Riggins v. Sass

143 S.W. 689, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 143 S.W. 689 (Riggins v. Sass) 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
Riggins v. Sass, 143 S.W. 689, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 19 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

FLX, J.

This is a suit instituted by ap-pellee, Ben Sass, to recover commissions on the sale of land made by G. A. Heilig for appellant. It was alleged that Heilig sold certain lands' for appellant for $34,386, for which service he had' agreed to pay Heilig 5 per cent, out of the sum received for the land, amounting to $1,719.30, of which sum he had paid $1,000, and the balance of the debt had been assigned to Sass by Heilig, and the payment guaranteed by the latter. The cause was tried by jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for Sass against appellant, as principal, and Heilig, as guarantor, for $719.30. This is a second appeal. 127 S. W. 1064.

[1, 2] The first assignment of error assails the action of the court in admitting in evidence a letter, dated January 25, 1907, written by appellant to Heilig, in which there is an admission that appellant was willing that the land be sold at $16.50 an acre. The letter was written after a meeting between appellant and Heilig at Hearne, where appellant had agreed to sell the land for $16.50 an acre. The letter was confirmatory of the claim made by Heilig that he had authority in the original agreement, at the Lester Hotel in La Grange, to sell for less than $20; and that 5 per cent, commission would be paid on whatever price the land was sold for. The letter was properly admitted for the purpose intimated, whatever ulterior purpose the counsel of Sass may have had in offering it. That it was introduced for a different purpose is, perhaps, indicated by the remarks of counsel that the letter was written “with the view and purpose of enticing prospective purchasers into a purchase of the land.” That argument may have been improper, and should not have been indulged in, but we cannot conceive how it had the effect “surreptitiously to poison the minds of the jury and engender in them a feeling of prejudice” against appellant; and neither does appellant claim that it did so affect the jury, but merely that the attorney had the expectation that it would so affect the jury. ,We must give the jury the credit of possessing some intelligence and a measure of fairness and honesty, and the remarks were not of such inflammatory character as to arouse any kind of a jury to such a pitch of prejudice as to forget théir oaths and duties as citizens and jurors. Even if appellant had been shown to have written the letter with a view to entice purchasers to buy, the latter were not, presumably, on the jury, and there was no cause for anybody else to become inflamed about it.

[3] Counsel, when interrupted in his speech, should not have said, “Oh, yes, when we are boring into them, they jump to their feet and except,” and, although such remarks may have been “insulting and insolent,” as claimed by appellant, the court promptly reprimanded counsel, and instructed the jury not to regard them. That was all that he could do, and we are not prepared to hold that the ebullient language of the enthusiastic attorney had more weight and influence with the jury than the instructions of the judge, coupled with a rebuke to counsel for the use of such language. Railway v. Johnson, 83 Tex. 628, 19 S. W. 151; Hogan v. Railway, 88 Tex. *690 679, 32 S. W. 1035. This, also, disposes of the objection in the fourth assignment of error to language used by counsel for. Sass.

[4] The special charge, the refusal of which is complained of in the fifth assignment of error, was to the effect that the uncontroverted evidence showed that appellant agreed to pay Heilig 5 per cent, for his services in selling the land, provided it sold at $20 an acre, and was properly refused, because the evidence was not uncontroverted on that point. Heilig, testifying as to his agreement in La Grange with appellant, stated: “He said he would give me $1 per acre if I colonized it. I told him that was not equitable: that it was worth more to sell land for $35 per acre than for $15 per acre; that I wanted 5 per cent, on whatever amount I could get for the land, and he agreed to that.” The charge would have been an invasion of the peculiar right of the jury to pass upon the credibility of the witnesses and the weight of the testimony. Heilig swore that he never agreed to the proposition, made through appellant’s letter of December 15, 1906, wherein he offered to pay Heilig $1,000 for his services if the land sold for less than $20 an acre, and stated he did not remember having received the letter. Heilig testified that he wrote to appellant that there was a mistake about the $1,000; “that the commission was ,5 per cent.” The jury seem to have credited the evidence of Heilig, as they had the undoubted right to do.

The judgment is affirmed.

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Related

Hogan v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Co.
32 S.W. 1035 (Texas Supreme Court, 1895)
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Johnson
19 S.W. 151 (Texas Supreme Court, 1892)
Riggins v. Sass
127 S.W. 1064 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 689, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riggins-v-sass-texapp-1912.