Sheeks v. Sheeks

Citation98 Ind. 288
Decision Date15 November 1884
Docket Number11,827
PartiesSheeks v. Sheeks
CourtSupreme Court of Indiana

From the Lawrence Circuit Court.

Affirmed, with costs.

J. E Henley, M. F. Dunn and G. G. Dunn, for appellant.

G. W Friedley and E. Pearson, for appellee.

OPINION

Hammond J.

Appellee, Hugh Sheeks, filed his statement in writing in the court below, alleging that appellant, John Sheeks, was of unsound mind. The issue, made by general denial filed by the clerk, was tried by a jury and a verdict returned as follows:

"We, the jury, find the said John Sheeks is a person of unsound mind and incapable of managing his own estate.

(Signed) "B. H. Potter, Foreman."

Judgment, over the appellant's motion for a new trial, was rendered upon the verdict, followed by the appointment of a guardian to take charge of the person and estate of the appellant.

The questions considered will be confined to those discussed in appellant's brief.

The jury returned into open court, in the presence of counsel for appellant, the verdict above set out, informing the court, in response to the court's inquiry, that they had agreed upon a verdict. They then passed the verdict to the judge presiding, who, in reading it, inadvertently read the appellant's name as David, instead of John, Sheeks. After thus reading it, the judge asked the jury if that was their verdict? They replied that it was, and were then discharged. No objection appears to have been made to the form in which the verdict was read until the filing of the motion for a new trial.

There is no question but that the verdict, as returned by the jury, and to which they assented in open court, was the one which was received and recorded. It does not appear, nor can we conceive, how appellant was in any way injured by the mere lapsus linguoe that occurred in reading his Christian name as David instead of John. An occurrence so trifling and harmless assuredly can not be seriously considered as good ground for a new trial.

It was also assigned as a reason for a new trial that a witness who testified for the appellee was not sworn, and that this fact was not discovered by appellant or his counsel until after the trial.

It does not appear that appellant or his counsel might not, by proper attention, have discovered that the witness was not sworn in time to object to her evidence upon that account. Nor does it appear that her evidence was not true. Upon a new trial it may...

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3 cases
  • Sweet v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Supreme Court
    • October 14, 1986
    ...11, Sec. 1507, p. 179, Slauter v. Whitelok, 1859, 12 Ind. 338; Stroup, Adm'r v. State ex rel. Fitch et ux., 1880, 70 Ind. 495; Sheeks v. Sheeks, 1884, 98 Ind. 288; Leach v. Ackerman, 1891, 2 Ind.App. 91, 28 N.E. Pooley v. State (1945), 116 Ind.App. 199, 62 N.E.2d 484, 485. Here, there was n......
  • Pooley v. State
    • United States
    • Indiana Appellate Court
    • August 31, 1945
    ...Sec. 1507, p. 179; Slauter v. Whitelock, 1859, 12 Ind. 338; Stroup, Adm'r v. State ex rel. Fitch et ux., 1880, 70 Ind. 495; Sheeks v. Sheeks, 1884, 98 Ind. 288; Leach Ackerman, 1891, 2 Ind.App. 91, 28 N.E. 216. We have searched the record before us and nowhere does it appear that the appell......
  • Leach v. Ackerman
    • United States
    • Indiana Appellate Court
    • June 23, 1891
    ...presumed, in favor of the action on the motion for a new trial, that such a state of facts existed as authorized that action. In Sheeks v. Sheeks, 98 Ind. 288, it was that where it is discovered after trial that a witness who testified on the trial was not sworn, a new trial should not be g......

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