Sparks v. Daniels

343 S.W.2d 661, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 699
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 27, 1961
Docket30527
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 343 S.W.2d 661 (Sparks v. Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sparks v. Daniels, 343 S.W.2d 661, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 699 (Mo. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

BRADY, Commissioner.

Respondents brought this action •against the appellants to recover for appellants’ allegedly negligent damaging of eight needlepoint seat covers. Jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in the amount of $800 and this appeal was timely taken and duly perfected. The petition was filed in April, 1956, and trial was in October, 1959, with verdict and judgment being entered upon the 2nd of that month. Motion for new trial was filed on the 13th, the 12th being a legal holiday, and the notice of appeal was filed on the expiration of 86 days from that filing and was therefore premature. This defect is cured by the provisions of Sup.Ct. Rule 3.24 (see Civil Rules 78.04 and 82.05, V.A.M.R.) We heard the case-during our December docket, 1960.

There is no dispute as to the facts. The respondent, Mrs. Sparks and her mother began to make eight needlepoint seat covers in January, 1955. In November of that year they had completed two of them and she contacted the appellants and advised that she wanted these two pieces used on two chairs she had, but that since she intended to get bigger chairs later she did not want it cut or flattened out but built up so that it would not be discolored when later transferred to the larger chairs. The appellants maintain that they were only instructed to pad out the seats and cover them. These two chairs were properly done and in accordance with Mrs. Sparks’ instructions. Later that same month, Mrs. Sparks and her mother had completed three more needlepoint seat covers and she again contacted the appellants and asked that these be picked up at her house. Her testimony was that she suggested that appellants also take one of the completed chairs with them so the work would be identical. The appellants-maintain that there was no conversation with Mrs. Sparks before these last three-chair seats and needlepoint came into their shop, and that when the appellants' got the telephone call from Mrs. Sparks the morn-' ing after the needlepoint and chairs were-' picked up, the needlepoint had already been cut for the chair seats. The chair seats-were returned to Mrs. Sparks covered with the needlepoint, but cut, and not padded out. Mrs. Sparks’ testimony was that the three seat covers as cut had no value and that she was unable to use these three seat covers, and together with her mother, made three more and re-covered the seats. She further testified that she had never tried to-sell needlepoint and that you could not get handworked needlepoint done in the market.

The respondents’ expert witness, Tucker,, had been in the business of manufacturing embroidery for 35 years. He testified that needlepoint is a form of embroidery, and his company had produced hand needlepoint *663 in the past but that in more recent times wage scales have made handwork commercially unfeasible, and that while he did have persons who did hand needlepoint, he would only do so for a customer he could not refuse; that he began to get out of that work and did his work with machines from five to seven years prior tO’ the trial date. Over obj ection, he was allowed to testify that the reasonable market value of respondents’ handworked needlepoint seat covers was a minimum of $200 each. He further testified that he would have charged more for it, and that his opinion was based upon his experience as a manufacturer, the intricacy of the pattern, the number of square inches involved and on the hourly labor involved, and did not include in his consideration the cost of the material or the overhead, as these were commercial items.

The appellants have preserved three points for our decision.. They urge that the trial court erred in permitting jurors to propound questions to respondents and their witnesses, and in overruling their motion for a mistrial based upon the trial court’s action in permitting the exhibits of both parties to be passed among the jury at the same time; that the trial court erred in permitting respondents’ expert witness to testify as to the value of the needlepoint seat covers; and that the trial court erred in giving Instruction No. 8.

The trial judge made some remarks to the jury at the opening of the trial which comprise slightly over four pages of the transcript. During the course of these remarks, he dealt with conferences between court and counsel and why these were held out of the jury’s hearing, the need to pay very close attention to the testimony, objections by counsel and the effect of his ruling thereon, the hours of trial and the recesses he intended to take, and their conduct during those recesses with regard to avoiding discussion of the case, and that the parties’ opening statement, while not evidence, should be paid attention to. In response to a juror’s question, “Can we jot down notes?” he replied, “I wish I could say yes, but the Supreme Court held that is not proper. I won’t go into their reasoning but since the Supreme Court so holds I have to enforce it.”

During the course of the trial court’s remarks concerning the need for the jury to pay very close attention to the testimony, the court, after stating that disagreements between counsel, particularly in closing arguments as to what was said and the interpretation thereof, often arise, stated

“ * * * and I have to leave it up to you to decide what was actually said and what is the proper interpretation, so it is very important for you to hear and understand every word. If you do not hear what a witness says, which often happens in this room, because the acoustics are very poor, or if the language does not carry meaning to you, raise your hand and I will have the witness repeat what he or she has said or use different language that will carry meaning to you, but if quite a period of time has elapsed and the question arises I have made it the practice in my courtroom that I do not take the time to have my reporter go back in her shorthand notes and try to uncover the particular passage. It takes longer than you think, and that is the rule I have adopted, and I have been so upheld by the Supreme Court.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The trial then proceeded. The first question put by any juror was as to how he should inform the trial court of his inability to hear part of the testimony. The juror had evidently raised his hand before asking the question and was told to do “Just the way you have done.” Then the appellant offered into evidence Exhibit No. 2, which was the form of the needlepoint, and the following occurred;

“The Court: Exhibit 2 is received.
“Defendants’ Exhibit 2 was here admitted into evidence.
*664 “Juror No. 4, Arthur B. Winkel-meyer: Your Honor, can the jury examine such evidence?
“The Court: I’ll find out in just a minute.
“Mr. Coleman: Yes, that was the next thing'. Your Honor, I would like permission to pass this to the jury, if I may.
“The Court: That may he done.
“Defendants’ Exhibit 2 was passed to the jury for their examination.
“The Court: I note juror number one raised his hand.
“Juror No. 1, Alfred F. Topp: I would like to know whether I am out of order or not in asking a question regarding this piece of warp.

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Bluebook (online)
343 S.W.2d 661, 1961 Mo. App. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparks-v-daniels-moctapp-1961.