Caldarera v. Giles

360 S.W.2d 767, 235 Ark. 418, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 24, 1962
Docket5-2729
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 360 S.W.2d 767 (Caldarera v. Giles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldarera v. Giles, 360 S.W.2d 767, 235 Ark. 418, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 595 (Ark. 1962).

Opinions

Neill Bohlinger, Associate Justice.

This case arose out of a collision of two trucks, one belonging to the appellants and the other owned by one of the appellees. The suit for damages growing out of the collision of the two trucks was tried before the Columbia Circuit Court, the appellees seeking damages on account of negligence alleged against the defendants, appellees here, and the appellants counterclaiming for damages which it was alleged had been suffered because of the negligence of the appellee and his driver, Johnny Hight.

The trial resulted in a verdict for the appellees and the appellants prosecute their appeal here alleging as points for reversal (1) the lower court erred in granting appellees’ request for a drawn jury after voir dire and the exercise of peremptory challenge by the appellants, (2) the misconduct of a jury which it is alleged affected the appellants’ right to receive a fair trial and, (3) the amounts of the verdict were excessive.

These facts were developed in the trial: At the beginning of this trial there were 18 veniremen in the jury box and counsel for both plaintiff and defendant were furnished a list of the names of the jurors; after examination on voir dire, the appellants struck the names of three of the prospective jurors and returned the list to the clerk. It does not appear that appellants ’ challenges were revealed to any person and without exercising their peremptory challenge, the appellees moved for a drawn jury which motion was granted over the objection of the appellants. The applicable statute is as follows:

“Ark. Stat. 39-229. Peremptory challenges — Panel drawn upon request — -Right to strike names.- — Each party shall have three (3) peremptory challenges, which may be made orally — but if either party shall desire a panel, the court shall cause the names of twenty-four (24) competent jurors, written upon separate slips of paper, to be placed in a box to be kept for that purpose, from which the names of eighteen (18) shall be drawn and entered on a list in the order in which they were drawn, and numbered. Each party shall be furnished with a copy of said list, from which each may strike the names of three (3) jurors and return the list so struck to the judge, who shall strike from the original list the names so stricken from the copies, and the first twelve names remaining on said original list shall constitute the jury.”

We see no error in allowing a drawn jury at this time as any exercise of challenges on original veniremen was not known. This was a matter which presented itself to the discretion of the trial judge and we do not find that he abused that discretion.

The appellants filed a timely motion for a new trial and in support of that motion presented testimony tending to show that one of the jurors, Otis Franks, Jr., had an interest in the result of the verdict.

It appears, from the record, that the juror, Otis Franks, Jr., was an employee of the First National Bank of Magnolia where he was employed as note teller and worked on relief; that in 1959 he, together with his wife, and Dixon Barnett, and his wife, organized a corporation known as the Bruce Cartright Livestock Auction, Inc.; that some time prior to June 25, 1959, the appellee, Giles, was indebted to the juror’s corporation and to discharge that debt the appellee procured a loan from the bank at which Mr. Franks was employed, the loan being in the sum of $3,060.00, and to secure that loan the juror had signed a writing guaranteeing its payment; that the note was a demand note and had not been paid at the time of the trial. As additional security for payment of the demand note, the appellee had executed to the bank an assignment of the proceeds of any recovery which he might secure in this action against the Caldareras.

The name ■ of Mr. Franks does not appear to have been among the eighteen (18) prospective jurors first presented, although his name was on the list that the clerk distributed for the drawn jury.

On examination of the propective jurors the veniremen were asked as to business relationships with the appellee, Mr. Giles; juror Franks answered that Giles had worked for him at the auction barn a couple of years before and since then he had had other business relations with him but that there was nothing in their relations that would affect his verdict.

On behalf of the appellee it is urged that a member of one of the law firms representing the appellants had drawn the incorporation papers for the juror Franks’ corporation and was at the time representing the corporation in a law suit; that this attorney also was a director of the hank that was carrying the loan of Mr. Giles and was a member of the Discount Board and there was introduced a transcript of the meeting of the Discount Committee on June 25, 1959 which discloses that loans and discounts No. 71582 through 71602 to 71612 were before that Board and that a notation appears on that transcript, “J. F. Giles (letter of guaranty) $3,060.00”; that this particular attorney had participated in the trial, which statement was qualified by the statement of the attorney and other counsel that this particular counsel came in after the trial had started and sat in the back of the courtroom until he was motioned to the counsel table and that when the attorney who was examining the veniremen asked as to Franks, this attorney had said, “He’s a good man. ’ ’

The juror, Franks, stated when testifying in the motion for a new trial that his corporation had been the beneficiary of the Giles loan from the bank and that he had signed the agreement guaranteeing the loan and had as his protection a mortgage on the Giles ’ home; that he knew at the time that he was present on the jury that the original loan had not been paid and that if the appellee, Giles, got a judgment that the $3,060.00 would be thus paid; and on the morning of the trial he had talked to the presiding judge and had told him that appellee Giles had a guaranteed loan at the bank where he worked and the judge had told him to talk to the attorneys and he did talk to the appellees’ attorneys but it does not appear that he advised anyone of his guaranty agreement or any assignment of the verdict in this case.

On the voir dire examination of the prospective jurors there appears to be no official transcript, but it is established that the court had directed a question to the prospective jurors as to any business dealings with the appellees; that the juror Franks at that time stated that Giles, the appellee, had worked for him two or three years before.

It is the contention of the appellants that the juror Franks had such an interest in the verdict that he was disqualified from serving as a juror; that this disqualification was known to Franks and not to them.

On the other hand, the appellees contend that if Franks had an interest in the proceeds from the verdict that fact was known or could have been known to the attorneys for the appellants and that they failed to avail themselves of the information which was theirs and that it is too late to bring that matter to the attention of the court in a motion for a new trial.

There is a duty upon every prospective juror on voir dire examination to make a full and frank disclosure of any connection he may have with the litigants or anything that would or could in any way affect his verdict as a juror. In this case Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
360 S.W.2d 767, 235 Ark. 418, 1962 Ark. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldarera-v-giles-ark-1962.