Quinn v. Louisville N.R. Co.

* Corpus Juris-Cyc. References: Costs, 15 C.J., p. 218, n. 34; Evidence, 22 C.J., p. 208, n. 61; p. 474, n. 59. The appellant, Thomas P. Quinn, sued the Louisville Nashville Railroad Company for damages for personal injuries received on account of being assaulted and kicked off of a moving freight train, resulting in serious bodily injuries, from which he suffered seven weeks in a hospital.

The declaration and the testimony of Quinn presented a case of a brutal assault upon appellant by the trainmen, while appellant was stealing a ride on a freight train between New Orleans and Gulfport.

The testimony offered by the railroad company disputed the story told by appellant, but the jury found for plaintiff in the sum of one thousand dollars. *Page 508

A motion for a new trial was made by the railroad company and sustained by the court, and the verdict and judgment for one thousand dollars in favor of Quinn was set aside and a new trial granted. Before the court proceeded with the new trial, a motion was made by defendant that the plaintiff be required to furnish a bond for costs, which motion was sustained by the court, and plaintiff failed and refused to furnish this cost bond, whereupon the suit was dismissed, from which ruling this appeal is prosecuted.

The complaint here is that the court erred in setting aside the judgment for one thousand dollars, and granting a new trial, and that the judgment of the lower court, in this regard, should be reversed, and the judgment for one thousand dollars reinstated by this court, citing the case of Ennis v. Y. M.V.R. Co.,118 Miss. 509, 79 So. 73, in support of the contention.

The sole question for our decision is whether or not the court erred in setting aside the judgment for one thousand dollars; and this being true, it becomes necessary for us to review the record in the trial of the case which resulted in the one thousand dollar verdict.

The motion for the new trial, which was sustained by the court, included several grounds, among them being that the court erred in admitting certain records and documents which went to show that Quinn, the plaintiff, had enlisted in the United States army, and had been honorably discharged therefrom, and in admitting many other written statements and certificates regarding his army service and character for a number of years before and after the World War, over the objection of appellant, for the purpose of showing the good character of Quinn. Another ground upon which the new trial was asked was that the overwhelming weight of the evidence in the case showed that the story of Quinn, as to being assaulted by the trainmen, was false.

We think the trial judge erred in admitting these numerous certificates, etc., showing the honorable discharge *Page 509 of Quinn from the United States army, which certificates also pertained to his character and the battles in which he had fought. These certificates were given at different times during a period of many years, while Quinn was in the United States army. We are unable to see how this testimony was competent. It did not bear upon any material issue in the case; it only tended to "prop up" the testimony of Quinn, and influence the jury toward a favorable finding for him.

We do not say that the admission of a reasonable amount of such certificate testimony would have been reversible error, for possibly it was permissible to show that Quinn had served in the United States army as an avocation for several years, but, as to the statements of the different officers in the certificates that Quinn had a good character, and that he had fought bravely in such and such battles, it was ex parte, hearsay, and went too far into matters not involved in the lawsuit, and was prejudicial to the rights of the defendant railroad company. Therefore we think the court erred in the trial of the case in which the one thousand dollar verdict was rendered, and that it was correct in setting aside the judgment and granting a new trial.

So it follows that the dismissal of the case before the second trial proceeded, because the cost bond was not given, was proper, and we see no reason for reversing the judgment and reinstating the former judgment for one thousand dollars.

It becomes unnecessary, as will be observed, to decide the other point, as to whether or not the testimony in the record overwhelmingly disproved the story of Quinn as to being brutally ejected from the moving freight train, and we do not decide that question. However, it may not be considered as uninteresting, or out of order, to say that the testimony of a large number of witnesses for the railroad company, together with the physical facts and circumstances shown in the case, were exceedingly convincing to the ordinary mind that the story of the *Page 510 appellant, Quinn, was very doubtful, and perhaps wholly untrue.

The record shows that, when he was picked up from the side of the track and carried to the hospital by the trainmen, he was in a drunken condition, and probably did not know how he fell off the freight train, nor how he was injured. Three of the nurses at the hospital, together with a large number of other witnesses, testified as to Quinn's drunken condition when brought to the hospital.

Of course, even a drunken man should not be mistreated, but the physical circumstances, together with some of the undisputed testimony in the case, showed that Quinn had not been willfully or wrongfully injured by the railroad employees on the train from which he evidently fell and was injured.

Judgment of the lower court is affirmed.

Affirmed.