Raynor v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co.

126 P. 91, 70 Wash. 133, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1015
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 1912
DocketNo. 10068
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 P. 91 (Raynor v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raynor v. Tacoma Railway & Power Co., 126 P. 91, 70 Wash. 133, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1015 (Wash. 1912).

Opinions

Crow, J.

This action was commenced by L. G. Raynor and Edith Raynor, his wife, against Tacoma Railway & Power Company, a corporation, M. Mattison and George Carpenter, to recover damages for personal injuries to Edith Raynor, sustained in falling or being thrown from a street car operated by defendant corporation, and on which car the defendants Mattison and Carpenter were conductor and motorman. The action was dismissed as to the defendant Carpenter, and this appeal is prosecuted from a judgment in plaintiffs’ favor against the remaining defendants.

After the close of all the evidence, the trial judge charged the jury in writing, and at considerable length, on the law of the case. After doing so, he further instructed them orally as follows:

“I think I will say this further orally: If you do believe that any of the witnesses have testified falsely in any material matter in this case, then you are at liberty to disregard all the testimony of said witnesses except in so far as you find it [135]*135corroborated by credible witnesses in the case or facts and circumstances in the case.”

To this oral instruction, not covered by the written charge, the defendants excepted, for the reason that, in giving the same, the trial court disregarded the statute which requires the charge to be in writing and read to the jury. Appellants’ first assignment is that the trial court erred in giving the instruction orally. Subdivision 4 of § 339, Rem. & Bal. Code; Laws of 1909, page 184, ch. 86, § 1, provides that:

“The court must reduce the charge to be given to the jury to writing, and at the conclusion of the evidence he shall read his written charge to the jury. . . . If a stenographer shall be in attendance upon the trial of the cause, the court shall have the right to dictate the charge he desires to give to such stenographer, and to have the stenographer reduce the same to writing for him and a copy for each of the parties plaintiff and defendant. And the cost thereof shall be taxed as other costs in the action. . . . After the argument shall have been concluded, the jury shall retire to consider their verdict, and shall take with them to the jury room, among other matters proper to be taken to their jury room for further consideration by them, the written charge given them by the court.”

Section 395, Rem. & Bal. Code, relating to the record on appeal, provides that:

“All charges to a jury made wholly in writing, all instructions requested in writing to be given as part of a charge . . . shall be deemed and are hereby declared to become, upon being filed in the cause, or, as the case may be, embodied in a journal entry, — a part of the record in the cause, for all the purposes thereof and of any appeal therein; and it shall, not be necessary or proper, for any purpose, to embody the same in any bill of exceptions or statement of facts.”

Considering these sections together, it would seem that the requirement of § 339, that the charge be in writing, was intended to be mandatory. The purpose is three-fold: (1) to enable the jury to take with them to the jury room and have [136]*136for their guidance the exact written instructions of the trial judge upon all questions of law affecting the case; (2) to avoid any question during the argument of counsel, or deliberations of the jury, as to the law of the case; and (3) by filing the same, to make all written instructions a part of the record, without a statement of facts or a bill of exceptions.

In State v. Marion, 68 Wash. 675, 124 Pac. 125, a similar question was presented. There the oral instruction of which complaint was made did not state any rule of law applicable to the facts of the case. In holding no reversible error had been committed, we said:

“The statute provides that ‘the court must reduce the charge to be given to the jury to writing, and at the conclusion of the evidence he shall read his written charge to the jury.’ Rem. & Bal. Code, § 339, subd. 4. Appellant contends that the language of the court above quoted is a violation of this statutory provision. It is not claimed that the instructions upon the principles of law involved in the case were not given in writing. It is manifest that the court was not giving an instruction to the jury upon the principles of law, but was explaining orally what he had read. The explanation was in the interest of the accused. ‘Only when the statements of the court amount to a positive direction as to the law of the case will such statements- be regarded as an insti'uction within the meaning of the statute requiring instructions of the court to the jury to be in writing.’ Boggs v. United States, 10 Okl. 424, 63 Pac. 969, 65 Pac. 927.”

An examination of our opinion will show that we did not discuss or allude to § 395 supra, which provides that written instructions upon filing shall become a part of the record. We did hold, as shown by the above quotation, that the oral explanations of the trial judge, of which complaint was then made, were not instructions upon any principle of law applicable to the issues. We are not inclined to extend the rule there announced. It was within the law of this case that the jury should be instructed as to the proper rules by which they were to be governed in weighing evidence, in passing upon the credibility of witnesses, and in accepting [137]*137or rejecting their testimony. Respondent contends, that the oral instruction was not upon the law of the case; that in any event it was not erroneous; that no prejudice resulted; and that no reversible error was committed.

The difficulty with this contention is that it ignores the plain and positive mandate of the statute. If the statute may be ignored as to one oral instruction because it was not erroneous, then we would be compelled to ignore it as to every other oral instruction free from error, with the result that the entire body of the instructions might be orally given, provided they were free from error and correctly stated the law. The result of this would be that an appellant would be obliged to resort to a statement of facts or a bill of exceptions to make such instructions a part of the record, that the jury could not take the instructions to their jury room; and that § 339 would, for all practical purposes, become a dead letter by judicial repeal. Whenever the attention of a trial judge is directed to the fact that he may have omitted any written instruction which should be given, he can suspend proceedings until the omitted instruction is reduced to writing so that it may be read to the jury, and thereafter be taken to their jury room when they retire to deliberate upon their verdict. The oral evidence was in direct conflict in this action. It must have been necessary for the jury to reject, in part at least, that of some of the witnesses. It was required by the statute that they should have, in written form, the exact instructions of the trial court announcing the rule by which they were to be guided.

By the criminal code of Utah it was provided that the charge to the jury should be reduced to writing before given, unless by mutual consent of the parties it was given orally, that the jury when retiring might take with them the written instructions given; and that when written charges have been presented, given, or refused, the questions presented in such charges need not be excepted to or embodied in a bill of exceptions, but the written charges or the report, with the in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 P. 91, 70 Wash. 133, 1912 Wash. LEXIS 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raynor-v-tacoma-railway-power-co-wash-1912.