Steiner v. Custer

27 N.E.2d 160, 63 Ohio App. 440, 17 Ohio Op. 170, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 258
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 12, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 N.E.2d 160 (Steiner v. Custer) 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
Steiner v. Custer, 27 N.E.2d 160, 63 Ohio App. 440, 17 Ohio Op. 170, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 258 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Sherick, P. J.

Upon trial of this cause, which is an action for damages growing out of an automobile collision, the jury returned a verdict in defendants’ favor upon plaintiff’s petition, and in favor of plaintiff upon defendants’ cross-petition. A motion for a new trial was made and sustained upon the sole ground of misconduct of certain jurors by their silence and failure to disclose their participation in and connection with prior automobile accidents. The defendants appealed from this ruling, upon the theory that the order whs a final one because the court had grossly abused its discretion.

Upon a hearing in this court on November 1, 1939, this court reversed the order of the trial court, and in a short memorandum found with the defendants, and in part stated:

*441 “We have carefully examined these affidavits and depositions, and from an examination of the record, we find no outside testimony. We are of the opinion that there is nothing in these affidavits or depositions to show that any of the jurors are partial, biased, or prejudiced to the extent that would warrant a removal of any one of the jurors from the panel.”

We are now importuned by the appellee to certify this cause to the Supreme Court for review because of a seeming conflict with the judgments of the Eighth and Ninth Appellate Districts in Cleveland Ry. Co. v. Myers, 50 Ohio App., 224, 197 N. E., 803, and Kerr v. Goodrich Co., 22 Ohio Law Abs., 685. We are unable to perceive the parallelism of the three cases. In view of the law, applied as we see it, and the fact that the court of last resort of this state has not specifically spoken and established the rule applicable in such cases, and the further fact that increasing like assaults are now being made upon juries’ verdicts, we are disposed to unequivocally set forth our reasons for the reversal entered.

In the Cleveland Ry. case, supra, we note, that defendant propounded the question which a juror failed to answer, and concerning which it was held that such failure to answer denied him the substantial right to challenge the juror upon “suspicion of prejudice,” as contemplated by Section 11419-52, General Code. The verdict returned was in plaintiff’s favor. The same circumstances are true in the Kerr case, supra. In the case at issue plaintiff propounded the unanswered inquiry and the verdict was for defendants.

It is stipulated in the record made upon the hearing of the motion for a new trial, which is the only record before us, “that there was a question put to each juror if they or any relative by blood or marriage, had had any accident or any claims been made for injuries or accident”; and that the court had in *442 structed the jury that a failure to answer would be construed as an answer in the negative; and that the jurors failed to answer this question.

Upon the hearing on the motion, the depositions of four of the ten jurors who joined in the verdict were offered by plaintiff and received in evidence. This was all of the evidence considered by the judge, who was not the trial judge in the cause.

The juror, Sapp, testified that twelve years prior his car slipped on the ice. No other car was involved. This juror states that as he understood the question it involved the element of damages sustained from a collision with another ear.

From the juror, Blackford, it is established that she saw the car in question in this action shortly after the accident, but did not associate it with this case until the pictures of the car were offered in evidence and exhibited to the jury; that she mentioned it to another juror, who told her to forget it. This juror did not know the defendant, Custer. She was a cousin of juror, Staats, and knew that he had been in an accident.

The juror, Staats, testified that he and his wife had been in an accident one to two years prior, and that his wife sustained a serious injury, a fractured pelvis. He was not injured. His expenses were $1,500. He says there was no suit, but that “they made a settlement for the accident.” This juror says he understood the question to be, “Have you ever been in an automobile accident that resulted in a law suit?” He also states that once a truck, due to defective mechanism, got out of his control and he was thrown out.

Juror, Leonard, stated that her daughter once lost control of her car. No collision was involved. She had the same understanding of the question as did the juror, Staats.

All of these four jurors testify that the matters related in no way influenced them in arriving at their *443 verdict. The juror, Staats, offered a further bit of evidence which is illuminating. When asked if the fact of his wife’s injury did not influence his judgment, he replied, “It didn’t. If there was any chance for that to influence me, it was from the other side.”

Analyzing the testimony of the jurors, Sapp and Leonard, it is clear that their accidents were their own personal mishaps, in no way contributed to by any other person. Both had the idea that the question referred to contemplated collisions, damages, claims and suits. How in the world, had they answered in the affirmative, could their answers and a subsequent inquiry have raised a suspicion of prejudice! Sapp had no one to blame, except mother nature for the ice which caused his accident twelve years previously. If this fact were of any importance, as it was not, surely “the failure to disclose these remote facts did not constitute misconduct and resulted in no prejudice to the plaintiff,” as was held in Muskingum Watershed Conservancy District v. Funk, 134 Ohio St., 302, at 306, 16 N. E. (2d), 454. The daughter of the juror, Leonard, had no one to blame except herself or a defect in her car. To our notion, in these two instances, a claim of denial of a right to challenge on suspicion of prejudice, is simply preposterous. The same may be said with respect to the truck accident of juror, Staats.

The fact that the juror, Blackford, saw the wrecked car after the accident, but did not associate it with the trial, until after she was sworn and the case was in progress, and the photographs were offered in evidence, surely is no ground for a charge against her of misconduct. Inquiry by counsel might have disclosed the fact. She was honest in her responses to questions propounded. She states that her view of the car did not influence her judgment. We doubt that she was bound to speak when the pictures disclosed that she had seen the wrecked car. We perceive no *444 resulting prejudice to plaintiff’s case. Rather it is a violent presumption to presume that it influenced her judgment.

With respect to the juror, Staats, we think it significant that the one at fault settled for his wife’s injury without disputation. This juror’s answer to the inquiry, “If his wife’s injury did not influence his judgment,” is consonant with the only logical conclusion deducible therefrom, as is expressed in Cleveland Ry. Co. v. Myers, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E.2d 160, 63 Ohio App. 440, 17 Ohio Op. 170, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steiner-v-custer-ohioctapp-1939.