrence-texapp-1924.