Court Opinion

ID: 6518033
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:28:28.892341+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:04.612011
License: Public Domain

McOLELLAN, C. J.
— The bill of exceptions does not purport to set out all the evidence. Hence we cannot find that the verdict was not supported by the evidence, or was contrary to the evidence. Moreover, the insistence in this connection is based on the supposed com tributory negligence of the plaintiff. The defendant did not plead contributory negligence, and there was no such issue in the case.
The 5th ground of the motion for a new trial is in effect that the jury brought in a quotient verdict. In support of this there is the affidavit of defendant’s attorney and two others in terms direct and positive that the jury agreed that each one of them should write down on a slip of paper the amount which he thought plaintiff was entitled to recover, that all the slips should be put in a hat together, that they should then be drawn out *615and the amounts shown by them added together, and this aggregated should be divided by twelve, the number of jurors, and that the result, this quotient, should be the verdict of the jury. This affidavit does not state that it is made upon information and belief, nor does it give the sources of the affiant’s knowledge. There are only three possible ways for the affiants to have come by this knowledge. It is in the first place possible, but not probable, especially in view of the fact that one of the affiants was an attorney of the court, that these affiants were in the room with the jury. In the next place, it is in like manner possible but improbable that the affiants were eaves-droppers of the jury’s deliberations and discussions. And in the third place, it is highly probable that the affiants were informed by some members of the jury that the verdict was arrived at in the manner stated in the affidavit; and that upon that assurance together with such indication of the fact as the verdict itself afforded they felt justified in deposing as is set forth in the affidavit. The trial judge had a right to reach this conclusion, that the affidavit was based solely on the indication furnished by the verdict together with the statement of jurors. Indeed it may well be that he knew as a fact that the affiants were not with the jury and that they did not hear what transpired in the jury room; and whether he so knew or not, he had a right to presume in the absence of anything to the contrary that these affiants were not guilty either of intruding themselves into the jury room or of eaves-dropping the jury’s deliberations. On this assumption he had nothing before him tending to show that the verdict was a quo- • tient one except the verdict itself; and the tendency of the verdict to establish that fact was not sufficiently strong to require or even to justify his finding it to exist. That the verdict should have been for $720.80 in a case like this furnishes an indication that the amount was reached by some trick of figures, but the mode of calculation may not have been agreed on beforehand as the means of ascertaining and fixing the amount for which the verdict should be rendered, and this would, therefore, not authorize the court to conclude that such prior agreement had been made. Besides this he had only the *616affidavit that a juror or. some of the jurors,- or, if you please, all of the jurors had informed affiants, McKenzie and others, that the verdict was reached in' the way they depose. This was, in the first place, the merest hearsay, and, in the second, - had it been the testimony of the jurors themselves, public policy forbade the circuit judge to consider it. So it appears to us,-without reference to the affidavit of plaintiff:' and her husband, which indeed amount to nothing; and we feel impelled to say at the least that error in overruling the motion for a new .trial is not shoivn.
Affirmed.