Newman v. Dodson

61 Tex. 91, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 52
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1884
DocketCase No. 1654
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 61 Tex. 91 (Newman v. Dodson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newman v. Dodson, 61 Tex. 91, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 52 (Tex. 1884).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

— The first and second assignments of error are not well taken.

Whatever defect there may have been in the notice served upon George W. Newman was cured by service of a proper and legal notice as to the taking of the depositions upon T. J. Newman, attorney of record for both defendants, and who, as such attorney, filed cross-interrogatories to the witnesses.

The answer of the witness Richardson to the sixth interrogatory propounded to him, and of the witness Lipscomb to the seventh interrogatory to him, were legal so far as they gave the statements of Dodson as to his health and physical condition. Such expressions by a plaintiff in answer to inquiries made by physicians, as to what he has suffered by reason of an assault, are held to be competent evidence in actions of this character. If made to medical men, they are of greater weight as evidence than if made to other persons, but they are admissible in either case. Rogers v. Grain, 30 Tex., 284.

Under this rule the expressions made to Dr. Richardson as to the suffering and sensations of Dodson, made by Dodson himself, were admissible, whether he was 'called "in to visit him professionally or not. The proof, however, that he was thus called in and did give his services to the plaintiff a"s a physician was ample. It could make no difference whether he rendered these services with or without compensation, or whether he was called in immediately or some time after the injury was received. It was only necessary that the pain or bodily condition complained, of was contemporaneous with the declarations made by the plaintiff. This was sufficiently established by the proof.

We think that the statements made by Dodson to these physicians, as to his having received the wound by being struck with a pistol by Geo. W. Dodson, was hearsay and inadmissible. However, the fact that the wound was thus caused was fully established by the wit[96]*96nesses on both sides, including the defendants themselves, and was not a disputed fact in the case.

It is unnecessary to add that the opinion of medical men is evidence upon the state of a person’s health, whether or not that opinion be partly founded upon the answer of a patient to inquiries made by him. Rogers v. Crain, supra.

The fifth assignment of error draws a distinction between the expenses incurred by the plaintiff in consequence of his sickness and those incurred on account of his disability from his wound,. We think this rather too technical to require further notice, especially as it is evident from the testimony of the witness Lipscomb that he gave these terms the same meaning.

It is not necessary to consider the sixth, twelfth and thirteenth assignments of error, as they raise questions upon the subject of vindictive damages, whereas no such damages were found against the defendants by the verdict of the jury.

We do not think that the court erred as stated in the seventh assignment of error, for the reason that the objection to the jurors summoned by the sheriff came too late after verdict. The Revised Statutes contemplate that all such objections should be made before the cause proceeds to trial; and it is the duty of the parties to the cause to inform themselves as to such facts so as to make the objection in proper time. See R. S., arts. 3074, 3076, 3079; Schuster v. La Londe, 57 Tex., 29.

The eighth assignment of error raises a question as to the admissibility of the pleadings, judgment and other papers in the cause of Mary R. and B. F. Dodson v. T. J. Newman, previously determined in the district court (in which the present suit was tried) and affirmed on appeal in this court. There is some doubt raised by a motion filed by the appellee to strike out the statement of facts found in the present record, because, as he alleges, this evidence was introduced by the defendants themselves and not by the plaintiff. This motion is supported by affidavits to the effect that the statement of facts, as originally made out by the district judge, showed that the defendants below offered the above papers in evidence, but that one of the appellants had erased the word defendants ” and interlined above it the word “plaintiff,” so as to make it appear that the evidence was offered by the appellee. This is not denied by the appellant T. J. Rewman, but in excuse he says that the statement as thus amended speaks the truth, and that it was an obvious clerical error that he sought to correct in making the change. This view is supported by the fact that the objection to the evidence was made by [97]*97the defendants, and it would be an inconsistency for the defendants to attempt to exclude their own testimony. On the other hand, the motion is sustained by the statement of the district judge as to what occurred at the trial.

Fortunately in this conflict of statement it is not necessary for us to decide upon the merits of the motion, as, in the view we take of the evidence, the question as to the party by whom it was introduced is of no importance. We will say, however, that whilst the present change in the statement of facts was not probably made with any improper design, it is a grave offense to tamper in any manner whatever with the records to be brought to this court for revision. In a proper case an alteration in the statement of facts, made without authority, after the same had received the sanction of the judge, would be visited with the penalty of at least having that paper stricken from the record.

Previous to the introduction óf the evidence complained of, the defendants had introduced papers to show that one of them, T. J. Newman, had been named as independent executor in the will of Mrs. M. A. Schrimpff; that he had qualified as such; that he was entitled to control the property of her estate till her sole legatee and devisee was of age, etc. These papers were introduced for the purpose of establishing the right of said Newman to take possession of the cotton about which the difficulty occurred, which brought about this suit, he claiming that it belonged to her estate.

The papers objected to tended to show, in rebuttal, that whilst the documents put in evidence might apparently show such right, yet the courts of the country, whose decisions were final in the matter, in construing them, had held that they gave him no authority to possess and control such property at the time he forcibly took it. from the possession of the plaintiff, to whose wife the courts had-awarded it. The testimony of the defendants on this subject having gone to'the jury, it was not error to allow the plaintiff to rebut it in the manner stated, however irrelevant the papers might otherwise have been.

In answer to the ninth, tenth and eleventh assignments of error,, it is sufficient to say that the charges asked by the defendants and refused by the court, so far as they were true statements of the law of the case, were sufficiently given in the instructions in chief submitted to the jury. These instructions were as favorable to the' appellants as the law would justify the court in making them,, and were in the main a correct exposition of the law, assuming that the assault and battery occurred in resisting an attempt of [98]*98the plaintiff to take the cotton from the possession of the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Tex. 91, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newman-v-dodson-tex-1884.