Western Cottonoil Company v. Arnold

279 S.W.2d 374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 1955
Docket3156
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 279 S.W.2d 374 (Western Cottonoil Company v. Arnold) 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
Western Cottonoil Company v. Arnold, 279 S.W.2d 374 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

*375 GRISSOM, Chief. Justice.

Charles F. Arnold an'd wife sited Western Cottonoil Company for damages alleged'to have been suffered by reason of odors entering their home from soap' stock' stofed by said company in an earthen pit. The jury found that such storing constituted a nuisance and that the Arnolds were damaged $900. Judgment was rendered on the verdict and said Company has appealed. ,

Appellant’s first point asserts error in the introduction of a sample from the soap pit. We do not think reversible error is shown relative to that point and it is overruled.

Appellant’s second point is that the court erred in overruling its motion for a new trial because of the introduction of new evidence by jurors during the deliberation .of the jury.

Appellant alleged in its motion for a new trial that the jury received new evidence in the jury room from members of the jury to the effect that some of them had smelled the odor complained of at their homes and another had smelled it at his place of employment and that the odor was so strong and so bad said juror, on several occasions, had to turn off the evaporative coolers to keep the odor from running him out of the house.

Juror Munroe testified he was employed by a funeral home and that he made "the following statement to other jurors:

“I said I had to turn off the evapora-tive coolers lots of nights in there or it would run me out of the house.”.

Juror Munroe testified . that other jurors made statements in the jury room “about like” he did. He further testified: ■

“A. I believe they "just said that it smelled, that they smelled it at home.
* ⅜ . * .* * ' *
“Q. What did Mr. Boyce :Barnard make — what was his statement about that? A. As far as I remémber he just said he smelled it at home and -asked rpei-if I cjidnit. ^gree with him, and I told him-yes,, that I had to turn off the evaporative coolers.
“Q. All right. What did' ' Mr. Hunter -say about that ? A; "I • think he said — T wouldn’t' swear- to it, but I think he said he had' smelled it at home way. up on Cedar or somewhere where he lives.”,

On ' cross • examination* juror Munroe testified that there had been testimony on the trial about the stench ‘ find he had smelled the jar containing a sample taken from the pit and knew what it wals and that nobody had testified on the trial that it did not stink. He testified he was not asked before he was accepted as a Juror whether he had smelled that odor; that if he had been asked he would have answered truthfully; that he did not think you could just put" off what’ you knew personally. Thereupon an objection was sustained and he testified that when the first remark was made the foreman said: “Gentlemen, you cannot discuss 'anything except the evidence that you heard from the witness stand;” that the foreman told them not to consider-anything except that and when the first remark was made the- foreman stopped it right there and it was never mentioned again.'' Munroe was then taken on re-direct examination and the following occurred:

. (Appellant’s counsel) : ,. “Now, you .say you made the statement about coming through your air .conditioner?, A. That’s right.
“Q. And Mr. Hunter made the statement about smelling it at his house'' áhd anothef-jtiror made a statement about smelli'ng'it at his house, áll three ' of those made, ahd you couldn’t remember" ’any 'others? A. ’ That 'was ":'only — didn't take a inmute. -
f’Q. Well, I. know,: but :Mr..Hpnter . didn’t promptly -then tell -you npt to ..consider..it after you had b.e.en dispuss-ing it? , It was after .you had been..., .discussing.-it, wasn’t it?” .
*376 (Appellee’s counsel): “We object to him leading'his witness.
“The Court: Don’t lead the witness.”
(Appellant’s counsel): “Well, I am cross examining him on a question that ■he went' into.-
“The Court: This is not cross examination. This is your witness.
“Q. -Well, that’s true, isn’t it?”
(Appellee’s counsel): “Now, that’s insisting on an answer to a question that the Court has sustained an objection to. , ;
“The Court: I sustained the’objection.”

Juror- Murphy was asked whether Munroe made a statement in the -jury room in his presence about the smell coming through an air conditioner-so bad that he had,,to cut it off, and he answered, “not that I heard.” That he did not hear juror Barnard make a statement about what he could smell • at his. home; ‘that he ’did not hear the forer man, Mr. -Hunter, make any statement in the jury room-about w-hat he could smell at his- home. Mr. - Murphy was asked whether the -foreman- admonished the jury not to discuss matters of personal knowledge but to confine their discussion to the testimony introduced, to which he answered that -the foreman read the charge “in the beginning.” The foreman testified, with reference to a question asked him oüt of c'o'urt by appellant’s 'counsel 'about' appellant’s claim that juror Barnard had said' he smelled the odor, at .his place of business, that he heard the..remark but he could not swear .who made it and that he had told appellant’s counsel out of court that he, the foreman,’ had told .the other jurors he smelled the. odor at his home but at that time he did not .kno-w what -it -was. The foreman testified that if Munroe said he smelled the o'do'r at Elliott’s Funeral Home and when he turned1 ori the' evaporative coolers 'it brought in the- odor so bad’that he' had to cut'them off, he did not hear it. Hunter testified further that the- odor was discussed, he “expected,” by nearly everybody in the jury' room because they had a sample of it, and then some of the jurors, would say: “Well, I have smelled that, but I didn’t know what it was”; that remarks, like that were made but he did not know-who made them. The foreman testified that: he told the jurors, after they had decided the pit was a nuisance, that the only thing-left to decide was the amount of damages- and that was the only thing to discuss,, “and that is all and we are to decide that on the evidence that we have heard in the, court room.” He further testified: ■

“Q. When you heard anything said', by anybody that was not dealing with-the evidence that was offered from the witness stand did you stop them and', say, ‘No-w, the Court said for us to try this case on the basis-of the evidence that we heard from the,witness stand’?' A. I read the charge three times to. them, and I told them that we was to-decide that on the evidence that we-had heard in here solely, on the preponderance of the evidence. ' I told them that before we voted the 'first time, and fumes and smells hadn’t been brought up at that time, and they all voted, twelve alike on it. (Emphasis, oúrs.)
“Q. Now, then, after that— A_ Then when they come up, I said, ‘Now, there’s no property damage. There’s, no need to discuss that. There’s no-property damage asked.

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279 S.W.2d 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-cottonoil-company-v-arnold-texapp-1955.