Webb v. Isensee

166 P. 544, 85 Or. 148, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 305
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 166 P. 544 (Webb v. Isensee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Isensee, 166 P. 544, 85 Or. 148, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 305 (Or. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

A transcript of all the testimony given at the trial has been sent up, from which it appears I. N. Foster [150]*150testified that at Portland, Oregon, between the 15th and 23d of March, 1915, the defendant, in the presence of Oliver Irwin and the witness said of and concerning the plaintiff that she was a tramp, a crook, a perjurer, a thief, and a bitch. W. S. Hoyt testified that in such city in his presence in March, 1915, the defendant in referring to the plaintiff stated she was a bitch. W. J. Cook testified that on March 16, 1915, he with Gr. Gf. Schmitt, one of plaintiff’s attorneys, went to the defendant’s machine-shop in Portland, Oregon, where was tendered to the latter a cashier’s check for a sum of money determined to be the reasonable rent of an apartment house owned by the defendant and occupied by the plaintiff (Webb v. Isensee, 79 Or. 114, 153 Pac. 800). Whereupon the defendant, referring to the plaintiff, inquired of Mr. Schmitt:

“How long have you been her attorney? How do you get your money out of her? She don’t pay anybody. • Do you take your pay in trade?”

The attorney in speaking of the plaintiff observed:

“The woman is a very old woman, or quite old,” in answer to which the defendant remarked, “Well, you can’t always tell, Schmitt; there is many a good tune in an old fiddle yet.”

Oliver Irwin, in alluding to the sworn declarations made by I. N. Poster as hereinbefore set forth having testified he was present at the time and place mentioned by that witness, was asked in adverting to the defendant: “Did he call or refer to Mrs. Webb as a crook?” The answer was:

“He didn’t refer to her at all.
“Q. Did he use the word perjurer in that conversation?
“A. No, there was nothing like that in my presence.
“Q. Did he use the word thief?
[151]*151“A. No.
“Q. Did he use the word bitch?
“A. No.”

The defendant as a witness in his own behalf specifically denied each statement of the several witnesses so imputed to him and also the language charged in the complaint. The cause was then argued by respective counsel and submitted. The court treating the testimony offered as insufficient to establish the averment of the complaint that the plaintiff was conducting illicit sexual commerce with men and that the words “crook” and “bitch” were not actionable per se, and because the complaint contained no averments of fact relating to special damages, instructed the jury to consider only the remaining parts of the charge as to whether the defendant maliciously made statements in the presence of others that the plaintiff was a perjurer and a thief. A verdict was returned for the plaintiff in the sum of $2,500, and judgment was rendered thereon as hereinbefore stated. Within the time limited the defendant’s counsel moved to set aside the verdict and judgment and for a new trial on the ground inter alia of the misconduct of plaintiff’s attorney, Gf. Gf. Schmitt. The stenographer who reported the testimony and the instructions made no note of any objections interposed or exceptions taken by counsel for either party during the argument of the cause.

In support of the motion for a new trial supplemental affidavits were filed,, asserting inter alia that Gf. G. Schmitt, one of plaintiff’s attorneys, who had not been a witness at the trial, in his closing argument in referring to the defendant’s denial of the testimony of W. J. Cook, hereinbefore set forth, said to the jury that the defendant was- a perjurer; that he perjured himself when he made such abjuration, “because I [152]*152was there and heard him say it”; that though the defendant’s counsel then objected to such argument, the statement so made was not retracted, nor did the court rule upon the objection or instruct the jury in respect to the matter.

Mr. Schmitt’s counter-affidavit is to the effect that the matters so set forth in the supplemental affidavits respecting the testimony given by "W. J. Cook and ~W. T. S. Hoyt and the remarks made by the defendant in relation thereto were withdrawn by the court from the consideration of the jury, except the words “thief” and “perjurer,” and that no exception was taken to such argument as appears from the report of the official stenographer who took notes of the proceedings occurring at the trial.

In considering the motion for a new trial the court refers to the statements contained in the affidavits and says they

“constituted prejudicial error and affected the substantial rights of the defendant, and the court is further of the opinion that the instructions of the court to the jury to disregard the matters testified to by W. J. Cook concerning said conversation between said W. J. Cook, the defendant, and plaintiff’s counsel, and to disregard the evidence and testimony relating to the words ‘bitch’ and ‘crook’ and certain obscene utterances attributed to the defendant, did not cure the error of the admission of the said evidence and testimony; that the admission of said testimony affected the substantial rights of the defendant, and that he was thereby prevented from having a fair trial, and for said reasons” a new trial was ordered.

1, 2. It will be remembered that the defendant’s testimony in respect to the language charged in the complaint contradicted the material sworn statements of every witness who appeared against him. It will also [153]*153be borne in mind that the testimony of Oliver Irwin disputed that of I. N. Foster in its essential particulars. As to whether the sworn denials by the defendant were entitled to credence by the jurors depended wholly upon their opinion of his veracity. If he swore falsely in respect to the plaintiff’s implied unchastity, so imputed to him by Cook, as would appear from the attorney’s argument, it is reasonable to infer from the verdict returned that the jury necessarily found the defendant’s sworn denials of the use of the words “thief” and “perjurer,” asserted to have been applied by him to Mrs. Webb, were also unworthy of belief. So that the instruction taking from the jury consideration of all statements alleged to have been made by the defendant relating to the charge of language as to the plaintiff’s immoral conduct did not eliminate the question of the veracity of Isensee; and this being so the remarks of the attorney in his concluding argument “constituted,” as the court found, “prejudicial error and affected the substantial rights of the defendant.” It is unimportant that the statements set forth in the supplemental affidavits did not appear in the stenographer’s notes of the trial, for the court having, from the evidence so submitted, found the narration to be true and incorporated it in the bill of exceptions makes such a part of the history of the cause and necessitates a consideration thereof.

3. Under the rule which formerly obtained in this state no appeal would lie from an order granting a new trial, because the judgment so set aside thereby ceased to be final and hence was not reviewable: Fisk v. Henarie, 15 Or. 89 (13 Pac. 760).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 P. 544, 85 Or. 148, 1917 Ore. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-isensee-or-1917.