Pickard v. Berryman

142 S.W.2d 764, 24 Tenn. App. 263, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 14, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 142 S.W.2d 764 (Pickard v. Berryman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickard v. Berryman, 142 S.W.2d 764, 24 Tenn. App. 263, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 14 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

ANDERSON, J.

The bill in this cause was filed by Lewis Pickard, Jr., a minor, by his next friend, to recover from the defendant, Robert A. Berryman, the sum of $500, which he alleges his father had lost in a game of chance conducted by the defendant and his servants. The suit is authorized by Code, sections 7814 and 7815. The answer denied the material allegations of the bill. The case was tried on depositions, and the chancellor awarded a recovery for the sum of $485. The defendant appealed.

The record contains no finding of fact by the chancellor, but the decree recites “that from a preponderance of the evidence and from inferences fairly to be drawn therefrom that heretofore, to-wit, in December, 1936, the defendant won and collected from Lewis Pickard the sum of $485.00 in a game of chance.”

There seems to be no controversy about the sufficiency of the evidence to show that the complainant’s father lost the sum mentioned at the time and place contemplated by the chancellor’s decree. The contention is that there is no evidence to warrant the conclusion that the defendant had any connection with the game of chance in which the loss occurred.

The proof consisted solely of the depositions taken on behalf of the complainant. Although the record does not so indicate, it is asserted in the briefs that one of these, not having been read by the complainant, was read by the defendant, the latter offering no other or further evidence. In any event, the defendant did not give his deposition. This becomes important in connection with the question hereinafter discussed of whether, under the circumstances shown, the complainant may rely upon an inference unfavorable to the defendant to be drawn from that fact.

*266 Although not material, it is shown by way of background that the complainánt’s mother and father are divorced, the mother now living in Chicago and the defendant in Memphis. They had lived together in Memphis as man and wife for about three years. During that time the father gambled away several thousand dollars,, representing a part of the proceeds of property left to the mother by a relative. In the course of three days in December, 1936, he lost the sum of $485 in the dice game, with which we are here concerned, that was being operated in a hotel room in Memphis. This was a "double room,” and appears to have been equipped with gambling apparatus, including a dice table and roulette wheel. The dice game was conducted by operatives referred to as "dealers,” with or against whom the patrons appear to have played. There were three of them, one "to call the dice,” referred to as a "stick man” and "two men in there to pay off if you would win.’’ The defendant is not shown to have participated in the dice game in which the complainant’s father played, on the occasion in question, but he was "in and out” of the room while it was going on. He was seen, however, to operate the roulette wheel on one occasion and to instruct a patron "about how to play it.”

Shortly after the complainant’s father had lost all of his money, he asked one of the dealers for a loan of $25. Whereupon, according to Pickard’s testimony, the dealer "called (over the telephone) Mr. Berryman out at his tourist camp and asked him if they should let me have $25.00, and he said, ‘No, let me have $15.00’ over the telephone.” He testified that "I heard the number called and heard them ask for Mr. Berryman, and under that telephone call they gave me $15.00. I asked for $25.00 and received $15.00.”

A few weeks .thereafter, Pickard sent the defendant a telegram from Jacksonville, Florida, reminding him that "I have lost some money” and stating that "Would appreciate it if he would let me have $15.00.” Receiving no reply, Pickard requested the telegraph company to trace the message and ascertain if it had been delivered to the defendant. This was done by means of what is referred to as a "service call.” The result was a report that the message had been delivered to the defendant, and "Will reply as soon as possible. ’ ’ Still no reply was received and another service message was sent, which resulted in a report that "said no answer.” There was no objection to the evidence concerning this transaction.

Both before and after the occasion here in question, Pickard patronized a gaming establishment located across the street from the hotel, over what is known in the record as Burke’s Clothing Store. These premises, consisting of the second floor of a building located at 85 South Second Street in Memphis, are shown at said times to have been occupied by the defendant under a written agreement dated December 7, 1936, whereby he rented them from *267 month to month. At times the defendant himself operated the dice game conducted in this place, at which Pickard also played and lost; at other times it was operated by the same “dealers” who were operating the game in the hotel on the occasion here in question.

One witness, also a patron of these games, testified that when the game was being operated “up over Burke’s Store” none was being conducted in the hotel room and vice versa; that “I would say it (the game) moved back and forth two or three times to my knowledge” but the same “dealers” worked in both places. The same witness testified that he had seen the defendant “get behind the table and take money from the dealers,” speaking, with reference to the game while it was being conducted over Burke’s Store. This testimony was elicited on cross-examination by a question, “Have you ever seen him (the defendant) gamble or operate a table up there?”

Resolving in favor of the defendant the doubt as to whether, with respect to some of the questions sought to be raised, there has been a sufficient compliance with the rules to require a disposal of them, we proceed to consider those we deem material to the conclusion reached.

The first of these is with respect to the competency of the above-quoted testimony of Pickard concerning- the telephone conversation between one of the operatives or dealers of the game in the hotel room and the defendant, that resulted in a loan to Pickard of $15.

This evidence was brought out on cross-examination during the taking of Pickard’s first deposition. His deposition was taken the second time and upon this occasion he related substantially the same conversation. With respect to this testimony, the chancellor sustained the objection of the defendant to so much of it as related to what the dealer reported to the witness that the defendant had said over the phone, and admitted the portion of the testimony to the effect that the dealer said he was going, to call the defendant, and that upon the phone connection being made he asked for the defendant. The ground of the objection to this testimony as first brought out on cross-examination in the course of Pickard’s first deposition was that “This is an opinion, or inference drawn by the witness, and is an effort to predicate an inference upon an inference, which is contrary to the rules of evidence.”

If the evidence were in fact inadmissible it was not so upon this ground, and this alone would dispose of the question made in this court with respect thereto. But it is at least doubtful if the objection was good on any ground. The admissibility of telephone conversations is the subject of exhaustive annotations in 71 A. L. R., 5, et seq., and 105 A. L. R., 326, et seq.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 S.W.2d 764, 24 Tenn. App. 263, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickard-v-berryman-tennctapp-1939.