State Highway Commission v. Walker

376 P.2d 96, 232 Or. 478, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 454
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 376 P.2d 96 (State Highway Commission v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Highway Commission v. Walker, 376 P.2d 96, 232 Or. 478, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 454 (Or. 1962).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff, 'State of Oregon, acting through the medium of its state Highway Commission, from a judgment which the circuit court entered in favor of the defendants, husband and wife, in an eminent domain proceeding.

The state presents only one assignment of error; it reads:

“The trial court erred in overruling the plaintiff’s attempt to exercise its peremptory challenge number three and in holding that plaintiff had exhausted its peremptory challenges even as to the one juror called to replace the one excused through the exercise by the defendant of its third peremptory challenge.”

The state’s brief declares:

“The only question to be presented on this appeal is the court’s alleged error in refusing to permit plaintiff to exercise its third peremptory challenge to juror Charles Wooldridge, who had been placed in the jury box in place of a juror through the exercise by the defendants of their third peremptory challenge.”

The defendants, referring to the Question Presented just quoted, state:

“* * * defendants feel a clearer way of expressing this would be to state that the Court refused to permit plaintiff to exercise a challenge plaintiff claimed to be its third and remaining challenge. * *

ORS 17.160 follows:

“The full number of jurors having been called shall thereupon be examined as to their qualifications, first by the plaintiff, and then by the defendant, and having been passed for cause, per[480]*480emptory challenges shall he conducted as follows: The plaintiff may challenge one and then the defendant may challenge one, and so alternating until the peremptory challenges shall be exhausted. After each challenge, the panel shall be filled and the additional juror passed for cause before another peremptory challenge shall be exercised, and neither party is required to exercise a peremptory challenge unless the full number of jurors are in the jury box at the time. The refusal to challenge by either party in the said order of alternation shall not defeat the adverse party of his full number of challenges, and such refusal by a party to exercise his challenge in proper turn shall conclude him as to the jurors once accepted by him, and if his right of peremptory challenge be not exhausted, his further challenges shall be confined, in his proper turn, to such additional jurors as may be called. The court may, for good cause shown, permit a challenge to be taken to any juror before the jury is completed and sworn, notwithstanding the juror challenged may have been theretofore accepted, but nothing herein shall be construed to increase the number of peremptory challenges allowed.”

ORS 17.155 grants each party in civil litigation “three peremptory challenges, and no more.”

When the trial got under way twelve prospective jurors were called to the jury box and thereupon the parties examined them as to their qualifications; all twelve were passed by each party for cause. Then the parties proceeded with the exercise of their peremptory challenges. They did so in this order: The plaintiff (state) exercised one; the defendant exercised one; the state exercised a second; the defendant exercised a second; then the state waived, but the defendant exercised its third peremptory challenge. At this point Charles Wooldridge, mentioned in the [481]*481state’s Question Presented, replaced the juror whom the defendant’s third peremptory challenge had excused. Wooldridge, of course, was not in the jury box when the state declined to exercise its third peremptory challenge. After both parties had passed him for cause the state declared that it had one peremptory challenge remaining and that it excused Mr. Wooldridge. The defendant conceded that the state had exercised only two peremptory challenges but argued that under the procedure governing the exercise of peremptory challenges prescribed by ORIS 17.160 the state was not entitled to exercise its third challenge. The trial judge sustained the defendant’s objection.

The jury’s verdict, which was unanimous, was in favor of the defendant and unsatisfactory to the state. We have mentioned that the sole contention presented by the state on appeal is that the trial judge erred when he refused to permit the state to exercise its third peremptory challenge.

ORS 17.160 was enacted in 1909 as Laws of Oregon 1909, 'Chapter 41,- page 89. In 1869 the State of Washington enacted a statute reading as follows:

“The jurors having been examined as to their qualifications, first by the plaintiff and then by the defendant, and passed for' cause, the peremptory challenges shall be conducted as follows, to wit:—
“The plaintiff may challenge one, and then the defendant may challenge one, and so alternately until the peremptory challenges shall be exhausted. The panel being filled and passed for cause, after said challenge shall have been made by either party, a refusal to challenge by either party in the said order of alternation shall not defeat the adverse party of his full number of challenges, [482]*482but such refusal on the part of the plaintiff to exercise his challenge in proper turn shall conclude him as to the jurors once accepted by him, and if his right be not exhausted, his further challenges shall be confined, in Ms proper turn, to talesmen only.” §4987, Ballinger’s Codes and Statutes of Washington.

In 1902, seven years before our legislature enacted OBS 17.160, State v. Vance, 29 Wash 435, 70 P 34, dealt with a situation substantially similar to that which is now before us; and in so doing, ruled:

“* * * The state by waiving these two challenges did not thereby lose the right to exercise them afterwards on jurors not in the box when the challenges were waived. They simply relinquished their right to challenge the jurors then in the box. The situation after the defendant had exercised its fifth and sixth peremptory challenges was that the state was willing to take the twelve men as they were then in the box as the jury to try the case, and the announcement that the state was satisfied with the jury meant that the state was satisfied with the jury as it then stood, and that they waived their fourth peremptory - challenge to the jury as it then stood. At that time, had the defendant’s counsel refused to challenge further, under our statute the right of both parties to challenge would have been exhausted, because no new jurymen were called into the box after the waiver of their peremptory challenge. When the state announced that they waived the fourth peremptory challenge, the only reasonable construction that can be placed upon that is that they waived this challenge as to the jurors then in the box, but, if the personnel of that jury then in the box was changed by bringing in new men, then they had a right to exercise these challenges as to the new * # #» jurors.

The rule announced in the decision from which [483]*483we just quoted was reaffirmed in 1927 in State v. Schmidt, 141 Wash. 660, 252 P 118, which declared:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Villeda
Oregon Supreme Court, 2024
State v. Villeda
526 P.3d 1213 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2023)
State v. Shipley
98 P.3d 407 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2004)
Baker v. English
932 P.2d 57 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
376 P.2d 96, 232 Or. 478, 1962 Ore. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-highway-commission-v-walker-or-1962.