Mississippi Ice & Utilities Co. v. Pearce

134 So. 164, 161 Miss. 252, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 244
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1931
DocketNo. 29361.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 134 So. 164 (Mississippi Ice & Utilities Co. v. Pearce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mississippi Ice & Utilities Co. v. Pearce, 134 So. 164, 161 Miss. 252, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 244 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 6th day of June, 1930, in the city of Biloxi, Miss Susan Pearce, the appellee, was injured while rid *258 .ing as -a passenger in a taxicab operated by the Yellow-Cab Company, her injuries having been received in, and due to, a collision between the taxicab in which she was a passenger and a truck of the appellant, Mississippi Ice & Utilities Company. She recovered a judgment for fifteen thousand dollars.

The evidence for the appellee was to the effect that the taxicab in which she was driving was going at a reasonable rate of speed along West Beach, approximately opposite the lighthouse, on a curve, and, while on the driver’s right-hand side of the road and near the curb, the taxicab was. violently struck by the ice truck of the appellant company, which was being driven around the curve on the same side of the street at a rapid rate of speed, and that the colliding of the two cars resulted in throwing the driver from the taxicab, and in painfully, if not seriously injuring Miss Pearce.

It was the contention of the appellant that the converse was true; that, while the driver of1 appellant’s truck was driving on his right-hand side of the street, he was struck by the taxicab', and carried over to the right-hand side of the street. There was conflict as to the speed of the cars, and on the main issue, both of which were submitted to the jury, and resulted in a verdict for Miss Pearce. It is unnecessary for us to go into a detailed statement of the main facts in issue, as the jury found liability, and no point is made here thereon.

Two assignments of error are argued by the appellant, and we shall state such facts in connection with each as are necessary to an understanding thereof.

1. Appellant argues that “it is reversible error to permit to be presented to the jury the inference that appellant carried insurance.” This assignment is based upon the following occurrence in the course of the trial: The appellant introduced Dr. W. W. Eley, as a witness, and he testified that, while the appellee, Miss Pearce, was in the hospital, he called there to see her, having *259 been sent by the appellant company; that he told her that he was sent by the appellant company; that she consented to his examining her; and that he made an examination. At this point counsel for appellee asked permission to propound some questions relative to the competency of the evidence, and the following examination ensued:

“Q. You say you went there as the physician of the Ice Company? A. Yes sir.
“Q. And went there for the purpose of making an examination for the Ice Company? A. Yes sir.
“Q. Isn’t it a fact that you went there as the representative of the Insurance Company? A. No sir.
“By counsel for defendant: Objected to. The witness having testified who he went for. He is intelligent. It is the rankest kind of prejudice, and I want to go fully into that question.
“By counsel for plaintiff: I ask that the jury retire. I think his testimony is incompetent.”

After the jury had retired, counsel for appellee' asked Dr. Eley if it were not a fact that the insurance company paid him for his visit to the appellee, and, if he had not received, or did not get, a voucher from the insurance company all of which questions he denied. He also denied making any report to the insurance company and emphatically denied that he told Miss Pearce that he came to her at the hospital as a representative of the insurance company. Counsel for the appellee told the court that his client, Miss Pearce, had informed him that Dr. Eley came as the representative of the insurance company, that she did not know he was coming until he. came to the hospital, and said: .“If he was the doctor of the insurance company as well as the physician of Miss Pearce, I don’t know if I would object to his testimony or not, because I am entitled to show the interest the witness has in the outcome of the case, and I want to get the full facts before the court.”

*260 Counsel for the appellant, during the colloquy, renewed his objection to the questions asked before the jury with reference to the insurance company, and asked that a mistrial be ordered by the court, which was overruled by the court. Thereupon the physician testified before the jury that he was called in consultation with appellee’s regular physician, and the court sustained appellee’s objection to the witness on the ground presumably that the testimony of the physician was privileged. But, in the presence of the jury, after the court had declined to order a mistrial, counsel for the appellant asked the following questions:

“Do you represent an insurance company? A. No sir.
“Q. Who paid you for the examination? A. ' Mississippi Ice & Utilities Company.
“Q. Do you know of the Mississippi Ice & Utilities Company having any insurance in this matter or any other matter? A. No sir,” — and continued to interrogate the witness about liability insurance until counsel for the plaintiff, the appellee, offered to open that conflict or else object to the evidence.

It will be observed that the assignment of error is based upon the single question, “Is not it a fact that you went there as the representative of the insurance company?” propounded by counsel for the appellee to Dr. Eley, and to which he replied in the negative. Counsel for the appellant contends that this question carried to the jury an inference of liability insurance; in other words, apprised the. jury of the fact that the defendant, or appellant, was protected by liability insurance, and that the question propounded by counsel for appellee was not warranted, and that it was an improper and highly prejudicial method of conveying to the jury the inference that liability of the appellant was covered by insurance, and that the insurance company indemnifying* it was the real litigant. Counsel for the appellee replied to this con *261 tention by the assertion that, under the authorities, it was perfectly proper for him to question and elicit from the physician, a witness, his interest in the proceeding.

Counsel for the appellee and the appellant likewise cite us to the case of Jessup v. Davis, 115 Neb. 1, 211 N. W. 190, 56 A. L. R. 1403, and both counsel quote copiously from the extended notes and splendid brief of the entire subject by the reporter of the American Law Reports. It will be noted that the question did not apply to indemnity from loss by an insurance company, and neither this court now, with the record before' it, nor the doctor at that time, by any strained construction of the language, could have determined' whether the question applied to accident insurance which might have .been carried by the appellee, Miss Pearce, or to liability insurance. All of this is purely a matter of conjecture, as shown by this record. The holding of the Nebraska court in the case of Jessup v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 So. 164, 161 Miss. 252, 1931 Miss. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mississippi-ice-utilities-co-v-pearce-miss-1931.