Flood v. McClure

32 P. 254, 3 Idaho 587, 3 Hasb. 587, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 13
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 32 P. 254 (Flood v. McClure) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flood v. McClure, 32 P. 254, 3 Idaho 587, 3 Hasb. 587, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 13 (Idaho 1893).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

This action was brought by the respondent 'against the appellant to recover $550 damages, alleged to have been sustained by reason of the appellant, as sheriff of Kootenai county, having levied upon certain property claimed by the respondent, to satisfy an execution issued in the case of Liebe & ■Co. against one Henry Farley.

It is alleged that said property was of the value of $470.08, ■and that by reason of the levy and sale under said execution respondent was damaged in that sum, and in the further sum •of seventy-five dollars for certain rents. The answer denies the material allegations of the complaint, and avers that the property referred to in the complaint was the property of one •John Farley, the execution debtor above referred to, and not the property of plaintiff, and alleges that the pretended transfer from Farley to Flood was fraudulent and made with intent to Linder, delay and defraud Farley’s creditors.

The action was tried by the court with a jury, and judgment rendered against appellant for the sum of $500. During the trial the court withdrew the seventy-five dollars claimed for rent from the consideration of the jury. This appeal is from the order overruling the motion for a new trial and from the judgment.

[590]*590The assignment of errors contains eighteen specifications. The first is the misconduct of the jury in arriving at their verdict by resorting to a determination thereto by chance. It is shown by the affidavits of Ernest 'Rhienhardt, J. G-. Hawkins and O. J. Johns, three of the jurors who tried said cause, that the jury arrived at their verdict by agreeing that each juror should mark on a slip of paper the amount which he considered the plaintiff entitled to recover, and thereafter the several sums so marked should be added together and the amount thereof divided by twelve, the number of jurors, and that the quotient arising from such division should be the verdict, and that said verdict was arrived at in that way and in no other. It is also shown by the affidavit of Rhienhardt that at least one of the jurors, in writing upon the slip of paper the sum which he thought plaintiff was entitled to recover, wrote thereon the sum of $500, which sum was added with the other sums written by the remaining jurors, and that the aggregate sum was divided by twelve, which resulted in making the sum mentioned in the verdict. The proof of the method used to determine the amount of the verdict was not disputed.

Verdicts obtained in this manner have been condemned by many courts, and if the method used in arriving at the verdict comes within the prohibition, of subdivision 2 of section 4439 of the Revised Statutes of 1887, the verdict should have been set aside and a new trial granted. Said subdivision 2 provides as follows: “Misconduct of the Jury. — And when any one or more of the jurors have been induced to assent to any general or special verdict, or to a finding on any question submitted to them by the court, by a resort to the determination of chance, such misconduct may be proved by the affidavit of any of the jurors.”

Counsel for the respondent admits that a verdict so obtained is vicious and irregular, but contends that it is not a verdict obtained by a resort to the determination of chance within the meaning of that term as used in the statute, and cites, Turner v. Tuolumne Co. W. Co., 25 Cal. 397, as an authority in his favor. In that ease the jury arrived at their verdict in the same manner as in the case at bar, and the [591]*591court said: “Under tbe facts of this case as we have assumed them to be, the verdict is undoubtedly vicious and ought to-be set aside. The only question for us to decide is, whether the affidavits of the jurors can be received for the purpose of establishing those facts. Although there is some conflict of authority upon this question, the better opinion seems to be that by the common law, the affidavits of jurors cannot be received for the purpose of impeaching their verdict, but may be admitted in support of it. But this rule of the common law has been changed in this state to a certain extent by the statute.”

The learned court then quotes the second subdivision of section 193 of the California Practice Act, which is the same as subdivision 2 of section 4439 of the Revised Statutes of Idaho above quoted, and -the court further says: “Being in derogation of the common law, this statute must be strictly construed and cannot be held to include such kinds of misconduct as do not come clearly within the descriptive terms of the act.” The court, after referring to a number of authorities on the point, whether a verdict obtained in the manner set forth was “a resort to the determination of chance” within the meaning of that expression as used in said section, arrives at the following conclusion: “We are therefore of the opinion that the verdict in this ease is not a chance verdict within the meaning of the second subdivision of section 193 of the Practice Act, and for that reason the affidavits of the jurors by whom it was rendered cannot be admitted to impeach it.”

In Thompson and Merriam on Juries, section 415, the eminent, authors, after quoting from that part of the opinion of the court in Turner v. Tuolumne Co. W. Co., supra, which holds that there was no element of chance in the method used by the jury in arriving at the verdict rendered, but that the result was obtained by the most accurate of sciences, say: “This reasoning seems hardly' conclusive. It proceeds upon the hypothesis that at the time the jurors consent to be bound by the result of the addition and division it is certain what each juror will mark down as his estimate of the damages; hence this method of finding a verdict is as exact as the science of mathematics. But the contrary is the fact. The jurors con[?]*?■sent that their verdict shall vary from abstract justice in that •degree that each juror deviates from sound judgment. Ail the prejudices, whims and caprices which sway a juror in his •deliberations are given full play, and they measurably affect the final result. Nothing could well be more the sport of chance than a conclusion reached in this manner.” In the case at bar, it is shown that prejudice, whim and caprice led at least one of the jurors in this case to mark a larger sum than the plaintiff was entitled to recover, in any view of the ■case.

“Quotient” verdicts are often referred to as “chance” ver■dicts. (Thompson and Merriam on Juries, 517, note.) This conclusion as reached in Turner v. Tuolumne County Water Co., supra, by applying the rule of strict construction, a construction forbidden by section 4 of the Revised Statutes of Idaho, which section is as follows: “The rule of the common law that •statutes in derogation thereof are to be strictly construed has »no application to these statutes. The Revised Statutes establish the law of this state respecting the subjects to which they relate, and their provisions and all proceedings under them are to be liberally construed, with a view to effect their objects •and to promote justice.”

It is contended that as we adopted this statute from the •statutes of California, we thereby adopted the construction given said section by the supreme court of that state. It is true that the rule is, when a state adopts a statute of a sister •state, that it thereby adopts the interpretation and construction given such statute by the courts of last resort of the ■state from whence it is adopted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 P. 254, 3 Idaho 587, 3 Hasb. 587, 1893 Ida. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flood-v-mcclure-idaho-1893.