Hanley v. Great Northern Ry. Co.

213 P. 235, 66 Mont. 267, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 20
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1923
DocketNo. 5,036
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 213 P. 235 (Hanley v. Great Northern Ry. Co.) 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
Hanley v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 213 P. 235, 66 Mont. 267, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 20 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

ME. CHIEF COMMISSIONEE LAW

prepared the opinion for the court.

The plaintiff, Dr. Hanley, claims to have been injured on December 22, 1917, near Oswego, Montana, by reason of a head-on collision between the train upon which he was being carried as a passenger and another of defendant’s trains. He contends that while riding in the day coach he was thrown forward from his seat by a sudden stopping of the train, thereby severely wrenching his body, straining his muscles, and rupturing his abdominal walls, by reason of which he became sick and sore, and at all times since has suffered and now suffers physical and mental pain. He asserts that his injuries are of a permanent character, and that they have in the past and will in the future seriously interfere with the practice of his profession (that of the general practice of medicine), and claims damages as a' result of his injuries in the sum of $15,000. The defendant admits negligence and liability for any damages to the plaintiff proximately caused by the collision, but denies that the plaintiff sustained any damages proximately or otherwise by reason of the accident.

The action was commenced on December 18, 1919, came on for trial December 20, 1920, and a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $15,000 was returned on December 31, 1920, and judgment entered thereon January 3, 1921. The appeal is from the judgment. Twenty-nine errors are- assigned, all of which, so far as it is necessary for us to consider them, may be. grouped into three divisions, namely: Objections to the jury panel; rejection of testimony offered by the defendant; and an excessive award of damages by reason of the passion and prejudice of the jury.

The cause was first set for trial on December 6, 1920. On December 2d the presiding judge learned that only three cases on the trial calendar would be ready for trial, and excused from attendance for the trial term the entire panel of jurors drawn from jury box No. 1. He then ordered that the names of fifty jurors be drawn from box No. 3 to report December 7th, and reset the trial of this cause for that date. Twenty-[271]*271eight of the fifty so drawn reported, together with one of the original panel who had not received his notice to not appear. The defendant’s challenge to this panel was sustained after the plaintiff had withdrawn his opposition to the challenge. The judge then made an order that fifty names of jurors be drawn from box No. 1 to report on the morning of December 14th at 9:30. Of this venire only seven of the fifty reported. The court then made an order reciting the statutory prerequisites to a drawing from box No. 3, that fifty jurors be drawn from box No. 3 to report at 1:30 P. M. of that day. The record is silent as to how many responded to this call. The court again, after the withdrawal by plaintiff of his opposition, sustained defendant’s challenge to this panel. ■ The cause was then reset for trial on December 28th, and on December 15th the court made the proper order for a panel of jurors, consisting of seventy-five names, to be drawn from box No. 1, to report December 28th at 9:30 A. M. Seventy-five were drawn in response to this order, thirty-nine served with process, eighteen reported for duty, and sixteen qualified. Only two absentees of this venire filed affidavits claiming exemption from jury duty. No record of the reasons for nonattendance, other than that the absentees were excused, was made, no reasons assigned or given. The panel was challenged by the de^ fendant on the ground that certain jurors had not been duly served with process, and others improperly excused. This was submitted on the records and files of the court, and denied. The court proceeded to select the trial jury, and, when each party had exercised two peremptory challenges, thereby exhausting the panel, he made the usual statutory order for drawing forty jurors from box No. 3 to report at 5 P. M. of that day. It does not appear just how many of this panel reported. The defendant, however, challenged the panel for the reason that there was no lawful justification for drawing jurors from box No. 3. The challenge was denied without evidence or argument in support thereof, the trial jury completed, and the cause proceeded to trial.

[272]*272Bespondent suggests that the decision of this court in Lee v. Hayden, 63 Mont. 589, 208 Pac. 596, is determinative of the questions here presented concerning the trial jury. With this contention we do not agree-. The only question before the court in that case was whether the jurors drawn from box No. 3 by proper order under the provisions of section 8911, Bevised Codes of 1921, could by order of the court under certain conditions become a part of the regular trial panel. This question was decided in the affirmative. The many irregularities presented in this ease were not present in the ease of Lee v. Hayden. The record presented here is not such as to enable us to determine whether there was error in the proceedings to obtain the trial jury. Except in a few instances, the failure of the jurors to attend is unexplained. Just how many and for what reasons the jurors were excused by the judge does not appear. The action of the judge in arbitrarily discharging the regular venire drawn from box No. 1, and thereupon drawing a jury from box No. 3 for the trial of the cause, was of course unauthorized in law, and a denial to the defendant of his right to try his case to a jury drawn from the county at large, and the judge properly sustained a challenge to this panel. It then appears that out of the fifty jurors drawn from box No. 1 to report one’ week hence only seven of the fifty reported, a most unusual condition. And again the court ordered that fifty names be drawn from box No. 3 to complete the trial jury. Defendant’s challenge, however, was sustained to this panel and finally we have a situation whereby sixteen jurors qualified for service out of a venire of seventy-four names drawn thirteen days prior to the date of the trial. As a result of this situation, the court again resorted to box No. 3 to complete the trial jury.

The reasons for the necessity of requiring, so far as reasonably possible, a jury drawn from the county at large, are obvious, and it is unnecessary for us to enumerate or discuss them here. The court is not authorized to arbitrarily draw a jury from box No. 3 for the trial of cases of this character. He can do so only when, in his opinion, it is [273]*273necessary because of the existence of certain conditions. Neither is the court authorized to arbitrarily excuse jurors and bring about the conditions which invoke the exercise of his discretion as to the use of box No. 3 for trial jury purposes. This was the first case of the term to be tried, and we find the court without a sufficient number of jurors from which to select a jury, should both parties elect to use the challenges to which they were entitled. The conditions surrounding the selection of the jury for the trial of this case cannot be regarded with favor. The record, however, is silent on so many matters of importance that we are unable to say whether the presiding judge did or did not abuse his discretion in excusing jurors or in drawing from box No. 3, and, in the absence of a proper record from which we might determine the question, we cannot presume irregularity of official conduct. The presumption is that official conduct has been regularly performed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
213 P. 235, 66 Mont. 267, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanley-v-great-northern-ry-co-mont-1923.