Vitt v. Baer

335 S.W.2d 681, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 547
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 1960
Docket23031
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 335 S.W.2d 681 (Vitt v. Baer) 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
Vitt v. Baer, 335 S.W.2d 681, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 547 (Mo. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

SPERRY, Commissioner.

This is a replevin case. Plaintiff, a farmer, owned one hundred and thirteen head of hogs and, in November of 1956, learned that twenty eight head were gone from his farm. He inquired in the neighborhood and found twenty one head, which he identified as his hogs, in the feed lot of defendant, a neighboring farmer. He instituted this suit and defendant executed' a redelivery bond. The cause was tried to a jury in December, 1958. From a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, in the amount of $746.25, defendant appeals.

There was a large volume of testimony, from twenty five witnesses. However, since defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, we will not set it out here, but will discuss the pertinent evidence in connection with the various points presented for review.

The first error urged is that the Court permitted plaintiff’s counsel to engage in unwarranted and prejudicial argument and conduct during the trial and in closing arguments and that, as a result, the verdict was the result of bias and prejudice.

During cross examination of some of defendant’s witnesses, counsel for plaintiff questioned them concerning a meeting held at a hotel in Carrollton, the night before, which was attended by defendant and by certain of his witnesses, invited by him, and by two of his attorneys. Some of the witnesses stated that, at that meeting, they discussed with counsel what their testimony would be. ' During colloquy between opposing counsel the Court admonished counsel for plaintiff not to make remarks which might reflect on defense counsel. It is not, and could not successfully be contended, that plaintiff could not properly inquire concerning the meeting, its purpose, the subjects there discussed, and the interest of witnesses in defendant’s cause.

In the closing argument of one of plaintiff’s attorneys the following occurred:

“Have you ever been to the theater and seen a puppet show? There is a fellow you know that gets up in the loft here and has a lot of little fellows on the strings and they do all kinds of antics, and he is the master and they are called the marionettes. And the man who handles that would be the master. Now, in that hotel room the other night was, if you had been there, you woúld have seen the master and the *683 greatest puppet show you ever saw. The master and the marionettes, and that is what you heard. They take all of their witnesses to the house, the courthouse, I mean the hotel, and that is why all of them tracked — tracked— tracked — because they have been coached and told and ‘now you tell it this way.’
“Mr. Joyce: I am going to have to object. That is highly improper.
“Mr. Carter: That is my inference.
“Mr. Joyce: You drew an inference — .
“The Court: Be careful about making serious insinuations, Mr. Carter.
“Mr. Carter: Oh, of course, Earl (the defendant) was in that room Tuesday night and of course it was said how are you going to answer Cressek— how are you going to answer what he said — .
“Mr. Jones: Now I object — .
“The Court: The jury should understand it is only inference.
“Mr. Carter: Plaintiff’s case stops where the defendant’s case starts. The evidence that the defendant has presented is manufactured evidence; all of it. It is evidence which was manufactured for this case.
“Mr. Joyce: I want to object to that.”

Later, during the closing argument of another of plaintiff’s attorneys, the following is recorded:

“The Court: Mr. Wheeler, base your arguments on fact Mr. Wheeler, and don’t argue probabilities.
“Mr. Wheeler: They manufacture-ed — .
“Mr. Joyce: Just a minute.
“The Court: Come up, gentlemen.
“Mr. Joyce: The defendant wants to object to counsel’s statement in argument that the defendant’s evidence in this case is ‘manufactured evidence’; all of it, and asks that — I want the record to show that defendant objects to counsel’s statement in argument that all of the defendant’s evidence was manufactured evidence, and asks the Court first, to admonish counsel for making that kind of a statement to this jury, and second, defendant asks that the jury be instructed to disregard it, and not to consider any portion of that statement for any reason.
“The Court: The Court rules that the plaintiff may argue facts of the case, and if there are any inaccuracies that exist in the defendant’s case, he may argue the fact — but in his estimation, if there is any manufactured evidence, it is based upon the evidence, and if it is not, then the jury should disregard it, and should point out the evidence if he has such an opinion that points it out.
“Mr. Joyce: And defendant excepts to the Court’s refusal to admonish the counsel, and excepts to the Court’s failure to advise the jury not to consider it.
“The Court: Proceed.
“Mr. Wheeler: The evidence of the defendant started where the evidence of the plaintiff stops. Not one person with the exception of the defendant’s father testified that these were the hogs of the defendant, these were defendant’s hogs, and the defendant’s father was the inducer of it.”

Later, plaintiff’s counsel said that defendant had said that all of plaintiff’s witnesses, and plaintiff, had lied, that the only truth that plaintiff told was in giving his name.

Defendant says plaintiff’s counsel’s argument was improper, and not fair comment on the evidence. There appears to have been no intended reflection upon the mora* *684 or professional integrity of defendant’s attorneys ; nor is there ground in the record for such an inference. However, the argument directed the jury’s attention to the evidentiary facts and tended to point to an inference that defendant (not his counsel} had coached his witnesses.

The testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses clearly indicated his ownership of the hogs, because of paint markings said to have been acquired from his freshly painted barn and fences; but defendant’s witnesses stated that there was no paint on the hogs two days after the sheriff seized and marked them. Plaintiff’s witnesses testified to certain clearly defined physical characteristics of the hogs which were not noticed, or were not present, when defendant’s witnesses later saw the hogs claimed to have been those marked by the sheriff. Clearly, the evidence indicates that one of the parties, plaintiff or defendant, was a conscious wrongdoer in claiming the hogs in controversy. We cannot say that plaintiff’s attorneys, in closing argument, were not entitled to argue an inference of manufactured and perjured evidence; but there was no charge made that defendant’s counsel was guilty of knowledge thereof or that any attorney in the case had a part therein.

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Bluebook (online)
335 S.W.2d 681, 1960 Mo. App. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vitt-v-baer-moctapp-1960.