Renegar v. Cramer

354 S.W.2d 663, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2235
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 7, 1962
Docket10912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 354 S.W.2d 663 (Renegar v. Cramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Renegar v. Cramer, 354 S.W.2d 663, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2235 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

Bill A. Cramer, suing in behalf of his wife, Patty Cramer, recovered judgment against Gayle Anne Renegar for $30,191.35 as damages for personal injuries sustained by Mrs. Cramer in a collision between a Chevrolet Sedan automobile operated by Mrs. Cramer and a Ford Thunderbird automobile operated by Gayle Anne Renegar. The collision occurred at the intersection of West 49j4 Street and Finley Drive in Austin, Texas, about 11:00 A.M. on December 5, 1959. At such time, Gayle Anne Renegar was fourteen and one half years of age. The trial was to a jury.

Appellant’s first and second points complain of the jury argument of appellee’s counsel. They are jointly briefed and we will dispose of them in the same manner.

As to point 1 appellant’s bill of exception shows that counsel for appellee made this argument to the jury:

“ * * * Now, there are lots of things — some things we’d like to tell you here, but the rules do not permit. So when you get in your Jury Room, don’t speculate about why we didn’t tell *665 you about this or why this and that wasn’t mentioned. Just restrict it to what the Judge tells you, what you’ve heard here, so that your verdict will be solid and good and they can’t come back and set it aside and make us try it again. If anyone should mention anything like that out of the record, just caution them, ‘We’re not supposed to do it.’ Just follow the Court’s orders and give these answers on the basis of the evidence. The Court tells you on Page 1, ‘Don’t concern yourselves with the result of your answers insofar as they may result in a judgment in favor of or against either party.’ Of course, the Court is telling you not to be concerned with the actual effect of your answers, nor with who is actually going to pay your verdict or whether or not it will ever be paid. Just find the facts from what you’ve heard here and let the Judge decide the law.”

This bill was approved by the Court with these qualifications:

“ * * * no objection to the statements quoted above was made; the Court was not requested to instruct the jury not to consider such statements; no complaint of any nature about such statements was made until the filing of defendant’s motion for a new trial; and all of the above quoted statements were made by plaintiff’s counsel in his closing argument.”

Related to the second point, appellant’s bill of exception shows that counsel for ap-pellee made this argument to the jury:

“Now, I’d like to go through the problems that they raised, one by one. First, this prior injury. If they are successful in making any ground for this release thing, then any time a person is injured in an automobile collision or any other way, if he can’t settle and get a fair settlement for his injuries and he has to bring a lawsuit, he’s going to be a fraud, a fake and a liar, and that’s what they’ve made out here, and anybody that comes in that they don’t agree with is a fraud, a fake and a liar. In this case, I guess it’s me, Dr. LaLonde and the Plaintiff also, according to what I’ve heard in the argument here. Any time any one of you or any member of your family or any person in society has a bent fender and is paid the amount of his property damage, it doesn’t matter if he got a scratch or his daughter got a scratch, and he signs his name to one of these releases for $320.00, if that’s the amount of your property damage — in this case fifty for the little girl — you’re, according to their theory, forbidden forever to come in and say that your injuries were caused by this recent accident, because you put your name on this release that these boys signed up — typed out for you. Any person who has ever had property damage to his car is going to be in the same fix, if you’re ever seriously injured in a wreck and have to make claim for it because you can’t get a reasonable settlement. And if you don’t think a simple telephone call to the central headquarters of these gentlemen will cough up every release you’ve ever signed, just try it. One call and give the name and they’ve got every release for property damage, and they can twist it and distort it, as has been done in this case. And, don’t you think, just common sense, if Mrs. Cramer had really made any indication she was injured at all, don’t you think they would have had in that file some medicals or statements or something besides a simple little signing of her name? If they’d had it, don’t you know they would have brought it in here? They brought in what they could for poison. Spray the air with poison and hope that some member of the Jury would pick it up and say, ‘Well, it may be right.’ That’s just shot-gun tactics. Any ‘BB’ that hits, they’re satisfied. Also, I wonder what explanation — I didn’t hear it — they have. Was Mr. Cramer injured — and he signed that re *666 lease. It says, ‘To my neck, back and all other parts of my body,’ and sometimes fingers and toes and everything else. He put his name on it and he wasn’t even in the car. It doesn’t mean that, and I suspect that some members of the Jury have signed them yourselves so you know that I’m talking about something you’re way ahead of me on.”

This bill was approved by the Court with these qualifications:

“ * * * no objection to the statements quoted above was made; the Court was not requested to instruct the jury not to consider such statements; no complaint of any nature about such statements was made until the filing of defendant’s motion for a new trial; and all of the above quoted statements were made by plaintiff’s counsel in his closing argument.”

Appellant’s points are that the effect of these arguments was to intimate to the jury that she was insured.

While Mrs. Cramer was undergoing cross examination, the following transpired:

“Q. Isn’t it true that your back was injured in an automobile accident around the Sth of April, 1956?
“A. No, sir, it wasn’t.
MR. GAY: Will you mark this, please, as Defendant’s Exhibit 1 ? (Said instrument was marked for identification as Defendant’s Exhibit No. 1.)
“Q. Do you recognize the signatures?
“A. Yes, sir, I do.
“Q. Whose signatures are those?
“A. They are mine and my husband’s.
“Q. Were you in an automobile which was involved in a collision with either Mr. William L. Best, Mrs. William L. Best or Barbara Best?
“A. Barbara Best.
“Q. All right.

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Bluebook (online)
354 S.W.2d 663, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/renegar-v-cramer-texapp-1962.