Tom Reed Gold Mines Co. v. Berd

260 P. 191, 32 Ariz. 479, 57 A.L.R. 55, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 196
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1927
DocketCivil No. 2612.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 260 P. 191 (Tom Reed Gold Mines Co. v. Berd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tom Reed Gold Mines Co. v. Berd, 260 P. 191, 32 Ariz. 479, 57 A.L.R. 55, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 196 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

ROSS, C. J.

The plaintiff, Berd, in a suit under the Employers’ Liability Law, chapter 6, title 14, Civil Code of 1913, obtained a verdict and judgment against the defendant, Tom Reed Gold Mines Company, for the sum of $10,000, and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial and from the judgment, the company has appealed.

*481 The accident, in which plaintiff claims he was hurt, occurred August 9th, 1924, in the 400-level of the Katherine mine, Mohave county. At the time he was lifting a drilling machine, weighing about 150 pounds, for the purpose of removing it from the danger zone of some blasts about to be put off, and while in such act his feet slipped and the drilling machine, as he alleges, struck him in the abdomen and groin and about the hips and legs and injured him internally and in his back, spine, hips and certain nerves, muscles and tissues of his body, permanently disabling him, etc.

The first six assignments of error are based upon the misconduct of plaintiff and his counsel during the trial. The seventh is that the jury acted under the influence of bias, passion, and prejudice, induced by such misconduct, and rendered an excessive verdict. We do not find it necessary to consider the other assignments, and therefore do not state them. We will consider those mentioned in the order stated.

This is a second trial, the first trial being had in November, 1925, and this one in June, 1926. In the first trial plaintiff was successful before the jury, but for some reason the verdict was set aside and a new trial granted. It would seem, therefore, that unless the errors complained of are clearly prejudicial the verdict and judgment should not be disturbed.

(1) It is claimed defendant’s rights were prejudiced by a statement of plaintiff while testifying, to the effect that defendant had caused a witness of plaintiff’s to absent himself from the trial. To begin with, plaintiff, as the record clearly shows, is an illiterate, uneducated foreigner. Prom his answers it is apparent he had difficulty in understanding questions put to him and, likewise, in making himself understood. He was asked by his attorney if *482 other men were working on the 300-level at the time he was hurt and in answer to the question he said there were. And to the further question, “Do you know where he is now?” (referring to one of such workmen), he answered, “He was the other day; he was in; but the company take him away from me before last night.” The plaintiff had no grounds for making such an accusation. It appears from the record that it was an assertion without any supporting evidence. That an insinuation or assertion that the adversary had secured the absence of the witness was improper is obvious. Untrue and unsupported statements of the kind in the presence of the jury were certainly calculated to do harm and deserve, whether volunteered by the witness or solicited by counsel, the severest condemnation. Such misconduct has been held sufficient to require a reversal of judgments (Ashland, etc., v. May, 51 Neb. 474, 71 N. W. 67, and Missouri, etc., v. Wood, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 63 S. W. 654) when the guilty party was not rebuked nor the jury admonished by the court not to be influenced by it. But in this case the court ordered the answers stricken and told the jury to disregard them. It was rectified so far as the court was able to rectify it, and with an honest and intelligent jury we think we should assume wholly so.

(2) The plaintiff was asked by his counsel if one Murphy rubbed him with liniment, and he answered, “No, sir; my wife did.” The defendant objected to the answer, moved that it be stricken, and the jury instructed to disregard it. It now contends that a failure to grant its motion was error. In support of this contention defendant cites the rule announced in Silver King v. Kendall, 23 Ariz. 39, 201 Pac. 102, wherein it was said that evidence that plaintiff had a dependent wife and daughter was, under the Employers’ Liability Law, irrelevant, and, since such *483 evidence would tend to excite the sympathy of the jury for the plaintiff, it was prejudicial. But in that case the record shows that the evidence was offered and admitted for the purpose of enhancing the verdict. If the situation here were the same, the rule would be the same. The statement by plaintiff that his wife rubbed him, if the question was proper, was also proper. That plaintiff had a wife was brought out incidentally and not for the purpose of augmenting the verdict or winning the sympathy of the jury. To extend the rule to hold that such accidental disclosure was injurious would be going too far, we think.

(3) The plaintiff sought to put before the jury, by questions propounded to him by his counsel, his financial condition at the time of the accident and during the interim to the time of trial. For instance, he was asked if he had any money saved up, how he had managed to live, if he made any money trying to farm or in the store business, if he had been able to make a livelihood, to which questions he made answer, in effect, that he had some money when hurt, but had since spent it; that his efforts to make a livelihood had been futile; that his living had been poor; and that he had borrowed, or tried to borrow, from friends. These questions and answers were foreign to the issue. The plaintiff had asked in his complaint for damages for permanent injuries only. He alleged no special damages, as for loss of wages, or for medical care, or otherwise. The evidence should have been confined to the issue. The defendant either interposed objections to these questions or moved that the answers thereto be stricken and the jury instructed to disregard them, which objections and motions were uniformly sustained by the court. In one or two instances the court stated in ruling out such evidence that the question was *484 whether or not the plaintiff’s earning capacity had been decreased by reason of the alleged injuries.

The persistence of plaintiff’s counsel in repeating these questions after the court had ruled thereon was almost contemptuous and exhibited a contentiousness that is unpardonable; and, if it were in our power to inflict punishment upon the attorney without condemning at the same time his client, we would be inclined to do so. Evidence of poverty in cases of this kind should never be allowed. The damages recoverable depend upon the nature of the injury sustained and not upon the wealth or poverty of the plaintiff. Johnston v. Beadle, 6 Cal. App. 251, 91 Pac. 1011; Green v. Southern Pac. Co., 122 Cal. 563, 55 Pac. 577; 17 C. J. 872. But, in view of the rulings of the court, we do not feel that we would be justified in holding the errors prejudiced the defendant’s case.

(4) One Murphy had testified in behalf of the plaintiff. On account of his intoxicated condition, defendant, in the absence of the jury, moved that his testimony be stricken, which was consented to by plaintiff. However, when the court in the presence of the jury granted defendant’s motion, counsel for plaintiff stated:

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 191, 32 Ariz. 479, 57 A.L.R. 55, 1927 Ariz. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tom-reed-gold-mines-co-v-berd-ariz-1927.