South Carolina State Highway Department v. Nasim

179 S.E.2d 211, 255 S.C. 406, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 374
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 10, 1971
Docket19168
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 179 S.E.2d 211 (South Carolina State Highway Department v. Nasim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Carolina State Highway Department v. Nasim, 179 S.E.2d 211, 255 S.C. 406, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 374 (S.C. 1971).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This appeal by the South Carolina Highway Department grows out of a land condemnation proceeding. The highway department has acquired for public use an 18/100 acre lot belonging to Mr. Nasim, the landowner. A trial was held before a jury, and the only issue involved was the amount of compensation the highway department should pay the landowner. The jury was charged that under the evidence it could award not less than $550 and not more than $3000. The award was for $2000.

After all evidence was submitted, counsel argued to the jury. Counsel for the highway department did not object to statements by counsel for the landowner during the argument. After the verdict was returned, counsel for the highway department moved for a new trial.

The sole question before the trial judge and now before this court may be phrased as follows:

Did the trial court err in failing to grant the highway department’s motion for a new trial, which motion was made on the grounds that the court erred in failing to interrupt the jury argument of the landowner’s attorney even though objection was not made until after the verdict, and only then in motion for a new trial.

We hold that the argument of counsel for the landowner was so flagrant, and the likelihood of prejudice so clear, that a new trial is required even though objection was not interposed until after the verdict.

The record reveals that one of the witnesses for the highway department was a Mr. Hopkins. He is a graduate of Clemson College and served for seventeen years as county agent for Anderson County. He has been in the real estate business for eleven years, and has testified in many condemnation cases for the highway department in Anderson County and in several other counties of this State.

*409 Arguments of counsel were recorded and this court has the benefit of the full argument to the jury of all of the attorneys. It is the contention of counsel for the highway department that the argument directed against Mr. Hopkins and his testimony was so vicious that the trial judge should have interrupted counsel of his own volition and stopped the line of argument and instructed the jury to disregard it. It is the contention of the landowner that the argument should have been objected to as it was being made. Some of the argument is as follows:

“I think that the estimate that Mr. Hopkins put on it is ridiculous. I think that when he got up on the witness stand and testified that that piece of property was worth $645.00, I think when he said that he should have asked the Clerk of Court to give the Bible back to let him take his hand back off of it. That is how ridiculous I think it is, and I don’t think it is worthy of considering, and I don’t think that his testimony and his demeanor on the stand is even worthy of talking about * * *. Compare that kind of testimony with this ‘quizzling quivaler’, who when you ask him a question, five (5) minutes later he still hasn’t answered it * * *.
“* * * No, I suspect on Tuesday or Wednesday you began to realize how come they carry Mr. Hopkins around the State, like a mother carrying a new-born infant. They don’t want him to get hurt. That is their baby, that’s their ‘quizzler.’ Do you remember the ‘quizzler’ back in World War II? The ones back in Germany and France, the ones that sided up with the enemy. It is the worst thing I can think of to call him, and that is the reason I call him that. No, there is nothing personal between he and I, until he gets on that witness stand and swears to God to the tell the truth, and comes up with some ridiculous figures like that, and tries to steal my client’s property. He is no friend of mine no longer, and it is wrong, and it is wrong for you to let him do it; and by Thursday of this week you know what he is, and what he stands for. He doesn’t stand for the same thing that you and I stand for, fair play and justice. He is out to *410 take every one of these farm landowners on that road that cuts through there and leads to nowhere * * *.
“Why didn’t he believe that yesterday, when he solicited from this quizzling jockey sales in 1967 that they claim comparable.”

In addition, counsel referred to Mr. Hopkins as a “Statewide highway department jockey” and as a “great highway robber.”

The general rule of this court has been stated as follows:

“It has been settled by many decisions of this court that, except in flagrant cases and where prejudice clearly appears, objection to improper argument of counsel should be made then and there, and comes too late if not made until after the verdict has been rendered.” Johnson v. Charleston and Western Carolina Railway Company, 234 S. C. 448, 108 S. E. (2d) 777 (1959).

We adhere to that rule. We reverse the case before us because the argument falls within the exception. In the case of Edwards v. Union Buffalo Mills Co., et al., 162 S. C. 17, 159 S. E. 818 (1931), this court held:

“In the case of State v. King, 158 S. C. [251], 285, 155 S. E. 409, 421, Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Blease said this: ‘In the recent case of State v. Kennedy, 143 S. C. 318, 141 S. E. 559, we held: “* * * Uncalled for personal abuse of a witness by counsel is objectionable, and will not be condoned or allowed by the court.” If the record in any case shows that this salutary rule has been violated, and the effect was, in this court’s opinion, to prevent one charged with crime from having the fair and impartial trial, guaranteed to him under the Constitution of this state, this court will exercise its power to uphold the Constitution by reversing the case, with the purpose of giving a defendant the trial to which he is entitled.’ ”

In Major v. Alverson, et al., 183 S. C. 123, 190 S. E. 449 (1937) this court held:

*411 “We think that a new trial should have been ordered. Counsel, of course, had the right to analyze the testimony and to point out to the jury any reason or reasons why he thought the witness Alverson was unworthy of belief. But he can offer no excuse for stating to them, in so many words, that the litigant was a liar, or a ‘bare faced liar.’ Such a statement was not only highly improper as an argument, but amounted to an abuse of the witness and tended to greatly prejudice defendant’s case in the eyes of the jury. In short, where counsel applies to a witness or litigant abusive epithets, he will do so at his own peril.
“Upon consideration of the whole matter, we think a flagrant case is here presented where prejudice clearly appears, which makes it an exception to the rule requiring timely notice to be given.”

Improper argument would not entitle the appellant to a new trial unless it be found that the same was prejudicial. Often it is difficult to determine whether argument has caused prejudice. From a study of the whole of the argument and of the record in the case, we think that the likelihood of prejudice is sufficiently strong to necessitate a new trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
179 S.E.2d 211, 255 S.C. 406, 1971 S.C. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-carolina-state-highway-department-v-nasim-sc-1971.