Drock v. Great A. P. Tea Co.

22 N.E.2d 547, 61 Ohio App. 291, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 340, 15 Ohio Op. 194, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 399
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 28, 1939
DocketNo 2935
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 N.E.2d 547 (Drock v. Great A. P. Tea Co.) 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
Drock v. Great A. P. Tea Co., 22 N.E.2d 547, 61 Ohio App. 291, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 340, 15 Ohio Op. 194, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 399 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*341 OPINION

By GUERNSEY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County.

The plaintiff, Myrtle M. Drock, brought an action against the defendant, The Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, for damages for personal injuries, alleging that she purchased certain liver pudding at one of defendant’s stores; that said liver pudding was unfit for human consumption; that she ate of the same; and that as the immediate consequence of eating said liver pudding she became ill and suffered damages for which she asks compensation.

The trial resulted in a verdict for plaintiff. Motion for new trial of the defendant was overruled and judgment in favor of the plaintiff was entered on the verdict and the cause is now before this court on appeal on questions of law by the defendant from said judgment.

A detailed statement of facts is not essential to the consideration of the questions raised on the appeal and so the same will be omitted and the ultimate facts in evidence will be stated and discussed in connection with the consideration of the various assignments of error insofar as such facts are essential to the consideration of the various assignments.

The defendant-appellant specifies a number of assignments of error in its assignment of errors, but in its brief argues" only three of such assigned errors, and under the statute these will be the only assignments-of ■ error considered. The assignments mentioned are as follows:

1. Said court erred in overruling the motion of the defendant to withdraw a juror and continue said cause for misconduct of a juror during the trial of said cause.

2. Said court erred in its general charge to the jury.

3. The verdict is against the weight of the - evidence, is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law.

These assignments of error will be considered in the order mentioned.

1. Trial of the cause in which the judgment appealed from was rendered was commenced in the Court of Common Pleas on January 17, 1938. There had been a previous partial trial of the case on June 11, 1937, which was discontinued because of the sickness of a juror. Mr. John Drock, the husband of the plaintiff, was examined as a witness at both trials and at the last trial, being the one in controversy, the defendant had a transcript of the testimony of the said John Drock at the first trial and used the questions and answers of said John Drock appearing in his examination on the first trial, in his cross-examination in the second trial for the purpose of bringing to the attention of the jury certain discrepancies in the testimony of the witness at the two trials. The cross-examination was necessarily, as stated by the appellant in its brief, “rather tedious and exacting.” The cross-examination had not been completed when the court declared a recess at four-thirty o’clock on June 18, 1938. Following the- recess, as shown by the record was an occurrence as follows:

“Let the record show that when recess was declared at four-thirty on June 18, 1938, one of the jurors, to-wit, Ernest Shobe, approached the court and prefaced-his statement by saying that he would not talk to anybody else about the matter he wanted to inquire about, *342 but the court. He thereupon inquired of the court whether Mr. Clarence Addision, of counsel for defendant, had -a right to cross examine the witness who had just left the stand, to-wit, Mr. John Drock, in the manner in which he had examined him; that it appeared to the juror that Mr. Addison wás attempting to trap the witness into making misstatements and that it appeared like persecution to him.
■ Whereupon the court advised Mr. Shobe that counsel was examining the witness by comparing his testimony in a former trial with the testimony in the instant case and that he had a right to make a vigorous cross-examination of the witness and that counsel for the plaintiff had not complained of the examination.
And thereupon, the court communicated the above facts to counsel for both of the parties in the absence of the jury.
“Mr. Clarence Addison: Thereupon came the defendant and moved the court to withdraw a juror and continue said cause by reason of the foregoing facts evidencing prejudice against the defendant on the part of the juror mentioned, which motion was by the court—
The Court: The motion of counsel for defendant is at this time overruled.
Mr. Addison: To which the defendant excepts.”

It is upon this occurrence that the defendant bases the first assignment of error mentioned.

It will be noted that this occurrence happened in the court room and that the colloquy was between the juror and the judge, and presumably not in the presence or hearing of any other person. The juror presumably started into the trial of the case with an impartial attitude of mind. The cross-examination of the witness John Drock by defendant’s counsel was, as above stated, necessarily tedious and exacting; ánd the juror’s reaction thereto was unquestionably an honest reaction in the then light of the juror’s concept of the law and the limits of the examination. In good faith he brought' the matter to the attention of the trial judge who explained to him that all that was done was strictly within the rights of counsel and the party whom he represented, and thát the cross-examination was proper. The juror went'to the judge for information, advice : and instructions and received them. The purpose of that which the,, judge said to the juror and its natural and probable effect would be to remove any prejudice that may have existed in the mind of the juror when he took the question up with the court. The court therefore properly overruled the motion of the defendant to withdraw a juror and continue said cause by reason of the occurrence mentioned.

The cases cited in the appellant’s brief on the question of misconduct of jurors all relate to situations where jurors had made statements indicating partiality toward or prejudice against a party during the course of the trial to or in the presence and hearing of persons other than the trial judge and where, the statement not having been made to the trial judge, there was no instruction on the part of the court pertaining thereto and tending to remove the prejudice indicated by such statements, and consequently such decisions are inapplicable to the facts of the case at bar.

2. From reading appellant’s brief it appears that the portion of the general charge which is claimed to be erroneous appears on page 239 of the record as follows:

“One provision of the statute of Ohio provides that: it shall be unlawful to sell diseased, corrupt, adulterated or unwholesome provisions, without making the condition thereof known to the buyer. Of course the word ‘provisions’ in that connection would include meat.
Now another section of the law: it is unlawful to sell meat or any other article of food if it consists wholly or in part of a diseased, decomposed, putrid, *343

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Bluebook (online)
22 N.E.2d 547, 61 Ohio App. 291, 29 Ohio Law. Abs. 340, 15 Ohio Op. 194, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drock-v-great-a-p-tea-co-ohioctapp-1939.