Hamburg-Bremen Fire Ins. v. Pelzer Manuf'g Co.

76 F. 479, 22 C.C.A. 283, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2149
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 1896
DocketNo. 168
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 76 F. 479 (Hamburg-Bremen Fire Ins. v. Pelzer Manuf'g Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamburg-Bremen Fire Ins. v. Pelzer Manuf'g Co., 76 F. 479, 22 C.C.A. 283, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2149 (4th Cir. 1896).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge

(after slating the facts as above). The first question raised by this appeal is whether equity has jurisdiction. The fact of the mistake is undeniable. The evidence of the foreman and the jurors who were examined as witnesses malces it manifest that the jury had agreed to render a verdict for the amount now claimed, and that they supposed that the foreman was announcing a verdict for the full amount of all the policies and interest, which was the verdict they had agreed upon. It was in the nature of a clerical mistake made by the foreman, by which he misstated the verdict which had been agreed upon. The matter is susceptible of the clearest and most indubitable proof. The case is the same in principle as if the mistake had been the other way, and the foreman had, contrary to the finding of the jury, announced a verdict for $2,500 more than the plaintiff had claimed in its declaration or proofs. The general rule is that after the term the judgment is beyond the control of a court of law. Bronson v. Schulten, 104 U. S. 410-415. So that, when this mistake was discovered, it was beyond the general powers of the court which entered the judgment to disturb it. The provisions of the Code of South Carolina (section 195), as construed by the supreme court of South Carolina, would appear not to he applicable to the case of a plaintiff, but only to the case of the party against whom the judgment is taken. Steele v. Railroad Co., 14 S. C. 331; Clark v. Wimberly, 21 S. C. 141. It is apparent, therefore, that the complainant was without any remedy at law at the time the mistake was discovered. It is not: to be denied that in a proper case, and where the party is without remedy at law, equity has jurisdiction to grant relief with respect to a judgment which by reason of mistake is inequitable. And this equity jurisdiction has frequently been exercised with inspect to a judgment which! does not give effect to the actual verdict agreed upon by the jury. Cohen v. Dubose, Harp. Eq. 102; The Hiram, 1 Wheat. 440; Phillips v. Negley, 117 U. S. 665, 6 Sup. Ct. 901; 2 Story, Eq. Jur. § 1571; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 871; Partridge v. Harrow. 27 Iowa, 96; Barthell v. Roderick, 34 Iowa, 517.

. The next assignment of error relates to the admission of the testimony of five of the jurors as to what: was the verdict upon which they had agreed. They all testified, in substance, that after finding for the plaintiff in the cases in which the witnesses were examined, and the remaining six cases were submitted to them, they had but one common understanding, and that was that they were to find as they had found in the first cases for the full amount of the policies and interest. They knew of no reason why there should be any discrimina tion with regard to the case in question, and they did not make any, but came into court having agreed to give the full amount sued for with interest. It is contended that the admission of this testimony violates the rule which excludes the evidence of jurors to impeach a verdict by testimony as to their deliberations, or to show upon what grounds the verdict was rendered, or to show [482]*482a mistake or misconduct of the jurors in arriving at the verdict. But the testimony objected to only tended to show what the verdict was, not how it had been arrived at, and to prove that the verdict read out in court by the foreman was not their verdict, but the result of an oversight by him in making the announcement. Without weakening at all the strictness of the general rule, testimony to this effect has been sanctioned in well-considered cases, and does not fall within the strong objections which properly exclude the statements of jurors in a different class of cases. Speaking of affidavits of jurors impeaching their verdict, it is said by Chief Justice Taney in U. S. v. Reid, 12 How. 366.

“It would perhaps hardly he safe to lay down any general rule upon this subject. Unquestionably such evidence ought always to be received with great caution. But eases might arise in which it would be impossible to refuse them without violating the plainest principles of justice.”

And in Mattox v. U. S., 146 U. S. 147, 13 Sup. Ct. 50, this ruling is reaffirmed, and the exclusion of affidavits as to facts occurring in the jury room was held reversible error.

In Capon v. Stoughton, 16 Gray, 364, it was held that it was admissible at a subsequent term to permit jurors to testify that the verdict signed by them was not the verdict the jury supposed they were signing, and was not the one they had agreed upon and intended to sign. The opinion of Chief Justice Bigelow fully discusses the reasons for the rule excluding the testimony of jurors as to their deliberations in making up their verdict. He says:

“The evidence of the jurors is offered only to show a mistake in the nature of a clerical error which happened after the deliberations of the jury had ceased, and they had actually agreed upon their verdict. The error consisted, not in making up their verdict on wrong principles, or on a mistake of facts, but in an omission to state correctly in writing the verdict to which they had, by a due and regular course of proceeding, honestly and fairly arrived. * * * No considerations of public policy require that the uncontradicted testimony of jurors to establish an error of this nature should be excluded. Its admission does not in any degree infringe on the sanctity with which the law surrounds the deliberations of jurors, or expose their verdicts to be set aside through improper influence's, or upon grounds which might prove dangerous to the purity and steadiness of the administration of public justice. On the contrary, it is a case of manifest mistake of a merely formal and clerical character, which the court ought to interfere to correct, in order to prevent the rights of the parties from being sacrificed hy a blind adherence to a rule of evidence in itself highly salutary and reasonable, but which, upon principle, has no application to the present case.” Jackson v. Dickenson, 15 Johns. 309-317; Peters v. Fogarty, 55 N. J. Law, 386, 26 Atl. 855; Dalrymple v. Williams, 63 N. Y. 361.

We are of opinion that under the circumstances of this case the testimony of the jurors was rightly admitted and considered. It was uncontradicted in any respect, and the truth of it was plainly manifest.

It is also alleged as error that, even if it be conceded that the mistake in the entry of the verdict and judgment do give jurisdiction to a court of equity to grant relief, the appellee, its agents and attorneys, have been guilty of such negligence as to forbid its interposition; that, as the verdict was delivered by the foreman in open court, and the judgment affirmed on appeal, and paid and satisfied, [483]*483and the mistake not discovered until nearly three years after the verdict was rendered, there must have been such negligence as should preclude a court of equity from relieving the parties from the result of their own inattention. A'fair statement of the proper rule is, we think, contained in 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 856:

“As a second requisite, it has sometimes been said in general terms that a mistake resulting from She complaining party’s own negligence will never be relieved. This proposition is not sustained by the authorities.

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76 F. 479, 22 C.C.A. 283, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamburg-bremen-fire-ins-v-pelzer-manufg-co-ca4-1896.