State v. Girdner

287 S.W.2d 706, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2080
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1956
Docket15049
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 287 S.W.2d 706 (State v. Girdner) 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
State v. Girdner, 287 S.W.2d 706, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2080 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

CRAMER, Justice.

This is a condemnation proceeding. In its pleading the State alleged that it was at that time constructing, laying out, and reconstructing a State farm to market highway which had been surveyed through, across, and upon a strip of land in Gray-son County owned by the Girdners and described in the pleading by metes and *707 bounds; which strip of land was alleged to contain 2.263 acres of land, more or less, of which 0.388 acres lies within the existing limits of the existing road, the fee simple title to which is owned by appellees, the Girdners, plus an easement across other land owned by appellees, for drainage purposes and “for the construction, reconstruction, widening, deepening, and repairing of a certain channel for drainage purposes”; and described said land also by metes and bounds and as tracts 27A and 27B; tract 27A containing 0.069 acres more or less; tract 27B containing 0.195 acres of land more or less; together with all other usual allegations.

After the court duly appointed Commissioners and they had assessed damages at $1,400, the Girdners filed exceptions and perfected their appeal to the County Court. The jury trying the cause in county court, after hearing the evidence, found in answer to special' issues submitted to them that: (1) The market value of the strip of land condemned for highway purposes at the time it was condemned, considered as severed land, was $945; (2) the market value of the Girdner land exclusive of the strip of land condemned immediately before the strip was taken for highway purposes, was $11,865 ($175 per acre); and (3) that excluding increase in value, if anyj and decrease in value, if any, by reason of benefits or injuries received by the Gird-ners in common with the community generally and not peculiar to them and connected with their ownership, use and enjoyment of the particular tract of land across which the strip of land has been condemned, and taking into consideration the uses to which the strip condemned is to be subjected, the market value of the remainder of the Girdner tract of land immediately after the taking of the strip condemned for highway purposes, was $9,630 ($146 per acre).

On such findings and the undisputed evidence the court entered judgment in favor of the Girdners for the proper amount based on such verdict and this appeal has been duly perfected by the State.

Appellant briefs five points of error. Point ¡1 asserts error in holding the State’s witness Duff Hood “incompetent to testify.” Appellees counter that “The record presents no indication that harm resulted to appellant by the exclusion of Duff- Hood’s testimony, in as much as that witness’s testimony was not preserved by bill of exception or statement to the trial court, and the verdict is supported by the evidence.”

The record shows appellees’ farm lies about one mile north of Howe, along the west side of U. S. Highway 77 which runs north and south at that point. A gravel road along the north side, of the farm intersects Highway 77. Duff Hood, for fourteen years before the condemnation proceeding was filed, operated a filling station which he rented from the Girdners in the corner of such intersection. Duff Hood testified: “Q. Would you state your name? A. Duff Hood. Q. Your age, please sir? A. Seventy years old.” When the above testimony was in, Girdner’s attorney objected to the witness’s testimony and, with the court’s permission, developed that the witness had been convicted of a felony in Grayson 'County and sentenced to a term of years in our State penitentiary and had never been pardoned. The court after hearing the objection, sustained it and barred the witness from further testimony. In our opinion such action was error. Article 3717, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., provides: “No person shall be incompetent to testify in civil cases on account of his religious opinion, or for the want of any religious belief, or by reason of having been convicted of a felony.”

Our Supreme Court has also held in Pool v. Sneed, Tex.Civ.App., 173 S.W.2d 768, at page 781 [18] (error ref.), “Since there has never been any statutory law prohibiting the witness in question from testifying in a civil case, his disqualification to do so prior to 1925 was not, in our judgment, a part of his punishment, and the legislature was therefore not without authority in 1925 to restore his competency thereafter to testify in civil cases.”

*708 The only question under the record here is whether harm is shown, and if so, whether or not it was sufficient to require a new trial; the appellees asserting that there is, (1) no showing of harm; and (2) an absence of any admissible evidence to which the witness would have testified. Appellant, however, a-sserts that where the witness’, testimony is objected, to and the objection .is sustained solely on the ground-of legal incompetence of the witness to testify, it is not necessary that his evidence be shown by the record. In other words, the rule contended for by appellee- is not applicable here.

The second syllabus in Todd v. Dysart, Adm’r, 23 Tex. 590, states: “If an objection to testimony relate solely to the competency of the witness, and not to the materiality of the matter concerning which he is offered, and the court exclude the witness, upon the ground of incompetency; prima facie, it will be deemed, that the matter proposed to be proved by the witness, was -material- and relevant.” In -answer to this, appellee relies on Vernon’s Ann. Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, rules 434 and 327 to the effect that no judgment shall be reversed unless the error complained of probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment and that such rule placed the burden upon appellant to show that the error probably resulted in injury to him. Ap-pellee also cites 3-A Tex.Jur. 534 as stating, the general rule that error in exclusion of testimony cannot be reviewed when the nature of the proffered testimony is not shown by the statement of facts or a bill of exceptions. However that authority at page 537 states the exception to the general rule as follows: “But it does not apply to a case. * * * where the testimony was excluded solely on the ground that the witness was incompetent * * Citing Todd v. Dysart, supra. Since the only objection here as to the competence of the witness to testify was sustained, error is presumed if the witness was competent. That was the only question raised here and under such record and the present state of authorities, point 1 must be sustained.

By point 2 appellant asserts error, in the overruling of its motion for mistrial based upon statements by- counsel for co-ndemnees that since the court had overruled portions of the testimony of their witnesses, the remaining evidence which was placed before the jury, distorted the facts. Appellees countered that there was no error in overruling a motion made in connection with objections to the admission and exclusion of certain • parts of the witness Chastain’s deposition.

Our examination of the petition discloses that Grayson County alleged that the State was constructing and laying out and reconstructing a State farm to' market highway which had been surveyed through, across, and upon certain property therein described by metes and bounds and containing 2.263 acres of land, more or less, within the limits of the existing road, the fee simple title to which -was owned by the appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W.2d 706, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-girdner-texapp-1956.