Castanos v. Lansing

2 Misc. 2d 529, 152 N.Y.S.2d 946, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1919
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1956
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Misc. 2d 529 (Castanos v. Lansing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Castanos v. Lansing, 2 Misc. 2d 529, 152 N.Y.S.2d 946, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1919 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1956).

Opinion

Frank Del Vecchio, J.

This is a proceeding under article 78

of the Civil Practice Act to compel the above-named respondent to enter a judgment in favor of the petitioner Nicholas Castanos in the amount of $32,500 plus costs. Hereinafter, Castanos will be referred to as “ plaintiff ”, the position which he occupied in the action which is the basis of this application.

The somewhat unique circumstances which give rise to the present proceeding may be summarized as follows:

On September 19, 1953 a collision occurred on the streets of Newark, New Jersey, between a bus owned by Public Service Coordinated Transport and an automobile owned and operated by Erisiny Theodore. Thereafter, a passenger in the bus, Nicholas Castanos, commenced an action in this county against Public Service and Mrs. Theodore for injuries allegedly sustained in the accident. Sometime later, the defendant Theodore commenced an action against Public Service, also in this county, to recover the damage to her vehicle which resulted from the collision. Still later, an order was granted without objection purporting to consolidate the two actions. However, Theodore being a plaintiff in one action and a defendant in the other, the eases could not be consolidated into one action (Vidal v. Sheffield Farms Co., 208 Misc. 438; Vandermark v. Novicky, 187 Misc. 733), and the court treated them as separate actions tried together.

[532]*532The cases were submitted to the jury on the afternoon of January 26, 1956, the ninth day of the trial. Early on the morning of the following day the jury advised the court attendants that they had reached an agreement and were returned to the courtroom for the announcement of their verdict. In response to the clerk’s question whether 10 or more had agreed upon a verdict in the action of Castanos against Public Service Coordinated Transport and Theodore, the foreman stated: “We find that the Public Service Coordinated Transport is negligent in the action brought against them by Nicholas Castanos and Mrs. Theodore and agree to award $32,500 to Mr. Castanos and also Mrs. Theodore’s garage bill be paid.’’ Such a verdict could be rendered only if the jury found that Public Service alone was negligent and that Mrs. Theodore was free from any negligence which contributed to cause the accident. However 10 did not agree upon that verdict as reported by the foreman, therefore the verdict was incomplete and an incomplete verdict is no verdict.

At the request of the attorney for the bus company the jury was polled. In the Castanos action 10 jurors, including juror No. 12, concurred in and two dissented from the verdict previously announced. In the property damage action however it appeared that only nine jurors were in favor of a verdict for Mrs. Theodore and three were opposed, including juror No. 12, who said: “ My vote on this is no cause for action ”. This was an indication that if he found the bus company was negligent he also found that Mrs. Theodore was guilty of contributory negligence and didn’t intend to vote a verdict in favor of Castaños against the bus company alone.

Thereupon, the court instructed the jury that their verdicts were inconsistent and reread the following portion of the original charge: “ You may render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff Castanos against both defendants, stating the amount. If you do that, to be consistent, you will also render a verdict of no cause for action in the case of Mrs. Theodore against Public Service for damages to her automobile, or you may render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff Castanos against the Public Service alone, stating the amount, and no cause for action against Mrs. Theodore. If you do that, to be consistent, you will also render a verdict in favor of Mrs. Theodore against the Public' Service for the damages to her automobile in the sum of $562.81, or you may render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff Castanos against the defendant, Mrs. Theodore alone, stating the amount and no cause for action against the defendant Public Service. [533]*533If you do that, to be consistent, you will render a verdict of no cause for action in the case of Mrs. Theodore against the Public Service for damages to her automobile.”

The jurymen were then returned to the jury room with a direction to arrive at a consistent verdict “ on both Cases ”, approved by 10 or more of their number. No exception to this procedure was taken by any of the parties.

Sometime later, at 2:06 a.m. the jury again entered the courtroom and, after answering in the affirmative the clerk’s question whether 10 or more had agreed upon a verdict in the action by plaintiff Castanos, the foreman stated: “We find that Public Service Coordinated Transport is negligent in the action brought against them by Nicholas Castanos and Mrs. Theodore and agree to award $32,500 to Nicholas Castanos and also Mrs. Theodore’s garage bill be paid.” (Note that this report of the verdict is in the same language as first reported.)

When the jury was immediately polled, however, it appeared that only nine jurors concurred in the verdict announced by the foreman. Thereupon the court observed that the jury was in disagreement and inquired of the foreman whether there was any possibility of their coming to an agreement. When informed that the jurors were hopelessly deadlocked the court declared a disagreement and discharged the jury.

Plaintiff now seeks to compel the entry of a judgment in the amount of $32,500, plus costs on the decision in his favor announced by the foreman when the jury first returned to the courtroom shortly after midnight on the morning of January 27, upon the ground that a complete verdict was rendered in his favor and that the verdict and the report of disagreement were not inconsistent or improper under the charge given.

The arguments advanced by plaintiff and the cases cited in support thereof have received the careful attention of this court which, however, is still of the opinion that no verdict in his favor has been received by Castanos.

It appears without contradiction that at the time the jury was discharged the vote in both actions stood at nine to three — one less than the number necessary to render a verdict in a civil action.

The court’s action in refusing to accept the verdict as first reported and directing the jury, to reconsider both cases, and in later discharging them and declaring a disagreement was predicated upon the following two conclusions:

First, the verdict as reported was not such as the jury, under the instructions of the court, legally was at liberty to render.

[534]*534Second, the decision of the jury did not become a final verdict until it was recorded and the jury discharged. At the time of discharge the jurors were at a nine to three disagreement as to the right of the plaintiff Castanos to recover.

With regard to the first conclusion mentioned above: In the course of the main charge the court instructed the jury: “ If upon all the proof in the case and the rules I have stated * * * you find that the driver of the bus was guilty of some negligence which was the direct cause of the accident, and that Mrs. Theodore was free from any negligence on her part, then your verdict must be in favor of the plaintiff Castanos against the defendant Public Service alone and no cause for action against the defendant Mrs. Theodore in the first action, and to be consistent you would also return a verdict in favor of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Misc. 2d 529, 152 N.Y.S.2d 946, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/castanos-v-lansing-nysupct-1956.