Waggoner v. Sneed

118 S.W. 547, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 278, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 608
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 547 (Waggoner v. Sneed) 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
Waggoner v. Sneed, 118 S.W. 547, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 278, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 608 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

SPEER, Associate Justice.—This

is a personal injury suit instituted by appellee against appellant in which there was judgment for the plaintiff in the sum of ten thousand dollars, and the defendant has appealed.

The question of first importance in the case is one of practice, arising on the court’s ruling in causing talesmen to be summoned to fill *281 the panel, which had been broken by the sickness of one of the jurors regularly selected. The matter is so clearly presented by appellant’s bill of exceptions that we venture to quote at length from the bill itself:

“The above styled and numbered cause was regularly reached and called for trial on, to wit, Monday, October 28, A. D. 1907, and thereupon both parties announced ready for trial, and there was at the time of said announcement of ready for trial in attendance upon said court twelve jurors, who had been regularly selected in accordance with law for jury service in said court for week beginning Monday, October 28, 1907, whose names are as follows, to wit: Leo Pittman, B. B. Owens, W. G. Ballinger, W. FT. Shoffit, T. M. Mallory, M. A. Jernigan, F. 0. Freeman, D. C. Curtis, J. B. Brothers, S. J. Lotsputch and J. H. Walker, and thereupon the court directed the deputy sheriff waiting upon said court to summon a sufficient number of persons qualified for jury service as talesmen and complete said panel, and in obedience to said direction and order of the court, said deputy sheriff summoned nine persons possessing the qualifications of jurors as talesmen, whose names are as follows; J. W. Burton, John Behrens, Bert Betehel, J. W. Sherley, C. L. Bandy, Ben Waggoman, J. G. Bewley, J. S. McDonough and J.' C. Pliant, hione of the twenty-one persons, whose names are above mentioned disqualified, and thereupon the defendant requested the court to require the panel to be filled with twenty-four qualified jurors, before he was required to exercise peremptory challenges, but the court refused said request, and compelled the parties to exercise such peremptory challenges as they desired to make without the panel of jurors being filled and completed, to which action of the court the defendant then and there in open court excepted, and in obedience to the direction of the court the defendant exercised his right of peremptory challenge, and challenged six of said persons, who were objectionable to him as jurors and whose names are as follows, to wit: M. A. Jernigan, S. J. Lotsputch, J. M. Trammill, J. H. Walker, C. L. Bandy and J. C. Pliant, and thereby defendant exhausted all of his peremptory challenges, the plaintiff used only three of his peremptory challenges in striking said panel of twenty-one jurors and from said panel a full jury of twelve persons possessing the qualifications of jurors were selected to try the above styled and numbered cause, whose names are as follows, to wit: B. B. Owens, W. G. Ballinger, W. FT. Shoffit, T. FT. Mallory, D. C. Curtis, J. P. Brothers, J. W. Burton, John Behrens, Bert Bechtel, J. FT. Sherley, J. G. Bewley, and J. S. McDonough, and the above twelve named persons were regularly sworn as required by law to try the said cause, and were regularly, duly and properly empaneled as jurors in said cause; thereupon the plaintiff read to the jury his pleadings, consisting of his first amended petition and his trial amendment, and the defendant read to the jury his first amended answer, to which said pleadings the parties announced ready for trial and on which they went to trial and on which this cause was tried. At the time the pleadings of the parties were presented to the jury as above set out, the regular time for the adjournment of this court for that day, to wit, *282 October 28, 1907, had arrived, and thereupon the court, after properly instructing said jurors, permitted them to disperse for the night with directions to them to return to said court at 9 o’clock a. m. on the succeeding day, to wit, October 29, 1907.

“At 9 o’clock a. m. Tuesday, October 29, 1907, all of said jurors appeared in said court to serve upon the trial of this case, but the Hon. M. E. Smith, judge of this court, being unavoidably detained by private business, was unable to appear, and by reason thereof said jurors were excused frorh further attendance until 9 o’clock a. m. on Wednesday, October 30, 1907, at which time they were directed by the sheriff to appear so that the trial of this cause might proceed before them.

“On Wednesday, October 30, 1907, all of said jurors .who had been so selected to try the issues of fact appeared except J. B. Brothers, who failed to appear, and the deputy sheriff, waiting on the District Court of the 17th Judicial District of Texas, informed the court that said juror, J. B. Brothers, had told him on the day before that he was suffering from rheumatism and wanted to be excused from the jury, as set out in Exhibit ‘A,’ hereto attached, but the defendant refused to agree that said juror might be excus.ed from jury service in this cause. Thereupon the court asked counsel for the defendant if they were willing to proceed with the trial of the case with the eleven jurors who appeared at said time, and the defendant and his counsel declined and refused to proceed to trial with said eleven jurors and demanded a trial before the said jurors who had been theretofore selected by the parties for the trial of this cause, and refused to consent or agree to excuse the said absent juror, J. B. Brothers, or to try this cause with a less number than twelve jurors or to try said cause before any other jurors than the said twelve who had been so selected. Thereupon the court directed the deputy sheriff waiting upon said court to summon three other talesmen, and the deputy sheriff in obedience to said direction and order of said court summoned three persons possessing qualifications of jurors as talesmen, whose names are as follows, to wit: Gr. P. James, T. D. James and C. B. Law, and the said three persons last hereinabove mentioned appeared as jurors and qualified as possessing the qualifications for jurors under the law, and thereupon by directions of the court their names were added to the said lists which had theretofore been furnished to the parties and the parties hereto were required, to select from said three names, the twelfth juror for the trial of this cause to serve in the place of J. B. Brothers, who failed to appear on said day. The defendant had exhausted his peremptory challenges. The juror C. B. Law was objectionable to the defendant because the defendant believed that said juror would be inclined to find a verdict for the plaintiff and that he would be in favor of assessing damages for the- plaintiff at a very high amount, but the defendant having exhausted his six peremptory challenges on the persons hereinabove named, who were particularly objectionable to him, was not allowed to challenge the said C. B. Law, and the plaintiff having left two peremptory challenges, exercised them in peremptorily challenging Gr. P. James and T. D. James, leaving said *283 Law as the twelfth juror to serve in the place of J. E. Brothers. The objections to the man Law were personal objections of counsel of defendant and not made known to the court, because said Law properly qualified as a juror on his voir dire.

“At the time the court directed the said deputy sheriff to summon said last named three persons as talesmen, the defendant objected thereto upon the ground that it had not been shown to the court that the juror, J. E.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 547, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 278, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waggoner-v-sneed-texapp-1909.