Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Benjamin

149 P. 968, 51 Mont. 167, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 91
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1915
DocketNo. 3,535
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 149 P. 968 (Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Benjamin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Benjamin, 149 P. 968, 51 Mont. 167, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 91 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was instituted by the Great Northern Railway Company to condemn certain lands for public use. Defendant Gilkerson, being dissatisfied with the commissioners’ award, appealed to the district court, where the trial of the cause resulted in a verdict and judgment fixing the amount of his damages. From that judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial, these appeals are prosecuted.

[171]*171Appellant is not entitled to have his bill of exceptions considered as a matter of right. Amendments to the proposed bill [1] were presented and some of them allowed, but the bill as amended was never engrossed and it is impossible for us to determine what should and what should not be included. However, in our desire to reach the merits of the appeal, we assume that the affidavits used on the motion for a new trial are properly before us.

1. The notice of intention enumerates all but one of the statutory grounds for a new trial; the motion, however, was heard and determined upon but one — misconduct of the jury. In support of his contention that the verdict was reached by a resort [2] to the determination of chance, appellant presented the affidavits of two of the jurors:

Gottlieb Jenni states: That the jurors “after retiring to deliberate upon their verdict, found that there was wide diversity of opinion among them as to the amounts to be awarded to the defendant John O. Gilkerson for his land and for damages to the remaining portion, and that, after arguing the matter for some time, some juror suggested that each juror write on a slip of paper the amounts that he thought fair for the land taken and also for the damage to the portion not taken, and that the amounts so given, respectively, be added together and the result divided by the number of jurors, twelve, and that they take such average as their verdict. That this plan was agreed to and carried out, and this deponent so acted, and agreed to the verdict so arrived at, and that all the jurors did likewise, and the verdict so obtained was brought into court as the verdict of the jury, and so recorded.”

The affidavit of the juror W. IT. Metz states: “That after the issues in said action were submitted to said jury and said jury had retired to consider upon their verdict therein, and, after arguing upon the amount to be allowed to the defendant John O. Gilkerson for damages to the portion of said defendant’s land not taken by plaintiff, each juror wrote down on a slip of paper his judgment of the amount to be awarded; it was [172]*172then agreed by all the jurors that these amounts should be added together and the sum should be divided by twelve, and thus the average of all the amounts should be found. This was done by one of the jurors and the average amount was found to be $280. That a motion was then made by one of the jurors that the amount so found should be adopted as their verdict as to such damages. That such motion was duly put and carried, and that said amount was then inserted in the formal verdict as the amount so to be awarded to said defendant for damages to that portion of his lands not taken, and said verdict fixing said amount, to-wit, $280, as such award, was returned into court as the verdict of said jury on said point, and was acknowledged by all said jurors as their verdict and filed as such.”

In common parlance, a quotient verdict is not infrequently referred to as one condemned by subdivision 2 of section 6794, Bevised Codes. This provision, however, has to do only with a verdict to which a juror was, or jurors were, induced to assent by a resort to the determination of chance, and unless the means employed fall under the ban of this statute the juror is not permitted to impeach his verdict. We do not know that any court has ever condemned the practice, quite prevalent with jurors, of taking the aggregate of the amounts representing their divergent views as to an award to be made and dividing that sum by the number of jurors as a means of ascertaining the average or as a basis for further consideration. It is only when the jurors agree in advance that the quotient thus obtained shall constitute the amount of their verdict, and such agreement is carried into effect, that the proceeding constitutes a resort to the determination of chance and is condemned by the statute above.

The general rule on the subject is stated in 29 Cyc. 812, as follows: “A verdict will not be set aside merely because the amount thereof was the result of a compromise between jurors, nor because the amount was first found by adding together the amounts the several jurors thought should be given and divid[173]*173ing the sum by twelve, if there was no agreement in advance to return a verdict for the quotient so found.' Where the jurors agree in advance to be bound by a quotient so determined, or where the consent of any juror to a verdict is determined by any resort to chance, a new trial must be granted.”

In Gordon v. Trevartlum, 13 Mont. 387, 40 Am. St. Rep. 452, 34 Pac. 185, the facts were in all essential particulars identical with the facts in the case now under consideration. The affidavit of Juror McNamara in that case disclosed a state of facts similar to those presented by Juror Jenni in this. The affidavit presented by W. H. Young and other jurors gave a version of their deliberation and conclusion similar to the facts presented by Juror Metz in this instance. Concerning the question thus presented, this court said: “Verdicts arrived at by methods such as described in the McNamara affidavit in this case have been held bad when properly before courts on motion for new trial. But the facts vitiating such verdicts are the agreement by the jurors to go into the process of marking amounts, adding them, and dividing the same by twelve, and the agreement that the result so obtained shall be the verdict, without further consideration; and the fact that such proceedings were taken by the jury in pursuance to such an agreement, and that the result so obtained was returned as the verdict. (Thompson & Merriam on Juries, sec. 408 et seq., and numerous cases cited; Goodman v. Cody, 1 Wash. Ter. 329, 34 Am. Rep. 808, 815, note.) On the other hand, it is held that a verdict reached after the quotient process having been had by the jury is not vicious ‘where the calculation is purely informal, for the purpose of ascertaining the sense of the jury, and every juror feels at liberty to accept, reject, or qualify the result, according to his convictions. Under such circumstances the jury may adopt as their verdict the exact quotient found, and it will be good.’ (Thompson & Merriam on Juries, sec. 410, and cases cited.) The distinction between good verdicts and bad verdicts where the quotient process has been used is well stated in a very old case as follows: ‘If the jurors previously agree to a particular mode of arriving [174]*174at a verdict, and to abide by the contingent result at all events, without reserving to themselves the liberty of dissenting, such a proceeding would be improper; but if the means is adopted merely for the sake of arriving at a reasonable measure of damages, without binding the jurors by the result, it is not an objection to the verdict.’ (Dcuna v. Tucker, 4 Johns. (N. T.) 487. See, also, Ilayne’s New Trial and Appeal, sec. 71.)”

2. It will not do to say that the affidavits of Jenni and Metz do not present an issue of fact.

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Bluebook (online)
149 P. 968, 51 Mont. 167, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-northern-ry-co-v-benjamin-mont-1915.