Goodwin v. Town of Wethersfield

43 Conn. 437
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 Conn. 437 (Goodwin v. Town of Wethersfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodwin v. Town of Wethersfield, 43 Conn. 437 (Colo. 1876).

Opinion

Pardee, J.

Levi Goodwin and others brought their petition to the Superior Court for Hartford County at the March term, 1878, for the laying out of a highway in the town of Wethersfield. That court appointed a committee to inquire as to the necessity for such new way; which committee, having heard the parties, reported to the court at the September term, 1873, “ that the highway prayed for in said petition is of common convenience and necessity.” The town and certain individuals,- respondents, remonstrated against the acceptance of this report, and the court at the March term, 1875, set it aside and referred the petition to a new committee, who heard the parties and reported lo the court at the same term, that the public convenience did not require the laying out and establishment of the highway prayed for. The [439]*439petitioners remonstrated against the acceptance of this last report, but the court accepted it and dismissed the petition with costs. They then filed a motion in error, assigning for reasons that the court erred in rejecting the first report and in accepting the second.

The respondents alleged that there had been irregular and improper conduct on the part of the committee in the performance of their duties, in this, that the committee, having brought their public hearings to a close on the 4th day of September, 1873, subsequently, upon the same day, met by themselves and took an informal vote upon the question which had been submitted to them, a-majority voting to lay out the proposed highway.; that they met again by themselves upon the succeeding day for consultation; that while in session Mr. Johnson, who was first selectman of the town of Wethersfield, and during the trial had acted as the agent of the town, as well as for himself as an interested individual, came to them privately, and promised that if they would defer further action in the matter he would procure a new highway to be laid out and accepted by the town, which would be satisfactory to all parties; and that they consented to the delay • and assured him that if he should carry out his plans they would make a report adversely to the petitioners and contrary to the report they then contemplated making.

In the case of Harris v. Town of Woodstock, 27 Conn., 571, this court said: “As the mode of trial before a highway committee is very different from that before a jury, much less strictness is required in relation to the intercourse between parties or counsel and the triers in one case than in the other.” In Wethersfield v. Humphrey, 20 Conn., 226, the report of a highway committee was accepted notwithstanding the fact that they had received a written statement concerning the case from one of the counsel after they had closed their hearing, the court saying, “Were this committee a jury, empaneled to act in court and sworn to decide according to the evidence given in court, and to keep their own counsel, and suffer no one to speak to them about the business or matters in hand but in court, the objection would have great force. But this [440]*440is not the character of the committee. They may, and they are expected to, hear evidence from all persons who feel an interest, on the ground and elsewhere.”

We cite these cases chiefly for the purpose of saying that we do not intend herein to overrule them. The conduct of the committee in the case before us will bear the test of a trial by the rigorous rule applied to jurors; and that rule was thus stated in Pettibone v. Phelps, 18 Conn., 450: “It is now well established by the modern authorities that every instance of misconduct in a juror will not destroy the verdict. The rule extracted from the cases seems to be, that however improper such conduct may have been, yet if it does not appear that it was occasioned by the prevailing party, or any one in his behalf, if it does not indicate any improper bias upon the juror’s mind, and the court cannot see that it either had or might have had an effect unfavorable to the party moving for a new trial, the verdict ought not to be set aside. A contrary rule would in many cases operate most unjustly. It would punish an innocent person for the offense of another. If a juror conducts improperly and violates his duty and his oath, he ought to be answerable for it, and not a party in the cause, who is in no manner accessory to the misconduct. To deprive a party of a verdict which he may have honestly obtained after a protracted and expensive litigation, merely because a juror may have improperly spoken of the cause, when he could have received no benefit from that act of the juror, and his opponent no injury, would seem hardly compatible with a due administration of justice. If, indeed, he, or any agent of his, will approach a juror while the cause is on trial and speak of the subject matter of the suit, it will destroy a verdict in his favor. He ought to know and feel that he may lose but cannot gain by such conduct. Depriving him of his verdict will operate as a punishment for his violation of the law. Só, too, if it appear that the unsuccessful party either sustained or might have sustained injury from the juror’s misconduct, it is reasonable that a new trial should be granted, that justice may be done between the parties. It is undoubtedly the duty of courts, as far as practicable, to [441]*441preserve the purity of trials by jury; and it is said that this can best be effected by setting aside every verdict whore a juror has spoken of a cause contrary to his oath. But it is difficult to see how such a result would be produced. The juror does not suffer by setting aside the verdict; it is the successful party alone that is injured. It is true that in some cases that rule seems to have been adopted; but in our opinion it is neither in conformity with a fair administration of justice, nor with the more recent cases.” In Hamilton v. Pease, 38 Conn., 117, the court said: “The court have appreciated the actual hardship of depriving an innocent party of his verdict because of the misconduct of a juror, which hardship is not counterbalanced by the possibility of hardship upon the other party, for the reason that the verdict but for the misconduct might have been the other way, and they have not applied the doctrine when it appeared that the successful party could not have received any benefit from the misconduct, or his opponent any injury.” In the case before us it is to be noticed that the committee had determined to report in favor of the petitioners before Mr. Johnson made his suggestion to them; they announced this result to him as one of the respondents, thus showing that they had determined the character of their report and that they then announced the result to one of the parties. They thereupon separated.

If the plan had been carried to completion it would, of course, have brought all parties to the point of desiring that the highway asked for by the petitioners should not be laid out; virtually, it would have made it unnecessary to publish any decision. The petitioners would have been under no inducement to continue proceedings under their petition, their purpose having been accomplished; they must have withdrawn it or consented to the committee’s making an end of it by an adverse report. Neither the town nor any individual respondent would have had any occasion for further expenditure of time or money in resisting it; litigation and its attendant costs would have been stopped by the voluntary agreement of all parties; and the respondents would have reaped this additional advantage—that the establishment of a highway which [442]

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Bluebook (online)
43 Conn. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-town-of-wethersfield-conn-1876.