Maryland Casualty Co. v. Gideon

213 S.W.2d 848, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 1948
DocketNo. 4555.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 848 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Gideon) 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
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Gideon, 213 S.W.2d 848, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1462 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

McGILL, Justice.

This is a workman’s compensation case. Appellee, James Gideon, an employee of Wolfe & Simon, electrical contractors, was accidentally injured while in the course of his employment on July 24, 1946. Appellant, Maryland Casualty Company, is the insurer, having theretofore issued its policy providing for workmen’s compensation insurance to Wolfe & Simon. The accident occurred while appellee was working on a pole in Odessa. His version of what happened as shown by his testimony, is as follows :

“I was working on a pole out there between the Trico Manufacturing Company and Jake’s Garage that had a feed-back. I hooked up a transformer and stepped out over at) arm on the pole to cotne down the pole. The disconnects were open and there was a feed-back through another transformer. My left arm was around the pole and when I stepped over the arm to come down the pole I hit the disconnect with my shoulder and 13,500 volts of electricity hit my shoulder and came out my left arm and I fell twenty or twenty-five feet off the pole.”

The sole controversy was as to the extent and duration of the injuries suffered by ap-pellee. The jury found that as a natural result of the accidental injury he sustained total incapacity which began June 24, 1946 (obviously July 24, 1946) which was temporary and continued for 250 weeks, and that he had sustained or would sustain partial incapacity which was temporary and had continued or would continue for 250 weeks after the beginning thereof. They also found that the difference between ap-pellee’s average weekly wage before the accidental injury and during the period of partial incapacity was $50. Judgment was rendered in accordance with these findings and other findings which are not questioned, and a stipulated weekly compensation of $20 and payment of $191.44. Appellee has filed no brief.

Appellant presents eight points. The first three complain of the court’s refusal to declare a mistrial because of the conduct of appellee’s counsel during his voir dire examination of the jury panel. The following is reflected by bills of exception. Counsel stated to the panel:

“You haven’t lined yourself with capital and labor and are not prejudiced against any man for the few dollars and cents he gets ?”

Obj ection was made and he then stated:

“What I said was ‘You haven’t lined yourself with capital and labor and are not prejudiced against any man for the few dollars and cents he gets’ ” ?

whereupon appellant’s counsel objected, excepted and requested the Court to discharge the panel.

■The Court: “Overruled, but counsel is asked to refrain from referring to anything between capital and labor which is not in this case. I don’t think what has been said is sufficient to discharge the jury, but I ask counsel not to refer to these things not material to the case.”

One juror stated he worked for the Gulf Oil Corporation and that it was a pretty good company, and further in answer to a question by counsel that it was a company not in court much. Appellant’s counsel excepted and asked that the jury panel be discharged, whereupon counsel stated:

“He said he worked for the Gulf Oil Company and it was a pretty good company and you didn’t find them in court very often.”

The Court: “Overruled. Those remarks and those things I don’t think are material, and can’t have any effect that is worth anything unless they are intended to influence the minds of the jurors and I instruct the counsel not to say them.”

Counsel: “All right.”

One juror stated that he was in the refrigerator business and counsel asked him if he would put on a pretty good freeze for total and permanent disability if the evidence warranted it. Objection by appellant’s counsel, and request that the panel be discharged, whereupon counsel stated:

“My remark was he said he was in the refrigerator business and I asked him if he would put on a pretty good freeze for total and permanent if the evidence permitted it.”

*850 The Court: “I am overruling this and ask that we put it in a serious nature, it takes up time. Let’s don’t have any more of that.”

While we disapprove and condemn counsel’s conduct as above shown, we have concluded that the court did not abuse his discretion in refusing to discharge the panel on that account. The remark referring to capital and labor is not near so inflammatory as those made in Texas & N. O. R. Co., v. Lide, Tex.Civ.App., 117 S.W.2d 479, which were made on voir dire examination and held to direct the jurors’ attention to the difference in the financial ability of the contending parties and to prejudice them against the railroad company and require 'a reversal. This is the only case we have found where a reversal was ordered among other grounds because of the misconduct of counsel on voir dire" examination. Of course the only purpose of such a statement and the only tendency it could have would be to direct the jurors’ attention to the difference in the financial status of the parties and appeal to them on this ground. The statement to effect that the Gulf Oil Company was a pretty good company and “you didn’t find them in court very much” could serve no legitimate pupose and an inference from it is inescapable that appellant was not such a good company since it was in court. The inquiry whether the juror would put a good freeze on for total and permanent disability was facetious and an attempt by counsel to “flirt” with the jurors and to curry their favor by undue familiarity, a practice which has often been condemned. While the conduct complained of was reprehensible and warranted a rebuke or reprimand much more severe than that implied in the language of the Court, yet we think that that language effectively removed any prejudice that may have been engendered thereby and that appellant was not deprived of any substantial right by the court’s refusal to declare a mistrial. We overrule these points.

The fourth point complains of the Court’s refusal to declare a mistrial because of the following statement of appellee’s counsel during his closing argument:

“Is this Germany, or is this America?”

The argument preceding this statement as shown by the bill of exception is too lengthy to reproduce. It is somewhat incoherent, but the gist of it is that appellant’s counsel had referred to one of the doctors who testified for appellee and who lived in San Angelo as the chief of his (ap-pellee’s counsel’s) medical staff, and criticized counsel for paying him and for not using local doctors; that one of appellant’s local doctors had testified that in all the years he had been there since 1929 he had never gone into court against an insurance company, that the local hospitals and doctors were on the payroll of the insurance companies. He then inquired: “if we got to have their paid hirelings say what we are entitled to or else we get nothing * * and continued:

“James Gideon they say don’t look nervous—what you say * * * is this Germany or is this America ?”

The court instructed the jury not to consider the remarks and denied a mistrial.

The remark may have been invited by .the opposing counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 848, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-gideon-texapp-1948.