Court Opinion

ID: 9832333
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 21:49:55.455133+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:45.772629
License: Public Domain

McMEANS, J.
This is a suit by the appellant, plaintiff in the court below, to recover ■of the appellee the balance due him as salary for- services rendered during the year 1907, and for the value of certain personal ‘property claimed by plaintiff and alleged to have been converted by defendant to its own use, and for exemplary damages for having withheld the possession of said property from plaintiff. The case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff has appealed.
At a former day of this term of the court the judgment of the court below was affirmed by an oral opinion. Counsel for appellant in a motion for a rehearing earnestly insists that we reduce our conclusions to writing, and this we will now do.
There is no statement of facts accompanying the record, and the judgment of the court below, in so far as errors may have been committed in the admission and rejection of evidence, is sought to be revised on bills of exceptions, and these are not sufficiently full to enable this court to determine whether the testimony admitted and rejected was material, or that plaintiff was prejudiced thereby. The judgment of the court below is sought to be reversed upon 22 assignments of error, each of which is followed by a proposition, but no statement from the record sufficient to support and explain the propositions is subjoined to any of them as required by rule 31 (67 S. W. xvi) ; indeed, there is not a statement, or hardly a semblance of a statement, throughout appellant’s entire brief, save under the twenty-first assignment, and therefore the assignments are not presented in such a way as to authorize ■ our consideration of them.
Assignments Nos. 12, 15, and 19 assail certain portions of the court’s charge on the ground that such portions are on the weight of the evidence, and 13, 14, 16, and 17 complain of other portions of the charge as not being warranted or supported by the evidence. In the absence of a statement of facts, it is impossible for us to say that the charge was or was not on the weight of the evidence, or that it had no evidence to support it.
The eighteenth assignment complains of another portion of the charge as being too general. Manifestly such assignment without any supporting statement cannot be considered. In justice to aiipellant’s counsel, we deem it proper to state that the reason given by him in his motion for rehearing for not accompanying his assignments by a statement of facts was because the facts were not favorable.
Appellant’s twenty-first assignment is as follows: “The court erred in going into the jury room, without permission of plaintiff! or his counsel, while the jury were deliberating on their verdict in this cause, and there speaking to them and instructing them about the ease.” It appears from affidavit of M. M. Burroughs, one of the jurymen who sat in the trial of the case, that during the deliberation of the jury the presiding judge “came *251to the jury room, and informed me in the presence of the jury the form of the verdict to bring in.” Another juryman, L. N. Scruggs, also made affidavit that during the deliberation of the jury the presiding judge “came to the jury room, and informed us the form the verdict should be.” This is all the information we get from the affidavits. This shows nothing more than that the trial judge merely instructed the jury as to the form of the verdict, and not as to its substance. This he could have done by his written charge, but which he omitted in his charge to do. It is not pretended that the judge directed that a verdict should be found in favor of either party, or that he undertook to control the character of verdict they should write. Having neglected in the charge to prescribe the form in which the jury should write their verdict after they had concluded their deliberations, it may he assumed that his advice was sought in this regard; and the affidavits prove nothing more' than that he gave them the advice they so sought. The assignment does not present a reversible error.
We conclude that the judgment of the court below should be affirmed, and it has been so ordered.
Affirmed.