Carpenter v. Honolulu Rapid Transit Co.

35 Haw. 761, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 1
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1940
DocketNo. 2424.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 35 Haw. 761 (Carpenter v. Honolulu Rapid Transit Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. Honolulu Rapid Transit Co., 35 Haw. 761, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 1 (haw 1940).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

KEMP, J.

This is an action by a minor approximately three years of age to recover damages for personal injuries alleged . to have been caused by the negligence of defendant’s bus driver, in the operation of his bus at an excessive rate of speed and without due care. It is undisputed that the infant plaintiff had fallen from the rumble seat of a 1932 Chevrolet coupe after it had gotten onto Twelfth avenue after making the turn from Waialae avenue. The issue then arose on plaintiff’s claim that his injuries were the *762 result of being struck by the bus either as he fell or after he was on the pavement, and that the striking was caused by the negligent operation of the bus which was traveling in the opposite direction. The plaintiff prayed general damages. He also prayed as special damages the medical expense incurred by his father and by him assigned to plaintiff. In the submission of the case to the jury, as to general damages the jury was properly instructed that even though you may believe that plaintiff’s mother or father was guilty of negligence at the time of the accident you cannot impute that negligence to plaintiff. The jury returned a verdict for the defendant. Such verdict necessarily involved either a finding by the jury that defendant’s bus driver was not guilty of negligence or that the plaintiff had failed to sustain the issue of negligence by a preponderance of the evidence. There was ample evidence, if believed, to justify either finding.

The plaintiff filed a motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial on the sole ground of alleged misconduct of the jury. The details of the alleged misconduct are set forth in an affidavit of one of plaintiff’s counsel attached to and made a part of the motion. After setting forth that neither he nor his associate counsel knew of the facts relating to the conduct of the jury prior to the verdict, the details of the alleged misconduct are set forth. The substance of said affidavit is that on the day following the return of the verdict the foreman of the jury informed him that during the course of the trial and before submission of the case to the jury he, the juror, drove his automobile, which affiant believes is a Chevrolet of a type, weight, size and power different from the Carpenter car, to the scene of the accident and as an experiment drove his car around the corner of Waialae and Twelfth avenues, in the same direction as that taken by the Carpenter car immediately prior to the accident, *763 at a speed of fifteen miles an hour, in an endeavor to satisfy his own mind as to the approximate location of the Carpenter car at the time of the accident in making a similar turn and in an effort to test the credibility of the witnesses, and that from said experiment he, the juror, reached certain conclusions adverse to the plaintiff; that on the day following the foregoing disclosures another juror informed affiant that during the deliberations of the jury, the results of said experiment were communicated to the other jurors; that the foreman of the jury further informed affiant that the result of said experiment was a factor in reaching a verdict against the defendant (sic) and that affiant is informed and believes and therefore avers the fact to be that inasmuch as the results of said experiment were communicated to the jurors, said experiment must have inevitably influenced and did influence the jurors to return a verdict adverse to the defendant (sic).

The affidavit of counsel above referred to was not considered as evidence and we think rightfully so. (46 C. J., tit. New Trial § 390, p. 366.) It was merely a part of the pleadings in the proceedings instituted to have the verdict set aside and a new trial ordered. It was necessary for the plaintiff to establish by competent evidence facts legally sufficient to justify the order complained of. In order to establish the facts set forth in the affidavit of counsel the foreman of the jury was sworn as a witness and permitted, over the objection interposed by the defendant that a juror will not be permitted to impeach his own verdict, to testify to the circumstances under which he visited the scene and what he did. Said juror testified, in substance, that while the trial was in progress, the jury having been excused over Saturday, he went on business into the district in which the accident under investigation occurred, driving a car of a different model and weight *764 than the car in which the plaintiff had been riding. The juror denied that he at any time had any intention of conducting an experiment and said that as he was nearing the scene of the accident he became conscious of .the fact that he was approaching the scene; that in rounding the corner and traveling in the same direction which plaintiff’s car had traveled, he casually observed his own speed of travel and where this route and speed took his own automobile in relation to the center line of the street on which the accident occurred but that he attached no significance to what he observed; that after the trial was resumed the following w;eek, and during a recess of the court, he and one other juror were conversing in the hallway; that said juror remarked that he had driven around that corner, to which the witness replied, “That’s nothing, I did too, the other morning.” He further testified that after the case was submitted to the jury, in the.hearing of some of the jurors, he told what he had done but .that the matter was never mentioned to the jury as a whole during deliberations. All of this evidence having been admitted over the objections of the defendant, the defendant at the close of the juror’s evidence moved that said evidence be stricken. The motion was denied and the defendant excepted.

We find nothing in the evidence of the juror sufficient to justify imputing to him any improper motive for being at the locus in quo. He was there on his own business during a recess of the trial. The fact that he became aware that he was approaching the scene of the accident and made casual observation under the circumstances related does not justify the conclusion that what he did constituted misconduct. There is nothing in the juror’s account of the manner in which he communicated to some of his fellow jurors the fact that he had visited the scene of the accident to indicate any motive or intent on his *765 part to make use of the incident to divert any juror’s mind from the ultimate duty to consider the case on the evidence produced in court. The undisputed fact is that only about one-half of the jurors knew, prior to the verdict, that said juror had visited the scene of the accident.

These observations are made because of the discussions appearing in some of the cases cited by plaintiff’s counsel from jurisdictions which do permit jurors to testify to overt acts.

No evidence other than that of the juror above recounted and that of plaintiff’s counsel as to what the juror told him was offered in support of the motion. The prayer of the motion was granted and a new trial ordered. The matter is before us on defendant’s bill of exceptions.

Defendant’s exception number nine raises squarely the question of admissibility of the evidence of a member of the jury to impeach his own verdict.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 Haw. 761, 1940 Haw. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-honolulu-rapid-transit-co-haw-1940.