DocketNumber: No. 33246.
Citation Numbers: 181 So. 849, 182 Miss. 810, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 189
Judges: Griffith
Filed Date: 6/13/1938
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
If the order of the school board made on July 23, 1937, creating the Puckett Special Consolidated School District, was a valid order, then under the decision in Colmer ex rel. Phillips v. Alexander,
Appellant has urged in argument that both the court and opposing counsel well understood from the form and frame of the interrogatories addressed to the witnesses, as well by the pleadings, what was the object of the testimony sought to be introduced, and what the scope and effect of it would be, and that being thus informed the purpose of the rule was satisfied. A careful examination of the cases will disclose that the rule goes substantially further. As stated in the case last cited, the rule is that "when a party would seek a reversal because of excluded testimony, he must either place the witness on the stand, ask the questions, and have the answers made of record, or else the witness must be presented, and there must be a specific statement of what the answers or testimony of the witness would be, if allowed, so that the court may see from the record itself whether the offered evidence would be material and of benefit to the merits of the case, and whether its exclusion was actually harmful and prejudicial to the offerer." See, also, Lizana v. Edward Motor Sales Co.,
It will be observed, upon a review of the cases, that it is not enough under the rule that the general tenor or trend of the offered evidence shall be shown, nor in any case is it sufficient merely to propound questions to the witness or witnesses. The showing must be specific to the extent that the court may see that the proposed evidence would be actually responsive in terms of facts and not of mere conclusions; that it would be believable; and that if believed it would be sufficiently definite and substantial to sustain the issue, and particularly is this *Page 815 true when charges of fraud are involved, which must be supported by proof which is clear and more convincing than a mere preponderance.
We have carefully examined all the assignments and are of the opinion that there is no error shown sufficient to work a reversal.
Affirmed.
Hunt v. Sherrill , 195 Miss. 688 ( 1943 )
Shaw v. Bula Cannon Shops, Inc. , 205 Miss. 458 ( 1949 )
I. B. S. Mfg. Co. v. Dependents of Cook , 241 Miss. 256 ( 1961 )
Foster v. Mississippi State Highway Commission , 244 Miss. 57 ( 1962 )
Mississippi Power Co. v. Harrison , 247 Miss. 400 ( 1963 )
GULF NAT. BANK v. Wallace , 1980 Miss. LEXIS 2170 ( 1980 )
Monsanto Co. v. Cochran , 254 Miss. 399 ( 1965 )
MANNING v. Hammond , 234 Miss. 299 ( 1958 )
Hitt v. State , 217 Miss. 61 ( 1953 )
Shepherd v. Delta Medical Center , 1987 Miss. LEXIS 2314 ( 1987 )
Priest v. State , 275 So. 2d 79 ( 1973 )
Jackson v. Smith , 309 So. 2d 520 ( 1975 )
Adrian Moore v. State of Mississippi , 2016 Miss. App. LEXIS 128 ( 2016 )
Dabbs v. International Minerals & Chemical Corp. , 339 F. Supp. 654 ( 1972 )