Corbin v. City of Cleveland

57 N.E.2d 427, 74 Ohio App. 199, 41 Ohio Law. Abs. 289, 29 Ohio Op. 333, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 623
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 25, 1943
Docket19269
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 N.E.2d 427 (Corbin v. City of Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corbin v. City of Cleveland, 57 N.E.2d 427, 74 Ohio App. 199, 41 Ohio Law. Abs. 289, 29 Ohio Op. 333, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 623 (Ohio Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

OPINION

By SKEEL, J.

This case comes to this court by appeal on questions of law from the Court of Common Pleas. The plaintiff in her petition alleges that on the 11th day of May, 1940, at about 3:00 P. M. she had come out of The William Taylor Company store on to Euclid Avenue. She was proceeding west. The street was very crowded. She had come only a short distance when she claims to have stepped into a hole in the sidewalk, which caused her to fall and sustain certain injuries.

After the jury had been impanelled and sworn, the court gave each juror an envelope in which was contained a few sheets of blank paper. The court explained to the jury that he was going to permit them to take notes, if they so desired, dur *291 ing the progress of the trial. The court directed the jurors to seal whatever notes they made in the envelope, write their names over the seal and leave the envelope in the custody of the Court upon adjournment, the notes to be returned to the jurors when the Court should re-convene. The jury was further instructed that when they returned their verdict, the notes were to be collected by the Court and destroyed in the presence of the jurors.

The trial resulted in a verdict for the defendant.

The plaintiff claims: (1) that the court erred in suggesting to the jury that they could take notes during the progress of the trial, if they wanted to do so, and in furnishing the material for that purpose; (2), that the verdict is contrary to law and against the weight of the evidence; (3), that the court erred in the admission of evidence;. (4) that the court erred in giving certain special instructions to the jury before argument at defendant’s request; (5) that the court erred in its general charge to the jury; (6), that the court erred in its general charge; (7) that the court erred in overruling the appellant’s motion for new trial.

The court’s conduct in furnishing materials to the jury for the taking of notes and suggesting to the jury that they are permitted to take notes of the evidence, if they should so desire, to assist them when deliberating upon their verdict and prescribing the rules which they should follow if they did take notes of the evidence, presents a rather unique question. What case law there is upon the subject deals with the question of where the juror, without the suggestion of the court and in most instances without the court knowing about it, takes notes of the evidence during the course of the trial.

In 39 Ohio Jurisprudence 1062, ¶337, there is an attempt to state the rule as laid down by the cases, as follows:

“In Ohio it seems to be proper, or at least permissible, for jurors to take notes during the court’s charge or during the testimony and take these notes to the jury room, although some courts, in the absence of a statute, seem to regard it as misconduct for a juror to presume to do this.”

The latter part of this quotation is based on a statement of the rule in Thompson on Trials, 2nd Edition, Volume 2, 12585, page 1868:

“If a judge or referee were to try a cause without notes of the testimony, he would justly be regarded as derelict in the *292 discharge of his duties; but, in the absence of statutes allowing jurors to take notes of the testimony, which, as hereafter seen, exist in some jurisdictions, for a juror to presume to do this is regarded by some courts as misconduct for which a new trial ought to be granted. The conception which supports this view is, that the jurors must ‘register the evidence on the tablets of their memory’ provided they are able to do so; and it is to be observed that in the jurisdiction where the rule is laid down, it is also a rule that the jurors are not to take the written evidence with them. But, in order to make the fact available as ground for a new trial that a juror took notes of the evidence and read them in the jury room, no objection having been made in court, it must appear that not only the defendant but his counsel was not aware that the jurors took the notes; and in the absence of a showing to the contrary, it will be presumed that they knew it and consented to it. Nor is the act of a juror in taking notes of the evidence as it is given, misconduct sufficient to set aside the verdict, where he, upon being admonished by the court of the impropriety of his act, ceases taking his notes.”

Long v State, 95 Ind. 481.

Cheeks v State, 35 Ind. 492-495.

Cowles v Hayes, 71 N. C. 230, at page 231, 66 N. C. 604.

Tift v Downs, 63 Ga. 237.

Lilly v Griffin, 71 Ga. 535.

The courts of Ohio have not passed directly on the question as presented in the instant case, where the court took the initiative in suggesting that the jury could take notes of the testimony, even going to the extent of furnishing the necessary material to carry out the suggestion. But, as indicated by the citation in Ohio Jurisprudence, the courts have had presented to them the question as to whether or not it is misconduct, sufficient to require the reversal of a case, where a juror has during the course of the trial, taken notes. The rule to be found from the decisions is that occasional note-taking by the jurors is not, under ordinary circumstances, such misconduct as would justify a reversal of the cause.

In the case of The W. H. Davis Die Company v The Beltzhoover Electric Co., 40 App. Rep. 308, where the court during the course of the charge, asked: “Has any one of the jury a pencil?” the record did not disclose whether the jurors had pencils or not, and if so, whether notes were taken or not, but it was claimed by counsel that notes were taken of the *293 charge and that such notes were taken by the jurors to the jury room. On page 311 of the opinion, after quoting a part of the paragraph in Thompson on Trials, supra, the court said:

“It is urged that the notes might be taken incorrectly and thus improperly influence the jurors in their deliberations. Certainly there would be as great danger of error upon the ‘tablets of their memory’ as upon the tablets in their hands. In the days when fewer men could read and write it might have been possible for one who could do so to use these abilities improperly. Today it is hardly likely that such a state of affairs would exist. While the stability of rule and precedent is desirable it is not so important as to require inflexibility in the presence of changed conditions, indicating the necessity or at least reason for adaptation to modern conveniences and practices adopted by men in the conduct of the ordinary affairs of life.

We find no prejudicial error in the remark of the court, even if followed by appropriate action stated by the plaintiff in error.”

In the case of B. H. Palmer & Sons v Charles Cowie, 7 C. C. (N. S.) 47, at page 53, the court noticed, during the course of the trial, that a juror was taking notes of the testimony, whereupon the court said:

“I notice, gentlemen of the jury, that some of you have been taking notes of the testimony. The theory of the law is that unless you all take notes of the testimony, none of you should, so that some of the testimony will not be unduly emphasized in the jury room, and I will ask you to discontinue that.”

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Bluebook (online)
57 N.E.2d 427, 74 Ohio App. 199, 41 Ohio Law. Abs. 289, 29 Ohio Op. 333, 1943 Ohio App. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbin-v-city-of-cleveland-ohioctapp-1943.