Mickel v. Thompson

156 S.W.2d 721, 348 Mo. 991, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 12, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 156 S.W.2d 721 (Mickel v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mickel v. Thompson, 156 S.W.2d 721, 348 Mo. 991, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 575 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

Action for damages for personal injuries. The cause was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for $60,000. Motion for new trial was duly filed. On the hearing of the motion, a remittitur of $25,000 was made; the motion was overruled, and defendant appealed.

Plaintiff was a brakeman and had been employed by the Missouri Pacific for about seventeen years. He was injured while at work at Russellville, Arkansas, about 6:30 A.M., November 21, 1938. The applicable Arkansas law was pleaded. It is alleged "that on or about the said 21st day of November, 1938, while plaintiff and defendant were engaged in intrastate commerce and transportation, and while plaintiff, in the usual course of his employment by defendant, was riding on top of a certain freight car which was coupled to another car moving in a cut of cars over and along defendant's tracks at Russellville, Arkansas, defendant, his agents, servants and employees (other than plaintiff), negligently and carelessly caused, suffered and permitted the aforesaid cut of cars to become separated, directly thereby causing plaintiff to be thrown from his aforesaid position to the ground and to sustain the hereinafter described injuries and damages, when said cars collided after having been negligently separated as aforesaid."

The petition goes on to set out in detail the injuries alleged to have been sustained. The answer is a general denial. There is no claim that plaintiff did not make a submissible case, hence it is not necessary to detail the facts.

Error is assigned (1) on alleged misconduct of plaintiff's counsel; (2) on the action of the court in ruling out questions asked by defendant when no objections were made, and in not sustaining objections made to improper questions, and not instructing to disregard answers to certain questions; and (3) on an alleged excessive verdict.

It is alleged that plaintiff's counsel was guilty of misconduct (1) "in repeatedly offering in evidence alleged reports of doctors, when he knew that such reports were at most hearsay and for that reason not proper evidence;" (2) "in intimating to the jury that appellant controlled the courts and juries of the State of Arkansas; that because of appellant railroad, respondent could not have obtained a fair trial in his home State of Arkansas, and that anything the appellant touched was thus contaminated so as to cause fear to respondent's counsel;" (3) "in calling individual jurors by name and by advising one juror that he would place his hat on the hat rack, which counsel did;" and (4)[723] in the cross-examination of defendant's witness, Middleton, conductor of the train with which plaintiff was working when injured.

In order to appreciate the assignments on alleged misconduct, it will be necessary to deal with the evidence, for the most part, as it appears in the record. Plaintiff was examined by Drs. Willis C. *Page 996 Campbell and R.E. Semmes, Memphis, Tennessee, and they made separate written report of the examination made. While plaintiff's witness, Dr. Earl H. Hunt, Clarksville, Arkansas, was on the stand, the following occurred on direct examination: "Q. Do you know he (plaintiff) went over there (Memphis); went over to see Doctor Campbell? A. Yes, sir. Q. Did you, after he went over there, go over to see Doctor Campbell? A. Yes, sir, I did; I went over to talk to Doctor Campbell. Q. Have you the reports that they (Drs. Campbell and Semmes) gave you on his condition? A. I have. Q. Have you got those with you? A. Yes, sir. . . . Q. I will ask you to read to the jury, if you will. Mr. COLE: That is entirely improper, and I object to any selfserving statements produced here without the privilege of cross-examination. Mr. EAGLETON: If the Court please, I think the statements may be — Mr. COLE: I don't want any speech, Your Honor. Mr. EAGLETON: I think the objection is well taken in as far as the introduction of any statement is concerned. Mr. COLE: Yes, I submit that you should not have offered that, Mr. Eagleton. Mr. EAGLETON: I didn't know you were going to object; if you remember, at the deposition, you asked me to produce them. Mr. COLE: I said, `Produce the doctor.' Mr. EAGLETON: No, you said to let you see them (statements) and I said I would have them at the trial. Mr. EAGLETON: I now offer in evidence the statements (of Drs. Campbell and Semmes) marked plaintiff's exhibits A and B."

The statements of Drs. Campbell and Semmes appear in the abstract, but it does not appear that they were either passed to or were read to the jury. Plaintiff's counsel says that they were not, and from what subsequently occurred it is quite clear that these reports were not before the jury. After the incident above mentioned concerning the reports of the Memphis doctors, and when plaintiff was on the stand and under cross-examination, he was asked by defendant's counsel if Dr. Hunt had told him that he had a herniated nucleus pulposus, and answered, "yes." Then he was asked when Dr. Hunt told him, and he answered that Dr. Hunt so told him when he (Dr. Hunt) got Doctor Campbell's and Doctor Semmes' report back from Memphis." Then defendant's counsel, in effect, asked if it appeared in these reports that he (plaintiff) had a herniated nucleus pulposus, and plaintiff's counsel interposed the objection that the reports were the best evidence. Then followed a crossfire between counsel, as follows:

"Mr. COLE (counsel for defendant): I object to that; this fellow (plaintiff) is trying to put something in evidence that is not in the report. Mr. EAGLETON (counsel for plaintiff): Then I suggest that the best evidence is to put them (the reports) in. Mr. COLE: No, the best evidence is to bring these fellows (Drs. Campbell and Semmes) here, or try the case in Arkansas. The COURT: I wish counsel would *Page 997 content themselves with the evidence and I will sustain the objection (that the reports were the best evidence as to what was in them). Mr. COLE: Save my exception. Mr. EAGLETON: Now I am objecting on the ground that these reports are the best evidence of what they contain, and I am perfectly willing for the jury to see what they are. Mr. COLE: Who wrote them, did you? Mr. EAGLETON: No. Mr. COLE: Bring the doctors here; I want them here. Mr. EAGLETON: If you want them, go get them. Mr. COLE: No, I want them; they are your doctors, the ones you want to make your case. Mr. EAGLETON: No, they are two respectable doctors. [724] Mr. COLE: That is what you say; maybe they are respectable, and maybe they are too respectable to come and testify that the man has a herniated nucleus pulposus. Mr. EAGLETON: Show what are in the reports. Mr. COLE: I don't care to see anything prepared in your office. Mr. EAGLETON: They are prepared by Doctor Semmes and Doctor Campbell. Mr. COLE: You don't even say that you didn't see them made. Mr. EAGLETON: I object to that: I am not on the stand. Mr. COLE: I object to that; if he wants the testimony of these doctors he should bring the doctors into court. The COURT: I'll say this is not proper procedure and both of you seem to go outside of that procedure."

The crossfire was in the presence of the jury, and upon its termination the following occurred out of the presence of the jury: "Mr. COLE: At this time I ask for a mistrial in this case in view of the manifest improper things that have happened here, and I'll ask for a mistrial, I don't think I can have a fair trial before this jury because Mr. Eagleton intimated to me that in keeping these reports out I am doing something that is not proper, and Mr. Eagleton has tried to get into this record the contents of these reports, and they are not proper evidence

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W.2d 721, 348 Mo. 991, 1941 Mo. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickel-v-thompson-mo-1941.