World Wide Tire Co. v. Brown

644 S.W.2d 144, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 5547
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1982
DocketC14-82-039CV
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 644 S.W.2d 144 (World Wide Tire Co. v. Brown) 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
World Wide Tire Co. v. Brown, 644 S.W.2d 144, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 5547 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

MORSE, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the trial court which awarded the plaintiff, Almond Charles Brown, the sum of $454,-067.63, as reduced from jury findings totall-ing $465,000 in damages for an eye injury he received due to the negligence of the defendant, World Wide Tire Company. The principal question presented for review is whether portions of plaintiff’s jury argument constituted reversible error.

This case arose from an accident which occurred November 12, 1977, when a tire came off of a truck owned by James H. Shaw & Company and struck the window of the vehicle in which the plaintiff was a passenger, permanently injuring his left eye. James H. Shaw & Company was a defendant in the trial court, but was not a party to this appeal.

The evidence showed that on or about October 28, 1977, defendant World Wide Tire Company had installed studs that were too long on the tire that came off, thereby proximately causing plaintiff’s injuries. Upon finding said defendant liable for plaintiff’s injuries, the jury awarded plaintiff $5,000 for past medical expenses (where medical bills were stipulated to be $4,067.63), $125,000 for past pain and suf *145 fering-, $10,000 in past lost earnings (where actual earnings claimed lost were tabulated by plaintiff’s attorney as $6,688.00), and separately, $25,000 for past impairment and disability. In addition, the jury awarded plaintiff $25,000 for future medical expenses, (in spite of his attorney’s asking the jury to “put in $500”). As to that item, however, the trial court granted a remitti-tur of $10,000, reducing the future medical award to $15,000. The jury further awarded plaintiff $50,000 for future physical pain and mental anguish, $150,000 for future loss of earning capacity, and also $75,000 for future impairment and disability.

Plaintiff sustained an injury to his left eye as a result of glass from the broken window which lodged in and lacerated that eye. For a part of his two days in hospital, plaintiff’s right eye was temporarily “swollen shut.” He later had no problems or complaints involving the right eye. The injury to plaintiff’s left eye required emergency surgery and stitches in the eye. Plaintiff now has an impaired vision of approximately 20/50 in his left eye with the use of corrective lenses. At the time of trial in September of 1981, the plaintiff was not undergoing medical treatment, nor was he experiencing any pain. The record reflects that prior to the accident plaintiff had a stable work record and that after the accident plaintiff continued to hold a series of jobs in the trucking industry at various salaries above or in the same range as his previous wages. The duration of these jobs was anywhere from three weeks to two years. He voluntarily quit the last of these in April, 1981, to move to Dallas to open a furniture distributorship. But, within the next few months the plaintiff experienced an unrelated serious injury as a passenger in another auto accident, and has not opened the distributorship.

In twenty-seven points of error appellant raised insufficiency of the evidence, no evidence and against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence points with regard to the future medical award, the loss of past earnings award, the future physical pain and mental anguish award, the past and future physical impairment and disability award, and the loss of future earning capacity award. Appellant further argued that comments by the plaintiff’s counsel during voir dire about the possible loss of his right eye were improper and that the jury verdict was excessive and manifestly unjust. Because of our disposition of appellant’s twenty-fourth point of error, which requires us to reverse and remand this case, we need not reach the merits of those points of error individually.

Appellant’s twenty-fourth point of error argued that the trial court committed reversible error by allowing plaintiff’s counsel to make the following argument to the jury:

We are instructed that we should do unto others as we would have them do unto us. What would you be satisfied with if you had to come down here with an injury such as this, what would you be satisfied with if you had the same problems that Mr. Brown has, what would you be satisfied with in the way of money damages awarded to you by a jury.
If you can come out and say that if I would have gone through the same experience a completely innocent victim, if I would have had the same pain and suffering in the past, mental anguish in the past, if I know that I would have the same physical pain—
DEFENSE COUNSEL: This is improper argument and I object.
THE COURT: Overrule your objection.
PLAINTIFF’S COUNSEL: Just think about those things, you all get back there and discuss this, will you?

After a thorough analysis of the case law on “Golden Rule” arguments and the requirements for harmful error, we find that the above quoted argument was indeed harmful error and requires us to reverse and remand this case to the trial court.

It is not improper for an attorney, in his closing argument, to argue the “Golden Rule,” i.e. do unto others as you would have them do unto you, because that alone merely asks the jury to follow the Golden Rule and would require the jury to look *146 with equal solicitude to the rights of both plaintiff and defendant. Fambrough v. Wagley, 140 Tex. 577, 169 S.W.2d 478 (1943). However, the argument in this case went well beyond proper jury argument in that it amounted to a direct appeal to the jury to consider the case from an improper viewpoint, because its effect was to ask the members of the jury to put themselves into the plaintiff’s shoes and to give the plaintiff what they would want if they were injured, rather than what the evidence showed plaintiff was entitled to receive as compensation. The Fambrough case, supra, is controlling in this case. The Fambrough case held a very similar jury argument to be improper on the same basis and distinguished prior cases upon which plaintiff relies, by making a distinction between cases merely reciting the Golden Rule to the jury and those asking the jury to put themselves in the plaintiffs shoes.

We evaluate the argument made for ap-pellee herein as the court described the argument which required the court to reverse and remand in Dallas Ry. & Terminal Co. v. Smith, 42 S.W.2d 794, 795 (Tex.Civ.App.—Waco 1931, no writ):

“The above argument was an appeal to the prejudice of the jury and calculated to induce the jury to abandon their position as fair and impartial jurors and to assume the position of a partisan or claimant in the case. The jury was told to give the plaintiffs, not what would reasonably compensate her for the injuries sustained, as directed in the court’s charge, but what they would want or think they were entitled to if they were the plaintiffs in the ease.

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Bluebook (online)
644 S.W.2d 144, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 5547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/world-wide-tire-co-v-brown-texapp-1982.