Petro, a Minor v. Donner

29 N.E.2d 177, 65 Ohio App. 55, 32 Ohio Law. Abs. 117, 18 Ohio Op. 289, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 469
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 1939
Docket17051
StatusPublished

This text of 29 N.E.2d 177 (Petro, a Minor v. Donner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petro, a Minor v. Donner, 29 N.E.2d 177, 65 Ohio App. 55, 32 Ohio Law. Abs. 117, 18 Ohio Op. 289, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 469 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

OPINION

By LIEGHLEY, J.

Plaintiff, a minor about twelve years of age, filed a petition in the Common Pleas Court' to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by him. while crossing Superior Avenue by being struck by an automobile driven by the defendant. The major injury claimed by him was a broken leg.

The case eventually came to trial and resulted in a verdict in his favor in the sum of Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00). Apparently not satisfied with the amount of the verdict, the plaintiff filed a motion for new trial.

Thereupon depositions of several jurors were taken with the obvious purpose of ascertaining whether all the answers given by those jurors on voir dire examination were true. Inquiry had been made of each of these jurors on voir dire examination whether either had sustained an accidental injury in times past; whether either had presented a claim for personal injuries to anyone; whether any claim had ever been presented to either of them by someone else claiming damages, etc., to all-of which on voir dire examination each juror had either answered in the negative or remained silent, the equivalent of the negative.

In these depositions, it was disclosed that one juror had sustained an injury two or three years before, consisting of a slightly bruised big toe by a taxicab turning a corner, accidentally running over her foot, for which a settlement for the sum of $10.00 was made. No loss of time or work resulted thereform.

Another juror admitted in deposition that some years prior while driving a truck on East 105th St., his truck skidded into an automobile as a result of which no one was injured and the *119 damage, if any, to either car was very insignificant. Also, on voir dire examination, this juror was asked whether in his business of investigating, engaged in at another time by him, the same included accidents for personal injury cases, which he answered in the negative. In deposition he admitted that among the many things that were assigned to him to investigate sometimes personal injury cases were assigned. Further than those circumstances nothing appeared to indicate bias or -prejudice on the part of this juror.

The trial court, as a result of these depositions, granted the motion for a new trial, and made the following entry:

“Motion for new trial is granted on the sole ground that two jurors did not fully disclose regarding former accidents.”

An appeal on questions of law was perfected from this order claiming that the trial court in making the same was guilty of an abuse of discretion.

On hearing, it was stated to us in this case, as it has been stated in cases heard by us heretofore, that the trial court was persuaded to grant the motion by virtue of the holding in the case of Cleveland Railway Company v Myers, 50 Oh Ap 224. The syllabus in this case reads:

“1. Where prospective jurors, on voir dire examination in a personal injury negligence case, are asked whether anyone of them had ever had a claim for personal injuries against anyone, and one juror who had, remained silent and sat in the case, the defendant, by reason of such misconduct on the part of the juror, is denied the right to challenge such juror on suspicion of prejudice, or peremptorily, and is entitled to a new trial.”

It is unfortunate that this decision has resulted in so much confusion, if all reports to us be true. The confusion arises from an interpretation that the rule applies to every failure to disclose. It is a generally accepted rule of construction that the syllabus of a case is written with reference primarily to the particular facts of that case. The holding in the Myers case does not and never was intended to control in any case such as this one.

The facts of the Myers case disclose a very severe injury sustained in an accident for which claim for damages was made, consisting of a “broken neck” as termed by the juror, followed by hospital and medical care for the period required to effect a cure, and the juror in the Myers case remained silent when' inquired of in respect to this prior experience.

It is beyond human belief that a jur- or, who sustained a broken neck or broken legs or arms, or any other injury which required long hospitalization and medical care could fail to recall such experience for the remainder of his life, and when inquiry is made regarding- such past experience he fails to disclose, the presumption should prevail that he failed to disclose from some ulterior motive of his own, or concealed same by reason of a mentality that should in and of itself disqualify him as a juror.

The incidents involved in the instant case are. so trivial and insignificant that a juror might very well not recall them. Such trivial incidents occurring years prior to the inquiry, unassociated with any other evidence or circumstances, fall far short of suggesting any suspicion of bias or prejudice.

The facts in the Myers case and the facts in the instant case present situations that approximate the two extremes. The facts of the Myers case clearly justify a trial court in granting a motion for a new trial for misconduct of a juror. The failure to disclose an accident resulting in such serious injury may well be presumed to have occurred from some motive resting in the mind of such juror of a nature prejudicial to one litigant or the other. Such, presumption may be rebutted but it should not be held to be rebutted except upon such proof as would appeal to the average prudent individual as, a rational excuse.

*120 The situation is just the opposite in the instant case. No presumption or inference of bias or prejudice would be presumed or arise from the failure to recollect for two or twenty years the insignificant occurrences which these jurors failed to recollect upon inquiry.

In an examination of a situation presented under the circumstances in this and similar eases, consideration should always be given to the circumstances surrounding an inquiry on voir dire. Twelve jurors are called to the jury box who are laymen and generally inexperienced in such matters. Doubtless they are solicitous about what is in the offing for them by way of questions. Suddenly court or counsel question them with respect to the experience or accidents in which they may have been involved for years gone by. The question compels them to search their minds and memories for occurrences significant or insignificant over a period of years. It is not within the normal intellectual powers of the average individual to remember every insignificant incident of his life over many years upon sudden inquiry. On the other hand, it is clearly a mental power of every average individual to clearly recollect that at some time, maybe years before, he was in an- accident wherein he sustained a broken back or broken legs or similar serious injury.

There is a wide gulf between the situation presented by the Myers case, and a situation such as presented in the instant case. Unquestionably, there is reposed in the trial judge a wide discretion to be exercised soundly in determining whether or not a particular or peculiar set of facts probably evidences bias or prejudices on the part of a prospective juror.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.E.2d 177, 65 Ohio App. 55, 32 Ohio Law. Abs. 117, 18 Ohio Op. 289, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petro-a-minor-v-donner-ohioctapp-1939.