Shaw v. Fisk

21 Wis. 368
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 21 Wis. 368 (Shaw v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Fisk, 21 Wis. 368 (Wis. 1867).

Opinion

Downer, J.

The circuit court granted a new trial in this case because two of the jurors did not understand the English language. The counsel for the apjDellants contend that the affidavits used on the motion show that the jurors did have sufficient knowledge of the English language to enable them to understand the witnesses, the court, and the attorneys for [369]*369the respective parties, and to act as jurors intelligently. We think the affidavit of the jurors themselves on this point is conclusive. Each of them states “ that be does not understand English well enough to understand and act intelligently upon a jury; and that be could not upon said trial understand fully what the witnesses swore to, and that be bad to have an interpreter in the jury room to explain to him some of the material points of the testimony.”

But the appellants maintain that their affidavits ought not to have been received. We consider the authorities clear that the affidavits of jurors should not be received to impeach their verdict on account of anything that took place in the jury room; and it is doubtful whether their affidavits ought in any case to be received as to any of their deliberations, even as to a mistake of fact or law that influenced their verdict. In Sergeant v. Denniston, 5 Cow., 112, such affidavits were received to show that the jury, in making up their verdict, adopted an erroneous rule of damages — -a rule advanced by the counsel for the plaintiff in his argument, and not corrected by the court. It would not be going farther than the court did in that case, to hold that the affidavits of the two jurors in this case were rightly received even as to what took place in the jury room. We have some doubts, however, as to that; and we hold that the affidavits are sufficient, excluding that part which relates to what took place in the jury room, to prove that the two jurors had not such knowledge of the English language as would qualify them to act as jurors.

By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is affirmed.

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Related

Holub v. Cootware
170 N.W. 939 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1919)
Territory v. Taylor
1 Dakota 479 (Supreme Court of Dakota, 1877)
Perry v. Bailey
12 Kan. 539 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1874)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Wis. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-fisk-wis-1867.