Starr v. Southern Cotton Oil Co.

81 S.E. 776, 165 N.C. 587, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 315
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 776 (Starr v. Southern Cotton Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Starr v. Southern Cotton Oil Co., 81 S.E. 776, 165 N.C. 587, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 315 (N.C. 1914).

Opinion

"Walker, J.,

after stating tbe case: Tbe court erred in permitting tbe questions which were asked and objected to, as above stated. They were clearly calculated to prejudice tbe defendant and to prevent a fair and impartial trial, which is tbe first and most important object in tbe administration of justice. Tbe law seeks to ascertain tbe truth and, upon it alone, to adjudge tbe rights of tbe parties. It was entirely irrelevant to this controversy to inquire whether any of tbe -jurors were employed by or connected with an insurance company, without admission or proof that tbe defendant was indemnified by such a company. Tbe question plainly carried with it tbe suggestion that defendant was so insured, when there was not tbe slightest proof of tbe fact. It was not only objectionable, as calculated to prejudice tbe jury by tbe suggestiveness of tbe question and its implication that defendant did carry insurance of that kind, and therefore tbe defendant would not have to shoulder tbe recovery, but in its stead, some unknown and, in this, case, mythical company, which stood behind it, and this without any proof to sustain tbe implied charge, but it placed tbe defendant before tbe jury at a great disadvantage, in that it may be that there is no such insurance, or if there is insurance, it may not be of tbe kind that covers this risk or liability of defendant, as in Clark v. Bonsal, 157 N. C., 270, or in some other respect or for some other reason it may not protect the defendant. So that tbe defendant is left defenseless against any such attack, which was made, not openly, but by innuendo. Tbe fact that there was no attempt to show that there was such insurance suggests that, in this case, it did not exist, and yet the jury is permitted to act upon the hypothesis that it does exist, and will shield the defendant from any harm.

*591 The capital vice of tbis kind of examination, if allowed, is that it is based upon the supposition, not always ill-founded, that a juror is prone to be more just and considerate toward his friend or associate, or one whom he knows and with whom he may be thrown in daily contact, and towards whom he entertains a more friendly disposition, than towards a mere stranger. Somehow, we instinctively lean that way, it is thought; whereas a jury .should be free from any such influence or bias, in order that they may execute justice- and maintain the truth, and not be swerved by any such consideration from giving a fair and impartial verdict. While our juries are required by statute to be men of good moral character and of sufficient intelligence to properly discharge their important duties, they are not expected to be superhuman and always to successfully resist the appeals to the weaker side of their nature. The law provides against this contingency by excluding from the case all extraneous matter calculated, whether intended or not, to sway prejudicially the minds of the jurors and thus frustrate the very purpose of all trials. It is true that this Court held in Featherstone v. Cotton Mills, 159 N. C., 429, that the question was properly asked the jurors, if they were employees of a particular indemnity insurance company mentioned in that case, towit, the Maryland Casualty Company, but it was shown, as a foundation for the question, that the defendant, in fact, had a policy of insurance in that company which indemnified and protected it to the amount of $5,000. The same question was allowed to be asked of the jurors in the case of Norris v. Cotton Mills, 154 N. C., 480; but in that case also the evidence showed that the defendant had indemnity insurance in the Maryland Casualty Company, and the jurors were asked the specific question if any of them were employees of that company. In Lytton v. Manufacturing Co., 1 57 N. C., 332, a new trial was granted, in the defendant’s appeal, on the ground that evidence was admitted to the effect that the defendant had employer’s liability insurance. The Court said: “In addition to the incompetency of Little’s declarations as mere hearsay, the subject-matter of the declaration is universally held to be incompetent and discon *592 nected with, the inquiry, before the court. Evidence that the defendant in an action for damages arising from an. injury is insured in a casualty company is entirely foreign to the issues raised by the pleadings, and is incompetent. By some courts it is held to be so dangerous as to justify another trial, even when the trial judge strikes it from the record,” citing numerous cases.

In the'recent case of Walters v. Lumber Co., ante, 388, we approved a ruling by which plaintiff - was permitted to’ ask a juror if he had any business connection with the Fidelity and Casualty Company, which, had insured defendant against losses, including the one then being investigated. But it will be seen that in Walters’ case, and in the others where a similar ruling was made, it was either proved or admitted that there was such insurance, and it thus enabled the plaintiff more wisely and discreetly to exercise his right of challenge. But how does that reason apply to this case? Not at all. So far as the record discloses, if a juror had any interest in or business connection with an indemnity company, it could not have affected his attitude towards the plaintiff or prejudiced him in any way, and it could not have done so, of course, unless it had been shown that the particular indemnity company had insured the defendant against ultimate liability for the plaintiff’s claim of damages. The, vital fact'is missing in this case, and we are left with nothing else than' something which is only calculated to bias the jury against the defendant, and perhaps to seriously prejudice it, if it should turn out that there is, in fact, no such insurance, and we must assume, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that defendant is not so indemnified.

In Walters v. Lumber Co., supra, we referred to the well considered case of Akin v. Lee, 206 N. Y., 20, where the Court of Appeals of New York decided a.question similar to the one now presented to-us. It said, by Justice Gray: “If we admit a doubt as to the first ruling, the error in the second is too serious to be disregarded. We have but recently held, following a rule already laid down by us, that evidence that the defendant, in an action for negligence, is insured in a casualty company is in *593 competent, and its admission- justifies an order for a new trial of the action. (See Simpson v. Foundation Co., 201 N. Y., 479, 490). Such evidence, almost always, is quite unnecessary to the plaintiff’s case, and its effect cannot but be highly dangerous to the defendant’s, for it conveys the insidious suggestion to the jurors that the amount of their verdict for the plaintiff is immaterial to the defendant. It was a highly improper attempt on the plaintiff’s part to inject a foreign element of fact into his case, which might affect the jurors’ minds, if in doubt upon the merits, by the consideration that the judgment would.be paid by an insurance company. While frequently, in the exercise of the authority conferred upon this Court, we disregard technical errors, when we see that they do not affect the merits of the controversy, the error committed in this case is of too grave a nature to be put aside as merely technical.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 776, 165 N.C. 587, 1914 N.C. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starr-v-southern-cotton-oil-co-nc-1914.