Latino v. Crane Rental Co.

630 N.E.2d 591, 417 Mass. 426, 1994 Mass. LEXIS 156
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 7, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 630 N.E.2d 591 (Latino v. Crane Rental Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Latino v. Crane Rental Co., 630 N.E.2d 591, 417 Mass. 426, 1994 Mass. LEXIS 156 (Mass. 1994).

Opinion

Wilkins, J.

The trial judge concluded, based on his post-verdict investigation, that the jury did not in fact reach the special verdicts for the plaintiff that were announced and affirmed in open court. He therefore granted the defendant Crane a new trial, the jury having been discharged more than a week earlier. When, however, a single justice of the Appeals Court, on the plaintiff’s request for interlocutory relief, ruled that the new trial order was “without force,” the trial judge ordered that judgment be entered pursuant to the verdicts returned in open court.

We allowed Crane’s application for direct appellate review to consider whether the recorded verdicts were properly vacated. We conclude that the trial judge was entitled to investigate the alleged failure of the jury to reach verdicts and that his initial order granting the defendant a new trial was correct. On other issues, we reject Crane’s argument that the judge should have entered judgment for it notwithstanding the verdict and Crane’s challenge to the dismissal of its third-party action seeking indemnity from General Steel Fabricators, Inc. (General Steel).

On December 16, 1987, the plaintiff Latino, an'employee of General Steel, was setting horizontal steel beams into a structure under construction in Worcester. The defendant Crane had leased a crane, with an operator, to General Steel to participate with General Steel employees in installing the steel beams. Latino was injured when he was struck on a leg by a beam that Crane’s employee had raised to the fourth floor level of the structure. The jury issues were whether Crane had been negligent, whether that negligence caused Latino’s injuries, what his damages were, and whether Latino had been negligent.

[428]*428The judge submitted separate questions to the jury on each of these issues.1 The transcript of the proceedings on September 19, 1991, shows that in answer to the special questions the jury found that the crane operator was negligent, that that negligence proximately caused Latino’s injuries, that Latino’s damages were $200,000, and that Latino had not been negligent. After reciting each of the questions and the answer to each, the clerk asked the jury’s foreperson whether the answer was correct as announced, to which she replied in the affirmative. The clerk then asked as to each answer, “So say you, twelve of you members of the jury?” The transcript indicates as to each question: “The jurors: Yes.”2

Eleven days later the trial judge set aside the special verdicts, declared a mistrial, and set the case down for a new trial based on the following findings:

“About a half hour after the jury was dismissed two jurors came to the lobby complaining that a minority of three, possibly four, were ignored when votes were counted by the foreperson.
“Shortly after the two jurors left the lobby, the defense counsel reported 'that three jurors complained to him about the verdict at which point he promptly stated he couldn’t talk to them and if they had any problem, for them to see the judge.
“The next morning I had the court reporter (a voice writer with a two track recording system) play back the jury’s answer to the clerk’s questions. To the first question, there may be a or some noes; to the second question, there were noes heard and the same to the third question.
[429]*429“On Monday, September 30, 1991 in the presence of counsel, I interrogated each juror individually in private. The questions were: (1) how did you vote on each question and (2) what do you remember the total vote was on each question in my attempt to determine whether the verdict was correctly reported. On each question the vote was 11 to 3, one vote less than 5/6 or the agreed upon twelve.
“On question three [damages], one juror stated the overall vote was 12-2, eleven jurors stated they voted for the reported amount, but thirteen jurors agreed the vote was less than twelve, ranging from five votes to not 12. The foreperson and two other jurors reported there were only six votes in favor of the amount of the award.”3

Latino’s challenge to the judge’s action is based principally on his position that the judge had no right to go behind the special verdicts returned and affirmed in open court. He does not challenge the judge’s findings as clearly erroneous. Any objection to the form of any question that the judge asked the jurors, to his use of the reporter’s tape, and to his failure to inquire about outside influences on the jurors were not seasonably raised below and come too late.

We conclude that the judge was entitled in his discretion and on his own motion to conduct the inquiry and that, in doing so, he did not improperly intrude into areas of jury activity closed to judicial inquiry.4 We stated the general rule against receiving juror testimony to impeach a verdict in Cassamasse v. J.G. Lamotte & Son, 391 Mass. 315 (1984), [430]*430as follows: “Juror testimony concerning the mental processes of jurors during deliberations, such as testimony that the jurors did not follow the judge’s instructions, or that they misunderstood the legal consequences of their verdict, or that they were influenced by matters not in evidence, is not permitted to impeach a verdict.” Id. at 317-318. See Commonwealth v. Fidler, 377 Mass. 192, 195-198 (1979) (inquiry of jurors permitted as to existence of extraneous influences, but not as to effect of those influences on jury deliberations); Shears v. Metropolitan Transit Auth., 324 Mass. 358, 361 (1949) (no inquiry permitted where verdict was unintended because of jury’s misunderstanding of legal consequences of their verdict); Woodward v. Leavitt, 107 Mass. 453, 460 (1871) (no juror evidence permitted concerning jury’s discussions or motives and influences affecting deliberations).

An inquiry into the question whether the jury" agreed on the special verdicts announced in open court is not foreclosed by this general rule. When a jury reached a verdict but it was improperly reported, we have allowed a correction to be made. “[A] discrepancy between the verdict actually agreed upon by the jury and that reported by them may, upon proper proof, be corrected after the separation of the jury.” Lapham v. Eastern Mass. St. Ry., 343 Mass. 489, 492 (1962). See Randall v. Peerless Motor Car Co., 212 Mass. 352, 386-388 (1912) (juror affidavits allowed to prove that “No” written on verdict slip did not reflect agreement of jury that intended answer be “Yes”); Capen v. Stoughton, 16 Gray 364, 367 (1860) (juror affidavits allowed to prove jury’s mistake in signing the wrong verdict form). We have not confronted the less likely circumstance that a jury reported a verdict when in fact they had not reached one.5

The reasons for allowing a verdict mistakenly entered to be corrected apply equally to allowing a verdict that was [431]*431never reached to be vacated. Conducting juror interviews designed to ascertain what the jury decided, and not why they did so, is sound “where the court surmises that the verdict announced differs from the result intended.” Attridge v. Cencorp Div. of Dover Technologies Int’l, Inc., 836 F.2d 113, 114 (2d Cir. 1987). See

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Bluebook (online)
630 N.E.2d 591, 417 Mass. 426, 1994 Mass. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/latino-v-crane-rental-co-mass-1994.