Nolting v. Petersen

404 S.W.2d 410, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 610
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 14, 1966
DocketNo. 32310
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 404 S.W.2d 410 (Nolting v. Petersen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nolting v. Petersen, 404 S.W.2d 410, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 610 (Mo. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover damages resulting from a fall down a common stairway in defendants’ office building. Jury trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff in the amount of $7,500.00. The trial court sustained the defendants’ motion for new trial specifying the two grounds upon which it based its ruling. We have herein determined that the first of these assigned reasons properly supports the trial court’s action and thus we need not rule upon the other. Accordingly, we will set out in this opinion only the facts that bear upon the contention defendants were prejudiced by an improper comment made by the trial court while ruling upon an objection.

It is first necessary that we digress from the merits of this cause to consider the defendants’ motion to dismiss this appeal. This motion is based upon the contention the plaintiff’s brief violates Civil Rule 83.05, subparagraphs (a) and (c), V.A.M.R., in that' the statement of facts contained therein is neither fair nor concise nor without argument, contains voluminous irrelevant material, and that verbatim tes-, timony has been substituted for “ * * * a statement of the facts relevant to the questions presented for determination. * * * ” We will deal with these matters in reverse order.

The plaintiff’s brief contains several lengthy verbatim excerpts from the transcript primarily dealing with evidence bearing upon the contention one of the jurors intentionally misrepresented facts regarding his prior involvement in litigation. That issue really turned upon whether plaintiff’s counsel so framed his questions to the juror that the juror could not, as he later claimed he did, have misunderstood. We do not reach this point under our disposition of this appeal but had it proved necessary to do so, the matters set out verbatim from the transcript would have been most enlightening and, in fact, really determinative of the matter. In any event, there was no substitution here involved as the verbatim excerpts were additional material to the statement of facts which set out, in summarized form, essentially what happened. In view of the nature of this issue, we cannot hold that verbatim excerpts of this nature so violate the rule as to require dismissal of this appeal.

The other allegations of the motion can best be considered together. The statement of facts found in plaintiff’s brief does go at length into matters not before this court on this appeal. For example, it contains a summary of the evidence relating to the extent of plaintiff’s injuries and her expenses for treatment. In view of the issues raised upon this appeal that evidence is irrelevant. It is also true there is some argument interspersed in the statement of facts as where the statement of facts contains the argument, together with case citations, made by plaintiff’s counsel on the is[412]*412sue of juror voir dire misrepresentation. However, we have determined that the violations of the rule, while serious and easily avoidable, are not so extensive as to cause us to sustain the defendants’ motion to dismiss this appeal. That motion is denied.

The facts bearing upon the determinative issue of this appeal need to be stated somewhat broadly so that a proper perspective may be obtained. The chain of events pertinent to the issue herein decided began with the voir dire examination when plaintiff’s counsel asked the members of the panel (a proper foundation presumably having been laid although the transcript does not disclose it), “Do any of you or any members of your immediate family— someone living in your household — work for or have any financial interest in the Globe Indemnity Company?”

We pass next to several pertinent matters occurring during trial. The plaintiff’s version of this action was that her left shoe caught underneath some raised metal stripping on the top step of the common stairway and she fell head first down the stairway. There was other evidence offered on behalf of plaintiff as to the metal stripping being raised, weak, loose and flexible. To rebut this evidence the defendants offered the testimony of William P. Carleton, Jr., a general insurance agent who occupied offices on the same floor of defendants’ building as did the plaintiff’s employer. He testified that he was in and out of his office four or five times a day for five days a week; that he would walk on the top step in reaching his office; that it was not weak and neither did it rock nor was it flexible but was in excellent condition; that certain of plaintiff’s photographs did not properly represent the steps as they appeared on the date plaintiff fell; that he had moved heavy furniture into his office and this was why he knew the condition of the steps was good; and that the metal stripping was not loose nor was it raised above normal.

Photographs were taken of this stairway and the top step by photographers employed by each of the parties. The trial court permitted plaintiff’s counsel to cross-examine the photographer employed by the defendants as to who paid him for the three photographs he took and identified at the trial. As a result the name of the Royal-Globe Insurance Company (no issue is raised as to the change in name from the company named in the voir dire) appears in evidence some ten times within two pages of the transcript. The culmination of all this reference to an insurance company occurred when, over objection, the photographer was asked this question to which he gave the answer shown: “Q Do you know what the Royal-Globe Insurance Group’s interest was in having you make those photographs ? MR. MORRIS : If the Court please, I object to that as not being material or relevant and it is highly prejudicial. THE COURT: Overruled. A The Royal-Globe Insurance Group insured the Clayton Realty Company.”

Keeping that evidentiary background in mind we pass to the next link in the chain of events leading to the comments the trial court later found prejudicial. During his closing argument counsel for the defendants directed the jury’s attention to certain of plaintiff’s photographic exhibits and stated: “ * * * If you look at the photographs plaintiff took, the only photograph — look at these photographs and tell me whether or not that photograph of April 4, 1963, has been jimmied or somebody has stuck a wedge or burglary tool under there or a screw driver, raised it up and then taken the photograph. * * * ” Later in that argument counsel stated, “ * * * Somebody jimmied those photographs, there is no doubt about that in my mind. * * ” Still later in his argument defendants’ counsel stated: “Let’s consider the photographs again. I don’t see how who paid for somebody’s photographs can affect what it can reflect, what appears in the photographs. Maybe this is the kind of photographs Mr. Green and his office take. This is a civil, [413]*413not a criminal case. The photographer is supposed to take what is there and not change it and then take a photograph. You know, once you mend metal and put it back it will show, and there are no defects in his photographs. Compare those photographs.”

During the reply portion of his closing argument counsel for plaintiff, obviously answering that portion of defendants’ argument set out above, said: “What this lady did is what happens to people who fall down. This, I submit to you — who here thinks, and I’ll look every one of you in the eye, I’ll look Mr. Morris in the eye, which of you thinks I would have something to do with jimmying pictures? You know it takes four years to go to law school. I’ve been doing this for about ten years and nobody has really ever accused me of jimmying up some pictures or some evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
404 S.W.2d 410, 1966 Mo. App. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolting-v-petersen-moctapp-1966.