Pritchett v. Etheridge

172 F.2d 822, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2780
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1949
DocketNo. 12398
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 172 F.2d 822 (Pritchett v. Etheridge) 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
Pritchett v. Etheridge, 172 F.2d 822, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2780 (5th Cir. 1949).

Opinion

HOLMES, Circuit Judge.

This is an action by Mrs. Etheridge and her present husband to recover the proceeds of insurance upon the life of her former husband, Jack Pritchett, a veteran of World War II. She bases her claim upon a change of beneficiary, in her favor, alleged to have been made at the hospital on January 21, 1946, seven days prior to the insured’s death. The sole issue upon the trial below depended upon the mental capacity of the insured to make the purported change. Upon this issue the hospital records, which were excluded below, were competent, relevant, and material evidence.

Long prior to the trial, in accordance with 38 U.S.C.A. § 445, the appellant moved for an order directing the issuance of subpoenas for material witnesses, residing more than 100 miles from the court, who could testify not only as to .above issue but as to the identity of the original hospital records. The court denied this motion, and later at the trial it refused to permit said records to be introduced in evidence on the ground that they were not properly identified. We think there was sufficient evidence before the court to warrant the reasonable inference that the records offered in evidence were the original hospital records, which tended to show the mental condition of the deceased on and before January 21, 1946, and thereafter until the time of his death. These records were in court at the time of the trial, in the possession of the United States Attorney, and if their authenticity was likely to be objected to on technical grounds, as the appellant’s motion indicated, then it was an abuse of discretion on the part of the court to deny appellant’s motion to subpoena witnesses to prove his case.

The appellant claimed that the hospital records would show that the patient was disoriented and irrational at the time in question, and that with those records before them the hospital doctors would swear that the insured could not have understood the nature and effect of his act. The records were in Texas, the doctors in New Mexico; and the motion, which the court below denied, was for the purpose of permitting the doctors to testify with the records before them. Originally, both the records -and the doctors were in New Mexico, but the Chief of the Qaims Division of the Veterans Administration ordered these records sent to Washington, and on the strength of them the Veterans Administration refused to change the beneficiary from the father to the widow.

This suit was filed April 19, 1947; obviously the hospital records were then turned over to the Department of Justice, and in due course were forwarded to the United States attorney who by his assistant, was handling the case in the district court. They were in his official custody at the time he produced them in court, but he refused to agree that they were authentic, and the court below refused to allow appellant’s attorney to introduce them in evidence. This action of the court, in connection with its prior action on the motion of appellant to be permitted to subpoena witnesses, prevented the facts indicated by the hospital [824]*824records from being introduced in evidence at the trial.

There was no lack of diligence on the part of appellant's attorney in attempting to get before the court the pertinent facts as revealed by the records in question. His efforts were directed toward compliance with every technicality requisite to the competency of this evidence. It was not a copy of the records that was offered, the certification of which was required in accordance with some rule or statute; the document in the possession of the assistant United States attorney (which is copied in full in the transcript) purported to be, and we have every reason to believe was, the genuine original record of the United States Veterans Hospital in which the insured died.1 The witness was in the court below with the purported record in his possession; we do not know exactly what his evidence would have been, because the rulings of the court were adverse to his being examined on the subject. As to what happened on the trial immediately before, and after this witness took the stand, we quote from the transcript, pages 37 to 44, as follows:

“Mr. Gay: If it please the Court, if I may use these hospital records, introduce them in evidence, I think we can finish with Dr. Witt by one o’clock.

“The Court: Well, they don’t see fit to agree to the, introduction of them without proof as to what they are. I can’t admit them over that objection. You have to prove that they are hospital records, that they are correctly made, and things of that kind.

“Mr. Reagan: If the Court please, I haven’t seen them.

“The Court: I am not asking you to do anything. I am merely asking the other side—

“Mr. Gay: If it please the Court, I would like to call to the Court’s attention some of the history of some of these hospital records.

“The Court: No use to call my attention to anything. The thing to do is produce proof. They don’t seem to agree with you, and that is all there is to it. I haven’t any right to—

“Mr. Gay: May Mr. Harrell be sworn, Your Honor?

“Oscar Morris Harrell, being first duly sworn, examined in chief by Mr. Gay, testified as follows:

“Q. State your name, address, and occupation, please, sir.

“A. Oscar Morris Harrell, 5735 Velasco, Dallas, Texas, Assistant United States District Attorney.

“Q. Mr. Harrell, I hand you herewith a folder that I will ask to be marked for identification as Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1. I will ask you what that folder is, please, sir.

“(Said folder was marked Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1.)

“The Court: He couldn’t possibly know, he didn’t make it. Somebody handed it to him and told him it was the hospital records. That is all you know, isn’t it?

“Mr. Harrell: That’s right. ■

“Mr. Gay: Your Honor, I would like to state to the Court that this has been in the possession of the United States District Attorney for some time.

“The Court: That doesn’t make any difference. He doesn’t know what it was.

“Mr. Gay: We would like to show how it came into his possession. It came through official channels.

“The Court: I have ruled, Mr. Gay, so put yourself in line with the ruling. He said that all he knows about it is somebody gave it to him and told him it was the hospital records. That is hearsay. That is no proof of their accuracy and no proof of where it came from.

“Mr. Gay: I would like to make one statement to the Court, if I may, sir. After this case was first filed, the Defendant, Mr. Pritchett, filed a motion under a special law allowing Veteran employees to be brought in as witnesses from out of the District. As these records were here and the witnesses were in New Mexico, we filed a motion asking this Court to authorize subpoenas to bring them here, under the special statute [825]*825allowing that to he done, and providing travel expenses for them. That motion was heard before your Honor, and was overruled. Thereafter we tried to think of some way to get the records here, which were not in our possession, and which we could not obtain. Since we couldn’t bring those persons here, and the records were here, it was an insoluble problem to have a person out there identify records here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 F.2d 822, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 2780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchett-v-etheridge-ca5-1949.