Stone v. City of Florence

28 S.E.2d 400, 203 S.C. 527, 150 A.L.R. 953, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 6, 1943
Docket15597
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 S.E.2d 400 (Stone v. City of Florence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. City of Florence, 28 S.E.2d 400, 203 S.C. 527, 150 A.L.R. 953, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 112 (S.C. 1943).

Opinion

Circuit Judge L. D. Eide, Acting Associate Justice,

delivered the unanimous Opinion of the Court:

This is an appeal by the defendant from an order granting a new trial upon the ground that two or three jurors, while the jury were viewing the premises, had conducted an experiment, and had thereby taken evidence outside of Court, to the prejudice of the losing party, a verdict having been later rendered in the case in favor of the defendant. The case was tried at the September, 1942, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Florence County before Hon. G. Duncan Bellinger, presiding Judge, and a jury.

The complaint' of Olive D. Stone, the plaintiff above named, alleges among other things that on or about June 8, 1941, at about 10:30 P. M, the plaintiff after leaving her son’s car, which had stopped a little west of the walkway *529 into her yard at her home in Florence, stepped off the curb to pick up a paper which had dropped out of the car, when her foot sank into an uncovered and unprotected clrainhole just at and partially under the curb; and that she fell forward as her foot went into the hole, breaking two boiies in her ankle and receiving a terrific shock due to the unexpectedness of the fall and the severe pain of the injured ankle. And she prays judgment against the City of Florence, the defendant above named, in the sum of $15,000.00 alleging that her injuries were due to the negligence, carelessness and mismanagement of the defendant in the maintenance and repair of its streets, in leaving open on a much used public street a drain or hole “more than eleven inches. deep;” in failing to warn the public and plaintiff in particular by lights or other devices of the presence of a deep, uncovered hole at the edge of the curb;,in constructing its street so as to leave a deep hole unprotected and uncovered and concealed to pedestrians by the curb at a place where they would step into the street in boarding cars or to cross from one side to the other; and there are other specifications of a like nature.

The answer of the defendant contains what is equivalent to a general denial, and also affirmatively alleges that the City of Florence constructed a system of drainage, “inclusive of the drainholes or inlets,” according to the best engineering principles and standards; and that the plaintiff resided at the same place in the City of Florence from the time the drainage system was installed until and after the time she suffered her alleged injuries, and that she knew, or should have known, the type, location and construction of the drainage inlet complained of, and that if she was injured as alleged it was due to her sole negligence and carelessness.

It is unnecessary to review the testimony taken at the trial other than to observe that there is no issue whatever as to the type, measurements and contours of the curb, gutter and drainage basin involved. A full and uncontradicted description thereof was given by the surveyor sworn in be *530 half of the plaintiff, and his map was introduced in evidence. And he testified definitely that the distance from the top of the curb to the bottom of the hole was ten and a half inches.

At the end of the first day of the trial, but before the plaintiff had closed her case, the jury was by agreement of counsel for the respective parties “allowed to go out this night and view the locus in question.” And the presiding Judge carefully instructed them that they were to go around and “take in the whole ground situation so that you may have a picture in your minds as to what exists there when the testimony is put up, just as to the conditions and surroundings at the time of the occurrence.”

And at the close of all the testimony, on the following day, on motion of counsel for the defendant, with the consent of counsel for the plaintiff, the jury was again sent to view the scene, the presiding Judge stating that counsel for the parties had “agreed for you to go out there and view the scene in the day time so that you can see it just as it is in the day time.” And the Court further instructed the jury as follows: “Gentlemen, when you go out there you are to view it just as it stands now but bear in mind what the testimony was as to the condition of the night, etc., the time this occurred and try to visualize while you look at it what the conditions were on the occasion, taking into consideration whatever testimony is as to the condition of the night, etc.”

Upon the return of the jury to the Court room the case waE submitted to them after a very clear and comprehensive charge by the presiding Judge, who had in the course of the trial overruled the defendant’s motions for a nonsuit and for a directed verdict. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, as hereinbefore stated.

Thereafter and in due time the attorneys for the plaintiff moved for a new trial upon the ground that while the jury was viewing the place “at least two and possibly three members of the jury stood on the curb and stepped in the hole *531 experimenting with the nature and condition of the hole or drain in controversy.”

The motion is based upon affidavits of two Deputy Sheriffs and of the son of the plaintiff, each of whom used the identical language above quoted from the motion. There is also an affidavit by the plaintiff herself to the effect that she did not know of this alleged experiment until the day following the jury’s verdict, when she was so informed by her son, and her statement to this effect is corroborated in his affidavit.

The presiding Judge granted the motion of the plaintiff for a new trial by his order dated February 13, 1943, and the exceptions of the defendant challenge the correctness of his conclusions; there being only one fundamental question involved in the appeal, to wit, whether the Court erred in holding that the jury, or certain members thereof, conducted an experiment or took testimony out of Court in the meaning of the law.

The statement contained in the motion and in the affidavits upon which it is based that jurors wére experimenting with the nature and condition of the hole or drain has no factual support whatever unless it be the fact that “at least two and possibly three members of the jury stood on the curb and stepped in the hole.” In other words, the statement that members of the jury were experimenting is manifestly just a conclusion. And in our opinion the mere fact that some of the jurors stood on the curb and stepped in the hole is wholly insufficient in itself to warrant the conclusion that an experiment was conducted, unless we are to enter into the field of surmise or conjecture. Such action on the part of two or three jurors may well have been purely incidental to their viewing the premises, remembering that the Court had instructed them to take in the whole ground situation so that they might have a picture in their minds as to the conditions and surroundings. Surely jurors will not be presumed to have been guilty of misconduct, and such an act *532 on their part seems too simple and natural to be deemed in any sense an experiment; and we are at a loss to see how it could have been in any wise prejudicial.

An experiment, as appears from the definition in the.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.E.2d 400, 203 S.C. 527, 150 A.L.R. 953, 1943 S.C. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-city-of-florence-sc-1943.