Morris v. Davis

292 S.W. 574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1927
DocketNo. 7076. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 292 S.W. 574 (Morris v. Davis) 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
Morris v. Davis, 292 S.W. 574 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

Opinions on a former appeal stating fully the nature of tbis suit .are reported in 257 S. W. 328, 259 S. W. 592, and 272 S. W. 1103! Suffice it to say here that the suit is to recover damages for injuries to a shipment of cattle from Hugo, Okl., to Coleman, Tex., during the period of federal control of railroads, and that a jury trial resulted in favor of appellee, the director general' of railroads.

Appellant predicates bis appeal upon seven propositions of error, tbe last two of which should be sustained. They relate to the action of the court in permitting the court reporter’s official narrative stenographic report of the testimony of witnesses O. S. Oakes and H. S. Baker, given 'in person on the former trial, to be read in evidence to the jury on this trial, the only excuse for their absence being that they were residents of the state of Oklahoma, and the only effort appellee made to have them present was as follows. J. A. Montgomery gave the following testimony:

“An effort was made on the part of the railway company to get Mr. Baker to attend court at this term — he refused to come. I seen C. S. Oakes and Mr. Baker both before I came over here — it was Saturday evening., Mr. Oakes refused to come here. I asked him; I thought we would ride on the same train together that day; I heard the agent ask him to come and he said, ‘My business would not permit me to go and I can’t go.’ ”

Appellee made no effort to obtain the depositions of these witnesses. Their testimony related to the only defense urged by appellee and submitted to the jury that the cattle were very poor in flesh, weak, and in no physical condition for shipment, and that the injuries complained of were directly caused by this condition rather than any of the acts of negligence charged against appellee. On this issue the testimony of these witnesses was very positive and pictured the cattle in a rather distressing condition at the time of shipment; and it was, in the main, the only evidence on the issue. The jury answered one special issue that the cattle were not injured, “as alleged in plaintiff’s petition,” and another special issue that some of the damage or injury was caused “by the condition of the cattle at the time of shipment.” The court based its judgment upon these answers of the jury; so the materiality of the testimony is conclusive and is admitted to be so by appellee. The grounds of objection to the testimony were that it was hearsay, and that no proper predicate was láid for its introduction.

■ It seems that Texas civil courts have announced a different rule for the admission of this character of testimony from that of probably the numerical weight of authority. The Supreme Court held, in the ease of Boyd v. Ry. Co., 101 Tex. 417, 108 S. W. 815:

“The proper predicate being laid to show that Lytle’s whereabouts is unknown and that diligent search has been made to ascertain wheré he is, the evidence to prove what he testified to on a former trial should be admitted.”

In the case of Baker v. Sands, 140 S. W. 521, this court held:

“The rule seetns to be that the testimony of a witness, who has previously given evidence on the trial of a case, may be reproduced by any person who is able to give, in substance, the testimony given by said witness, provided that it first be shown that said witness is dead, or is beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and cannot be found after diligent inquiry, or that he has been kept away from the trial by the adverse party.”

Apparently, for fear that the rule had not been made sufficiently clear, Judge Key added the following in the Baker-Sands Case:

“It is not believed that a party has the right to prove by other witnesses what a particular witness testified to on a former trial of the case, merely because that witness has gone to and resides in another state. It is believed that the true rule is that the party offering to reproduce the testimony must show conditions which render it reasonably certain that he cannot procure the evidence of the absent witness by deposition or otherwise.”

In the case of Railway Co. v. Geary (Tex. Civ. App.) 194 S. W. 460, it was held:

“It may be first replied that, under a familiar exception to the hearsay rule, the testimony of a witness given at a previous trial between the same parties upon substantially the same issue, where the parties had the opportunity to examine and cross-examine him, is admissible on the offer of either party, if the witness is out of the state, out of the jurisdiction of the court, under the circumstances shown in this casé.”

The evidence on which the court concluded the former testimony admissible, “under the circumstances shown,” is not set out in the court’s opinion, and we assume that it met the requirements of the Supreme Court announced in Boyd v. Railway Co., supra, and of this court in Baker v. Sands, supra, since both cases were cited in support of the conclusion. ,

It is clear beyond dispute that the purpose of the rule requiring the “whereabouts” of the witness to be unknown, before his former testimony is admissible, was to require the taking of his deposition when his “whereabouts” is known, even though his residence be beyond the limits of the state. Or, as said by Judge Key, “conditions which render it *576 reasonably certain that be cannot procure tbe evidence of tbe absent witness by deposition or otherwise” should be shown by tbe party offering it. Texas civil courts cannot compel personal attendance of a witness who resides beyond the limits of tbe county where tbe case is tried, and, of course, cannot compel personal attendance of a witness who resides in another state; and for that reason tbe Legislature has prescribed that tbe deposition of a witness may be taken in either instance.’

Now appellee cites numerous authorities which criticize the rule announced by our courts and hold that “absence from the jurisdiction of the trial” alone is generally accepted as ground for the admission of testimony at a former trial, it being reasoned that “there is on principle no distinction between a deposition and former testimony as to the condition upon which either may be used at the trial .* * * supposing, of course, that in each case there has been cross-examination,” and further presuming that the witness will give the same testimony by deposition as he gave on the former trial. The effect of appellee’s attack upon the additional prerequisite that the whereabouts of the witness be unknown is that the rule is without rhyme or reason, and that it should be set aside. This, we think, is beyond our prerogative. The Legislature has not given testimony taken at a former trial the same dignity as that produced by deposition; nor have our courts done so, and the wisdom or soundness of the reason for the rule is not involved. It might be suggested, however, in view of the majority opinion in the Baker-Sands Case, that the rule requiring the deposition or a reasonable showing why it could not be taken, the whereabouts of the witness being known, does find sound reason in the fact that it affords the opposite party an opportunity to lay a proper predicate for impeaching the witness.

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Bluebook (online)
292 S.W. 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-davis-texapp-1927.