Court Opinion

ID: 8194668
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 23:17:50.364301+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:40:43.637367
License: Public Domain

Vinje, C. J.
The defendant assigned three errors which it claims should reverse the judgment of the trial court. It claims, first, that the evidence shows that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law in making the turn without at the same time indicating that he was about to make it; second, that the court erred in permitting the jury to change the answer of the special verdict from a finding of contributory negligence to the contrary answer; and third, that the damages are excessive. We shall not discuss at any length the first and third assignments of error. The evidence was somewhat in conflict as to just when and to what extent the plaintiff indicated, by holding out his arm, that he was going to make the turn to the south. He testifies in substance that he held out his arm some time before he started to make the turn and that he then knew that defendant’s cab was some distance behind him. Upon this subject the evidence is in conflict and therefore it was a jury question as to whether under all the circumstances the plaintiff was free from contributory negligence. Plaintiff’s shoulder was dislocated, and there is evidence that there will be a permanent injury resulting in a loss of about thirty per cent, of the use or elevation of the arm. He was forty years of age and had earned about $100 per month before the injury. Since that time he had to do lighter work; had lost about $600 in wages, and his doctor’s services were reasonably worth $70. Under such evidence, in view of the fact that there was considerable pain and suffering, we cannot say that an assessment of $1,500 was excessive.
*301It appears from the record that just after the verdict was returned by the jury the foreman of the jury inquired what was the answer recorded to the fifth question relating to contributory negligence and he was informed that the answer was “Yes.” He immediately stated that that was a mistake and that it was unanimously agreed by the jury that the answer to that question should be “Nothat there had been a mistake in recording the answer. When this colloquy took place some of the jurors had left the jury box but none of them had left the court room. The judge directed the jurors to be reassembled and sent them to' the jury room for the purpose of permitting' them to correct the answer to the fifth question. The jury returned to their room and within three minutes reported again to the court and returned a negative answer to question number 5, relating to contributory negligence. ■ The defendant claims that the court erred in calling the jury together for the purpose of making the correction. It insists that the jury was discharged and that there was no power in the court to call them together again for.the purpose of amending their verdict to conform with the facts as declared by the foreman that the unanimous agreement was that the answer to the fifth question should be “No.” This is not a case where the jury seeks to impeach the verdict rendered, but a case where, before they finally leave the court room, they informed the judge that an error had occurred in reducing their agreement to writing. It is well settled law both in our own jurisdiction and in other jurisdictions that there is an inherent power in the court to permit such errors to be corrected. In Dalrymple v. Williams, 63 N. Y. 361, the court said:
“It would be a reproach upon the administration of justice if a party could lose the benefit of a trial and a verdict in his favor by the mere mistake of the foreman of the jury in reporting to the court the result of the deliberations of himself and his fellows.”
*302In Wolfgram v. Schoepke, 123 Wis. 19, 100 N. W. 1054, our court said:
“But is it an attempt to impeach their own verdict? That depends on the sense in which that word is used. Is the written paper filed, or the agreement which the jury reach, the verdict? We think the latter is what is intended when we say the jurors cannot impeach it. The former, like most records or writings, is but the expression or evidence of some mental conception. Hence it may well be said that a showing that such writing is not correct is not impeachment of the verdict itself.”
In Victor S. M. Co. v. Heller, 44 Wis. 265, the court said:
“We do not think there was any error committed by the court with respect to the verdict. It is true the record shows that the judge, after the delivery of the verdict, said to the jurors that they were discharged; but immediately thereafter, before they had left their seats or communicated with any one, the judge called their attention to the imperfections in the verdict, and, having put the same in the form in which the jurors affirmed they intended it to be, it was signed by the foreman, and, as so amended, declared by the jury to be their verdict. The judges of the circuit courts are frequently called upon to perform a work of this kind. Jurors unacquainted with the forms of law very often deliver very informal verdicts; and, where their intentions are clearly indicated by such informal verdict, it becomes the duty of the court to put it in proper form'before it is entered as the verdict of the jury. It is in furtherance of justice that the judge should do so. When it is clear that .the verdict, as finally put in form by the court, is the one intended by the informal one delivered by the jury at first, no injustice is done to the parties if, after the same is so put in formal shape, the jury, without further consultation and without again retiring to consult, assent to the entry thereof.”
In this case the jury was sent out to the jury room for the purpose of making the correction called to the attention of the court by the foreman. It is evident that it must have *303been the unanimous view of'the jury that ques'ion number 5 should have been answered in the negative, otherwise they would not have agreed upon a verdict and returned to the court within three minutes. Whether the correction is made in the jury box or in the jury room is quite immaterial when it appears that there has been a mistake in reducing the agreement of the jury to writing and a correct verdict is returned. Such correction of the mistake may be made in the court room in the presence of the court, or the court may in its discretion send the jury to the jury room, there to make the correction and return the verdict which they had agreed upon and which they intended to make. Counsel for respondent cite a large number of cases sustaining the power of the court to permit the jury to correct their written verdict where there has been a mistake in reducing it to writing. In view of the cases in our own court we do not deem it necessary to quote from or even cite the cases which counsel have furnished us in their valuable brief.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.