Lendvay v. Sobrito

21 Va. Cir. 458, 1968 Va. Cir. LEXIS 21
CourtRichmond City Circuit Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1968
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Va. Cir. 458 (Lendvay v. Sobrito) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Richmond City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lendvay v. Sobrito, 21 Va. Cir. 458, 1968 Va. Cir. LEXIS 21 (Va. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

By JUDGE ALEX H. SANDS, JR.

This case, tried to a jury on June 12, 13, and 14, 1.968, resulted in a verdict for defendant. In support of her motion to set aside the verdict, plaintiff assigns six grounds. The only ground deemed worthy of consideration is number one, which challenges the action of the court in excluding from the jury the testimony of the witness, John A. Morissey, which was offered to attack the reputation for truth and veracity of the witness, Leonard T. Brown, who had been called by the defendant. It must be admitted that Brown's testimony was quite important to the defen* dant’s case and damaging to that of the plaintiff, and the exclusion of evidence attacking his character must, therefore, be presumed to have been damaging to plaintiff's case.

Testimony Offered

It is plaintiff's first contention that the testimony of Morissey as offered, which was excluded from, but taken in the absence of, the jury, qualified under the rules of evidence as charter evidence against Brown and should have been admitted as such. This contention will be first considered for, if true, the Court erred in excluding the evidence regardless of the nature of the objection thereto offered by defendant. Page references will be to the partial transcript of this witness' testimony.

[459]*459The question was first asked (Tr-7) whether Morissey was familiar with Brown’s reputation in the community |n which he lived or worked for truth and veracity, and when he answers in the affirmative, the question is put to him: "What is his general reputation for truth and veracity?"

His answer is:

Related to me personally this was the ultimate reason / had to discharge him. Too many untruths were coming back (i.e. to me) in the work he was doing for me, and / had to release him from my employ.

Obviously, this not only was not a responsive answer but was merely the statement of the reasons why Morissey discharged Brown. A further reading of Morissey’s testimony (Tr-9-10) demonstrates clearly that Morissey is giving his own opinion as to Brown’s integrity and not his general reputation. Were there any doubt, however, it would be put at rest by this question and answer (Tr-9):

Q. Among his acquaintances, what is his reputation for truth and veracity?
A. I can’t relate among his acquaintances, I can only relate to myself. As far as he and I are personally concerned, he did not have a good reputation with me.

At no place in the testimony of this witness does he vaguely undertake to state the general reputation of Brown for truth and veracity in the community in which he lived.

Obviously, this testimony in no matter qualified as evidence of Brown’s reputation for truth and veracity in his community and could not, therefore, have been admitted for this purpose.

Nature of Defendant's Objection

Plaintiff next contends that even though the evidence as offered might have been inadmissible for the purpose [460]*460for which offered, yet the objection of defendant, upon the basis of which the evidence was excluded by the Court, was an incorrect statement of the controlling law and that the evidence was, therefore, erroneously excluded.

When the question was first put to Morissey as to whether he knew of Brown’s reputation for truth and veracity, defendant objected upon the ground that Brown’s character had not been put in issue by defendant, and that until it was, it could not be attacked. The Court sustained the objection upon this ground. This ground was, perhaps, not a valid one, as the plaintiff urges, as there is authority to the effect that the act of calling a witness to the stand puts his character in issue and renders it subject to proper impeachment. See 98 C.J.S. Witnesses, sect. 572, and authorities cited.

Assuming that the ground urged in support of this objection was an invalid one, the question is presented as to whether the Court in excluding this evidence after it was taken in the absence of the jury was bound by the objection upon which the ruling was made or whether, inasmuch as the evidence was clearly inadmissible as not qualifying as character impeachment evidence, the Court’s action in excluding it was proper without the assignment of any ground in addition to the erroneous one upon which defendant based his objection.

Plaintiff urges that where a specific objection is made to the admissibility of evidence that both the objecting party and the Court are bound by such specific objection and that the action of the Court in excluding the evidence can be justified upon no other ground irrespective of whether there are other valid grounds for such exclusion.

This point is well briefed and forcefully argued by counsel for plaintiff. The argument is, moreover, sound where the objection is overruled and the evidence is admitted, for the complaining party is then in position of attempting to appeal an adverse ruling upon an objection upon which the court has never been called upon to pass. The authorities relied upon by plaintiff all deal with this situation and are sound.

The rule is quite different, however, where, as in the case at bar, the objection ha been sustained and the evidence excluded. The test is not, in such case, [461]*461whether the objection was valid but rather whether the evidence offered was, in fact, admissible upon any ground.

This distinction is clearly pointed out in 1 Wigmore (3rd ed.) pages 339 and 342 thus:

A specific objection overruled will be effective to the extent of the grounds specified, and no further. An objection overruled, therefore, naming a ground which is untenable, cannot be availed of because there was another and tenable ground which might have been named but was not... .
A specific objection sustained (like a general objection) is sufficient, though naming an untenable ground, if some other tenable one existed.

The reason for this distinction is pointed out by the court in Esbach v. Hurtt, 47 Md. 61, thus:

What this Court must determine is whether the testimony offered was admissible, and not whether a right or wrong reason was assigned for its rejection. (Emphasis added)

Most of the authorities dealing with sustained objections support this view. In Rubin v. Town of Arlington (Mass.) 99 N.E.2d 30, where counsel pressed the same point as that here urged, the Appellate Court in upholding the lower Court's exclusion of evidence although the ground of objection in the lower Court had been invalid, stated:

The judge was not bound by the grounds stated by objecting counsel. On appeal his exclusion of the testimony is to be sustained if it can be supported on any legal ground. (Emphasis added)

And where a similar contention was made in Ross v. Foss (S.D.) 92 N.W.2d 147, the court in upholding the exclusion of evidence by the lower Court, although the ground of the assigned objection was bad stated:

[462]

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Related

Rubin v. Town of Arlington
99 N.E.2d 30 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1951)
Ross v. Foss
92 N.W.2d 147 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1958)
Bristol, Trustees v. Noyes
174 A. 924 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1934)
City of Arcola v. Wilkinson
84 N.E. 264 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)
Eckman v. Funderburg
108 N.E. 577 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1915)
Eschbach v. Hurtt ex rel. Applegarth
47 Md. 61 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Va. Cir. 458, 1968 Va. Cir. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lendvay-v-sobrito-vaccrichcity-1968.