Strong v. District of Columbia

10 D.C. 499
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketNos. 14,706 and 14,736
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 D.C. 499 (Strong v. District of Columbia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strong v. District of Columbia, 10 D.C. 499 (D.C. 1881).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hagner

delivered the opinion of the court:

We have examined with care the numerous questions presented, and desire to express our obligations to the distinguished counsel engaged on both sides for the assistance they have afforded the court by their arguments. These questions will be noticed in order.

The first is the motion for a new trial.

The second, filed on the same day, is a motion in arrest of judgment upon the ground of alleged error in the admissions before the jury of evidence of services rendered by the plaintiff'for the District of Columbia, in the underpinning of various private houses in the city of Georgetown. Those two motions were overruled, and they are brought up here by bill of exceptions, according to the settled practice of the court as authorized by statute.

The next motion was that the judgment should be stricken out, in compliance with the terms of a stipulation filed in the case.

Then follows a motion to vacate the judgment because of fraud in its obtainment. These last two motions were certified to be heard here in the first instance; and, therefore, none of the questions involved are before us, technically, upon appeal.

The plaintiff’s counsel cited authority to show the care and circumspection that should be exercised by the courts in granting such motions, and their unwillingness to do so. That authority is properly applicable when the motion is made to strike out a judgment after the term has passed; but these motions were made at the term at which the judgment was rendered, and it is well understood that during the term the judgments of a court are malleable and wholly under its control, and will be moulded and corrected as may best promote the ends of justice. Courts, in acting on such motions, exercise a quasi-equitable jurisdiction, and will not hesitate to strike out a judgment which they believe is inequitable ; though they are most unwilling to disturb a ver[501]*501diet where they can see that substantial justice has been done.

The first and second reasons assigned in support of the motion for a new trial are in these words :

“ 1st. That the court was without authority to try the case in manner and form as the same was tried.
“ 2d. For error in directing the parties to proceed in the trial of said cause in the manner and form as the same was proceeded in.”

In support of these two reasons several objections to the verdict have been presented for our consideration.

• The first is addressed to the constitution of the jury. Was that jury, as it was constituted, authorized to render a verdict in this case on the 5th of October, 1878 ?

By the second rule of this court it is declared that the May term of the Circuit Court commences on the second Mouday of May, “ which term shall not continue beyond the third Saturday of July, except to finish a pending trial.” The third Saturday of July, 1878, was the 20th of that month.

It appears that on the 17th of July this case was called and a jury of twelve from the May panel was sworn, and the jury was then respited until Tuesday, the 10th day of September, and the rest of the May panel were discharged.

When .the court reassembled in September eleven of these jurors responded when called. James E. Bogerson, the twelfth juror, was excused from further service on the jury, and from three talesmen then summoned by the marshal another juror was sworn in his place, and on the next day another of the May jurors was excused, and a new juror selected from three talesmen was sworn in his place, so that the jury, as finally formed, consisted often of the May panel and two taken from the talesmen. It is worthy of remark that there was no striking by the parties, the court directing the clerk to swear the first of the talesmen on the list. The court then ordered that each of the jurors should be called and sioorn separately, and they were sworn accordingly.

Now, was there a “ pending trial ” on the third Saturday [502]*502ill July, within the meaning of the rule ? The only feature of a “ pending trial ” appearing on that day was the fact that a jury from the May panel had been sworn in the case. But that jury then impaneled did not try this case, although ten of the persons who constituted it were among the twelve persons who were impaneled and sworn afterwards, on the 11th of September, 1878, when it may well be questioned whether the only feature of a “pending trial,” existing on the third Saturday of July, had not then disappeared.

The court, under this practice, could equally in turn have excused every juror of the May panel and supplied their places successively from talesmen, and the jury would then, have been constituted without a single member of the May panel. And admitting that the jury as impaneled would have been a lawful one, and that the mere swearing of a jury fulfilled the condition of the rule as to “ a pending trial,” still, as this swearing of the jury took place on the 11th day of September, it could scarcely be considered as proof of a pending trial on the third Saturday of July.

For these reasons we are constrained to express very grave doubts whether that jury was competent to proceed to the trial' of that case in September, 1878.

' The case then came on to be heard on the defendant’s motion to strike out the plaintiff’s exceptions to the. auditor’s report, and some of them were stricken out and others retained ; whereupon the plaintiff moved for leave to file exceptions.

This motion was denied, and the jury was respited till the next day, and on that day was again respited to the 16th of September. On that day the plaintiff, with the consent of the defendant, moved the court for leave to withdraw a juror and continue the case, “and the same having been heard said motion was refused.” And thereupon the court ordered that its ruling as to the plaintiff’s leave to file his amended exceptions be set aside, and leave was granted the plaintiff to file them, and they were filed. The defendant thereupon moved for a continuance, which was refused, and the court ordered [503]*503that the trial proceed, and the jury were again respited until the next day.

In our opinion this refusal of the court to allow the continuance was error.

The exceptions to the auditor’s report formed an exceedingly important part of the pleadings, and here were new exceptions filed, new issues introduced into the cause, which were not part of it at the time the jury had been impaneled to try the case “ upon the issues joined ” at the time they were so sworn. For the filing of those new pleadings necessarily involves new and different issues. The defendant insisted that the court should have allowed this continuance in accordance with the fourth section of the act of Maryland of 1785, chapter 80, which reads as follows :

“ IV". And be it enacted, That the courts of law shall have full power and authority to order and allow amendments to be made in all proceedings whatsoever before verdict, so as to bring the merits of the question between the parties fairly to trial. And if amendment is made after the jury is sworn, a juror shall be withdrawn, and in all eases where amendments are made the adverse party shall have time allowed,

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

Related

Yellow Cab Co. of D. C. v. Rogers
34 A.2d 36 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1943)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 D.C. 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-district-of-columbia-dc-1881.