Mullery v. Great Northern Ry. Co.

148 P. 323, 50 Mont. 408, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 42
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1915
DocketNo. 3,477
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 148 P. 323 (Mullery 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
Mullery v. Great Northern Ry. Co., 148 P. 323, 50 Mont. 408, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 42 (Mo. 1915).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE SANNER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The respondent, plaintiff below, brought this action to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the Great Northern Railway Company and its switching crew, two of whom were joined with the company as defendants. The answer denies negligence on the part of defendants or any of them, and pleads contributory negligence as well as assumption of risk. Trial was to a jury who determined the issues against the defendants, and from the judgment entered on the verdict, as well as from an order denying their [415]*415motion for new trial, they have appealed. Several questions are presented which will be considered seriatim.

1. Upon the selection of the jury and after twelve men had been passed for cause, the appellants each demanded and sought to exercise four peremptory challenges. This was not permitted, the court ruling that they were only entitled to challenge collectively. As the result, there were left upon the jury, after all the peremptory challenges thus allowed had been exhausted, three persons who had been severally challenged by the appellants but upon whose rejection they did not agree. Their contention is that under section 6740, Revised Codes, each of them was entitled to exercise four peremptory challenges, and this is [1] claimed to be based upon the language of the statute as well as upon its history. The section reads as follows: “Each party may challenge the jury or jurors, as follows: 1. The panel or array. 2. For cause. 3. Peremptory. There can be only one challenge on a side to the array or panel, which may be made by one or more of the parties. A challenge to the array or panel may be made and the whole array or panel set aside by the court when the jury was not selected, drawn, summoned or notified, as prescribed by law. Challenges to individual jurors are for cause or peremptory. Each party is entitled to four peremptory challenges. If no peremptory challenges are taken until the panel is full, they must be taken by the parties alternately, commencing with the plaintiff. ’ ’ It certainly cannot be said that this provision is unequivocal. If “party” means each individual upon either side of the cause, then a contradiction resides in the expressions “each party may challenge the array,” but “there can be only one challenge on a side to the array.” It is manifest, of course, that the use of the words “party” and “side” may have been studied and purposeful; but it is not manifest that the particular purpose was to allow four peremptory challenges to each individual defendant in every case. A case in which there is one plaintiff and two or more defendants, each exercising the same number of peremptory challenges, presents difficulties in the way of obeying [416]*416the mandate to challenge “alternately commencing with the plaintiff,” and these difficulties are not to be needlessly multiplied. It is said that if the legislature intended to require defendants to join in their' challenges, it could have said so in apt terms, such as appear in the provisions relating to criminal trials (sec. 9244, Rev. Codes). This is true. It is also true that if the statute had meant to authorize four peremptory challenges by each individual plaintiff or defendant, such intent could have found unmistakable expression. So, too, the fact that section 6740 first appeared in this state as section 1059, Code of Civil Procedure of 1805, supplanting a section of the Compiled Statutes (sec. 257, Code Civ. Proc.), which did expressly require parties on the same side to join in their challenges, is apparently of much significance. But this significance is more apparent than real. Words and phrases which have acquired a particular and appropriate meaning in law are to be construed according to such meaning (Rev. Codes, sec. 15). When section 6740 appeared for the first time in our Code, it was, and from an early date had been, universally held that the words “each party” used in the connection there presented, mean each side or each party litigant, and not each person of whom the respective sides or parties litigant are made up. (Schmidt v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co., 83 Ill. 405; Sodousky v. McGee, 4 J. J. Marsh. (Ky.) 267; Hargrave v. Vaughn, 82 Tex. 347, 18 S. W. 695; Bibb v. Reid, 3 Ala. 88; Snodgrass v. Hunt, 15 Ind. 274; Stone v. Segur et al., 11 Allen (Mass.), 568; Bryan v. Harrison, 76 N. C. 360; Blackburn v. Hays, 44 Tenn. 227; Wolf v. Perryman, 82 Tex. 112, 17 S. W. 772.) So far as civil cases were concerned, special expression was required, not to state this meaning but its opposite; and in the absence of unequivocal language to the contrary, the persons composing each side or party litigantwere required to join in the exercise of peremptory challenges. In criminal cases, and for very obvious reasons, the rule was exactly the reverse. Defendants jointly tried for a public offense were each presumed entitled to the number of peremptory challenges fixed by law, and an explicit [417]*417provision was necessary before they could be required to join; and this is the explanation of section 9244. Nor is the construction thus given to section 6740 without excellent reason. It is not to be supposed that a statute was intended to create an absurdity, and yet we have only to imagine the existence of several individual plaintiffs or defendants, each exercising four peremptory challenges, to see the possible result; instead of a speedy trial of the issues by an impartial jury, a long-drawn and expensive preliminary proceeding, resulting in the elimination of every talesman whose intelligence or freedom from bias might fairly commend him for the particular duty. As said by the supreme court of Illinois: “Had there been twenty tenants seeking damages, each holding by a separate lease, appellant’s argument would lead to those tenants being permitted to exercise sixty challenges while the petitioner could use but three, and that, manifestly, would not accord with the intent of the statute.” (Freiberg v. South Side Elevated R. Co., 221 Ill. 508, 77 N. E. 920.) We need not doubt, however, that since nominal defendants who are in fact hostile to each other are “parties litigant,” they are entitled to challenge as such within the meaning of section 6740. (Hargrave v. Vaughn, supra; Rogers v. Armstrong Co. (Tex. Civ.), 30 S. W. 848; McLaughlin v. Carter, 13 Tex. Civ. 694, 37 S. W. 666; Hogsett v. Northern Texas Traction Co., 55 Tex. Civ. 72, 118 S. W. 807; Levyn v. Koppin (Mich.), 149 N. W. 993.) Whether such hostility must [2] appear on the face of the pleadings, or whether it may be shown in some other way at the time the jury is selected, we need not determine because no such hostility was ever made to appear in any way in the case at bar. The answer was joint, was signed by attorneys representing all the appellants and asserted defenses common to all of them. As between them there was not, by pleading, representation or evidence, any conflict of interest disclosed or any issue of any sort. They constituted but one party defendant, and the ruling by which they were limited to four peremptory challenges was correct.

[418]*4182.

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Bluebook (online)
148 P. 323, 50 Mont. 408, 1915 Mont. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullery-v-great-northern-ry-co-mont-1915.