Schmotzer v. Sixt

108 N.E.2d 154, 91 Ohio App. 295, 48 Ohio Op. 392, 1952 Ohio App. LEXIS 738
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 18, 1952
Docket22326 and 22327
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 108 N.E.2d 154 (Schmotzer v. Sixt) 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
Schmotzer v. Sixt, 108 N.E.2d 154, 91 Ohio App. 295, 48 Ohio Op. 392, 1952 Ohio App. LEXIS 738 (Ohio Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

*296 Thompson, J.

The two companion cases before this court on appeal on questions of law were tried at the same time to the trial judge and jury in the Common Pleas Court. One case involves a suit by a minor, by his mother and next friend, to recover for personal injuries suffered when thirteen years of age and while riding a bicycle; the other suit is by the mother in her own behalf for loss of services and for expenses. Defendants in each case are a minor and his mother, the minor being the operator of a motor vehicle with which the minor plaintiff collided. A separate verdict was returned in favor of defendants in each case and a judgment in accordance therewith was thereupon rendered by the court.

Various errors are alleged in this court, the principal errors asserted being misconduct of the jury, misconduct of the prevailing parties, and error of the trial court in overruling a motion for new trial in each case, based on the 'alleged misconduct, and other claimed errors.

We have examined the record in these cases with care. It becomes unnecessary to discuss the facts relating to the accident itself. Important, so far as alleged misconduct of the jury and of the prevailing party in each case is concerned, is the fact that during the course of the trial, which commenced on J une 13,1951, a view of the premises by the jury was requested by defendants’ counsel, and such view was granted by the ' court pursuant to Section 11420-2, General Code. Upon return of the jury from a view of the premises on June 15th, the bill of exceptions shows no exceptions taken by the parties to any events transpiring on that occasion. It appears, however, from various affidavits filed by attorneys for plaintiffs in connection with their motions for new trials, that certain events occurred during the inspection of the premises, to which we are required to give attention.

*297 At the hearing of - the motion for new trial in each case, the bailiff in charge of the jury testified that at the scene of the accident counsel for plaintiffs in the presence of counsel for defendants complained that the minor defendant was talking to the jurors. The bailiff then stated:

“So I went up and I told the defendant he cannot speak to the jury: told him that was orders from the court, and thén I asked jurors No. 1 and 5 if he had talked to them and they says he did but they paid no attention to him.

“Q. But they did say he had talked to them? A. Yes, but they paid no attention to him; didn’t know what he said.”

The bailiff stated also that these facts were made known informally to the trial judge in his chambers by counsel after return from the view of the premises. No cross-esamination of the bailiff was had.

An affidavit of juror Bridget Murray was also presented at the time of the motions for new trial, in which the juror stated that while viewing the premises she overheard the minor defendant remark to his mother, the second named defendant, that “they are trying to prove that I was cutting this way instead of out further. ’ ’

A deposition of the defendant, mother of the defendant minor, was also introduced in evidence to substantiate further the motion for new trial, in which she stated that her son did not speak to members of the jury while viewing the premises. She stated that her son was talking to her and not to the jury at the time of the remarks complained of. The deposition of the minor defendant, also offered in evidence for purpose of the motion for new trial, denied that he talked to the jury at the scene of the accident. The testimony of juror Henry Woloszynek was also offered. This juror, when asked whether defendants *298 talked to him during inspection of the premises, replied: “they did talk to some one. They didn’t talk to me.”

The affidavit of juror Yiola Riedel was also offered, and in this affidavit she declared that at the time of viewing the premises she overheard the minor defendant say “this is where it happened.” She testified also that defendant, in making the remarks quoted, pointed to a spot around the bend in the road. The witness declared further that she heard the bailiff instruct the defendant not to talk to anyone, and that the bailiff at the same time cautioned the jurors not to talk to the defendant. Affidavits of both attorneys for plaintiffs were also submitted, stating that the jury was talked to by the defendant at the scene of the accident, that both attorneys at once called the bailiff’s attention thereto, and that the bailiff immediately instructed defendants and the jurors to refrain from speaking to each other.

We have recited substantially the entire evidence before the trial court on this phase of alleged misconduct relating to conversations (by the minor defendant at the scene of the accident. This court is committed to the well recognized principle that the verdict of a jury is not to be impeached except by evidence aliunde. Wicker v. City of Cleveland, 150 Ohio St., 434, 83 N. E. (2d), 56. The extent of this principle was discussed by this court in a recent case. Hutchinson, Admx., v. Laughlin, Jr., 90 Ohio App., 7, 102 N. E. (2d), 875, a decision referred to by counsel in argument. That case appears to us inapplicable to the circumstances outlined, since any misconduct at the time of the viewing of the premises was that of the defendant and not that of the jurors. The remarks of the minor defendant, whether for the benefit of the other defendant or for that of the jurors, are in no sense to be approved. His conduct was wholly im *299 proper and it emphasizes once more the necessity for utmost caution on the part of a trial judge and most explicit instructions by him in delivering a jury into the care of a bailiff in connection with any viewing of premises • authorized under Section 11420-2, General Code.

We are confronted with the question whether the conduct recited on the part of the minor defendant requires, without more, that a new trial be granted in these eases. In deciding that question, we note that all the circumstances transpiring at the scene of the accident were known to counsel at the time. The bill of exceptions discloses the point at which the court adjourned on the third day of the trial in order to permit the jury to visit the scene of the accident. When court resumed, the bill of exceptions is silent as to any incident during the visit to the premises. We would not now, as a reviewing court, have any information as to what transpired at the scene of the accident were it not for the motions for new trials and the testimony there introduced. That testimony discloses that the circumstances first formally complained of at the time of the argument of the motions for new trials were previously reported to the trial judge informally by counsel, upon return from the scene of the accident. No formal exception, however, was taken by counsel for plaintiffs at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
108 N.E.2d 154, 91 Ohio App. 295, 48 Ohio Op. 392, 1952 Ohio App. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmotzer-v-sixt-ohioctapp-1952.