Thorne v. Parrish
Decision Date | 15 November 1956 |
Docket Number | 8 Div. 881 |
Parties | William Murphy THORNE v. Mattie Lee PARRISH. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Jesse A. Keller, Florence, for appellant.
C. E. Carmichael, Jr., Tuscumbia, for appellee.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court in a personal injury action. The single count submitted to the jury charged simple negligence. The defendant filed pleas of the general issue and contributory negligence.
A timely motion for new trial was overruled. Several grounds of the motion for new trial and the appellant's assignments of error pertain to the admission of evidence on the subject of insurance. This question arose while a witness for the defendant was being cross examined by the plaintiff. In that connection the record discloses the following:
'Cross Examination
'By Mr. Carmichael: [Attorney for plaintiff]
* * *
* * *
'Defendant objects, that is immaterial and irrelevant whether he has ever given a statement.
'By Mr. Carmichael: I want to show it to impeach the witness' testimony, I want to show that he has given another statement.
'Objection overruled.
'Defendant reserves an exception.
'By the Court: Go ahead.
'By the Court: Go ahead with the questions, and you make your objections, and I will rule on them at the proper time.
'By the Court: You don't have to use his occupation, if you know his name you may say.
'Defendant objects and moves to exclude that testimony and at this point we move for a mistrial, we ask that the jury be excluded, your honor.
'Objection and motion overruled.
'Defendant reserves an exception.
* * *
'By Mr. Carmichael: That is all.'
It should be presently observed that the plaintiff did not at any time during the trial attempt to impeach the witness with the statement--if indeed it would have been permissible. It is clear to us that the plaintiff's sole purpose in asking to whom the statement was made, knowing that the statement was made to an insurance adjuster, was to convey the idea to the jury that the defendant was covered by insurance.
Then plaintiff's counsel's closing argument to the jury where he stated, 'after they collect $30,000 Murphy Thorn [def.] and I will still be friends' could well have been interpreted to mean--in connection with the previous cross examination of witness Holt--that the plaintiff's attorney and the defendant were friends and would still be friends after the jury gave the plaintiff $30,000 of the defendant's money because the defendant was indemnified.
It is prejudicial error to allow testimony to show or tending to show that a party is indemnified in any degree or fashion by an insurance company. Pearson v. Birmingham Transit Company, 264 Ala. 350, 87 So.2d 857; Colquett v. Williams, 264 Ala. 214, 86 So.2d 381; Standridge v. Martin, 203 Ala. 486, 84 So. 266; Watson v. Adams, 187 Ala. 490, 65 So. 528.
When insurance is injected into the case during the questioning of witnesses, our cases hold that the prejudicial error may be eradicated. Colquett v. Williams, supra; Wagnon v. Patterson, 260 Ala. 297, 70 So.2d 244; Cannon v. Scarborough, 223 Ala. 674, 137 So. 900. The error on that point was cured in the Colquett case by later evidence showing that the insurance belonged to a person not a party to the suit. The prejudicial errors caused by irresponsive answers about insurance in both the Wagnon and Cannon cases were cured by prompt exclusion of the testimony by the trial judge and adequate instructions to the jury to the effect that insurance was not to be considered in their verdict.
But with reference to an argument made by counsel emphasizing the existence of insurance carried by his opponent covering the transaction, this Court has taken the position that the influence is ineradicable. Pearson v. Birmingham Transit Company, supra; Colquett v. Williams, supra; Edwards v. Earnest, 206 Ala. 1, 89 So. 729, 22 A.L.R. 1387; Standridge v. Martin, supra.
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...by his opponent covering the transaction, this Court has taken the position that the influence is ineradicable.' Thorne v. Parrish, 265 Ala. 193, 195, 90 So.2d 781, 783 (1956) (citations omitted). The principle that reference to indemnification or insurance of an opposing party is highly pr......
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