DocketNumber: No. 34539.
Citation Numbers: 2 So. 2d 163, 191 Miss. 73, 1 So. 2d 163, 1941 Miss. LEXIS 126
Judges: McGehee, Smith, Anderson, Griffith
Filed Date: 5/12/1941
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The appellee was employed by the appellant to fire the boilers of the engines in his manufacturing plant, and this appeal is from a judgment for damages from a personal injury caused him, as the jury found, by negligence of the appellant's foreman.
The only assignments of error argued by counsel for the appellant are that the court below erred (1) in not granting his request for a directed verdict; and (2) in not setting the verdict aside on the ground that it is against the great weight of the evidence.
According to the appellee, he was injured while obeying an order of the appellant's foreman, which the foreman had the right to give. If given, negligence appears in this order, or rather the jury had the right to so find. The appellant says the order was given. The foreman denied giving it. No other person heard or was in position to hear the order, if given. The appellant's contention is that the appellee's testimony is unworthy of belief — that he is not a credible witness and therefore his testimony should not have been submitted to the jury. It would serve no good purpose to set forth the several reasons advanced by counsel for the appellant for not believing the appellee's testimony, one of which is that a conflict appears therein on an immaterial matter, for one of the most fundamental and elementary rules of judicial procedure is that the credibility of witnesses in a case tried to a jury is for its determination. If an examination of the many cases in this court so holding be desired, they will be found collated in the notes to 64 C.J., sec. 340, page 348 et seq., and in appropriate sections of the Mississippi Digest dealing with the subject of Trial, to here cite which would be supererogatory.
According to the stenographer's transcript and a special bill of exceptions: "On the trial of the above cause upon examination of two of the prospective jurors, Albert Phillips and J.S. Eggerton, counsel for the plaintiff asked these two jurors if they or either of them or any *Page 77
of their close relatives or kin people were connected in any way with any liability insurance company, any insurance company writing liability insurance to which the defendant then and there objected and which was by the Court sustained. Whereupon the defendant moved the Court for a mistrial because of said question of the counsel which motion was, by the Court, overruled." This ruling of the court is assigned for error, but no argument relative thereto appears in the brief of either counsel. Consequently, the assignment was waived, Rayl v. Thurman,
Affirmed.