Paris Theriot v. Mrs. Wanda Mercer

262 F.2d 754, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4528
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 23, 1959
Docket17214_1
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 262 F.2d 754 (Paris Theriot v. Mrs. Wanda Mercer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paris Theriot v. Mrs. Wanda Mercer, 262 F.2d 754, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4528 (5th Cir. 1959).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge,

Appealing from a judgment on a ver-diet in a suit for damages for the death of plaintiff’s husband, defendant is here confidently insisting that, for the reasons put forward by him in his brief, 1 the *756 court erred in denying his motion for an instructed verdict made at the close of plaintiff’s case and repeated at the close of the evidence.

In the alternative he urges upon us that, in the conduct of the case, errors of omission and commission occurred which, permitting the case to go out of bounds, require reversal. Upon the considerations and for the reasons hereafter stated, we find ourselves in substantial agreement with these views.

In Maryland Casualty Co. v. Reid, 5 Cir., 76 F.2d 30, this court, as preliminary to disposing of the question for decision there, whether the^ trial had been attended with reversible error, carefully examined and as carefully showed forth the intensely dramatic nature and atmosphere of a jury trial and how it affects the actors in it, the witnesses, the lawyers, the litigants, the triers themselves — judge and jury. Pointing out that many verdicts in closely contested civil and criminal cases find their real spring in the atmosphere generated in and by the trial, where things felt but unseen, sometimes real, sometimes illusory, arising out of but more than the relevant and admissible evidence, in the end more influence the ver-diet than the relevant testimony itself does, the opinion, declaring that in a federal court, in a jury trial, it is the judge who is charged with full responsibility for its just outcome, then went on to say:

“ * * * Because these things are so of jury trials, it is of the genius of our institutions that they be conducted under the firm and steady guidance of judges as administrators, who having minds trained and personalities adequate to the task, are held primarily responsible lov their just outcome. 2 Because these things are so, in a federal court at least, the conduct of jury trials is largely confided to the District Judge, who is expected to have and exercise trial skill of the highest order, and a wise and just discretion. chief function, his primary objcct, is to keep the^ case within legal bounds by admonitions and rulings from its beginning to its end. He uses the rules of evidence as means, no^ ends, to elicit and confine the case ío evidence available in order to bring the truth to light. Trained in the principles and problems of proof, knowing how to value pertinent, to reject the impertinent, he uses other trial rules to accomplish the same end. Nor does function as an overseer, superintendent, and administrator of the trial end with its ending.
common law and by statute, ^he federal District Judge is charged with the duty of granting a ney7 trial in a jury case where, in his opinion, it went unjustly and injuriously out of bounds. This court, as t° ^aw cases> is a court of errors, We n°t retry the case.^ We review' the record made in it for reversible error, error by the judge, in conducting or failing to conduct the trial, which has, by permitting the case to get out of bounds, prejudiced l'usf result. * * * ”
“Ordinarily, if his counsel fails to adequately object, or fails to except to adverse action on his objection, a litigant may not complain of what occurred as error, for he will be treated as having assented to it. On the other hand, a trial judge may never abdicate his function, or surrender to counsel the conduct of the trial. It is still his primary duty to oversee and conduct it. Because this is so, he may, and if he fails to, the appellate court may, though no objection is made and no *757 exception taken, correct an error of abdication which has resulted unjustly, by voiding the trial. But this will be done only in extreme cases, where the judge’s error in permitting the trial to get out of bounds, instead of exercising his function to guide and control it, is of such transcendent influence on the course of the trial as that, though not ex cepted to, justice requires its being noticed and corrected. * * *
2 . ‘The judge is primarily responsible for the just outcome of the trial. He is not a mere moderator of a town meeting, submitting questions to the jury for determination, nor simply^ ruling on the admissibility of testimony, but one who in our jurisprudence stands charged with full responsibility.’ Patton v. Texas & P. Ry. Co., 179 U.S. 658, 661, 21 S.Ct. 275, 276, 45 L.Ed. 361.”
At pages 32-33. (Emphasis supplied,)

This case at once precisely illustrates and perfectly proves the truth and wisdom of what was there said. Originating in and bolstered by an atmosphere of rumor and intrigue, heard on inadmissible and inflammatory evidence and presented to the jury with the use of trial tactics equally inadmissible and inflammatory, which except in one glaring instance 2 went unrebuked and unrestrained, the case was tried in a melódramatic atmosphere and setting of suspicion and prejudice in and by which trifles light as air were made to seem confirmations strong as proofs of Holy Writ. Thus tried, it was submitted to the jury on a record so replete with instances of things done which ought not to have been done and of things left undone which ought to have been done as to require the holding here that defendant was deprived thereby of that fair trial to which, in a federal court at least, every person accused of fault is by law entitled,

appellant, citing many m-stances in P°int> does indeed 011 Pa^e 11 ?f his brief courteously acknowledge 4that, the trial court attempted to prolect Cendant from speculative madmis?lble and imPr°Per conclusions and opmlons> but sufficient inadmissible evidence went lnto the record’ and the damage was done with the jury”. He, however, fails to point out many other instances 0f eVen greater moment where, due to the inaction of the trial judge, the trial went completely out of bounds as a trial to become a hue and cry. Without undertaking to point them all out, it is sufficient to say that one of the most grievous 0f them was the court’s permitting a wftness to be asked whether there had been a pay-off in the case and to answer that he had heard that there was. From then on, it is quite clear that the trial took on its cloak and dagger aspect of political intrigue and scandal, and the real issue> whether the defendant’s car had struck the deceased and whether, if so> the defendant was negligent, was lost to view> indeed disappeared from the case‘

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Related

Glazer v. Glazer
274 F. Supp. 471 (E.D. Louisiana, 1967)
Mercer v. Theriot
377 U.S. 152 (Supreme Court, 1964)
Mrs. Wanda Mercer v. Paris Theriot
316 F.2d 635 (Fifth Circuit, 1963)
Brunet ex rel. Brunet v. P. F. Harris Manufacturing Co.
209 F. Supp. 723 (E.D. Louisiana, 1962)
Elmer Miller v. Boston Insurance Company
271 F.2d 9 (Fifth Circuit, 1959)
Frank J. Rooney v. Louis Nuta
267 F.2d 142 (Fifth Circuit, 1959)

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Bluebook (online)
262 F.2d 754, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 4528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paris-theriot-v-mrs-wanda-mercer-ca5-1959.