Tarabochia v. Johnson Line, Inc.

440 P.2d 187, 73 Wash. 2d 751, 1968 Wash. LEXIS 691
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1968
Docket39137
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 440 P.2d 187 (Tarabochia v. Johnson Line, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tarabochia v. Johnson Line, Inc., 440 P.2d 187, 73 Wash. 2d 751, 1968 Wash. LEXIS 691 (Wash. 1968).

Opinion

Rosellini, J.

This is an appeal from an order granting a new trial. The respondent, Tarabochia, who was injured while working as a longshoreman unloading cargo from the hold of a ship belonging to the appellant, was denied recovery by the verdict of a jury which found that the vessel was seaworthy. Affidavits obtained from two jurors by the respondent showed that they had performed a test or experiment in the jury room and that the results were “considered” by the members of the jury in arriving at their verdict. The trial court held that this was misconduct, justifying a new trial.

At the same time, the court dismissed a third-party action of the appellant against the stevedore contractor for indemnification. Because we have decided that the verdict must be reinstated, there will be no occasion to discuss the error assigned to this action of the trial court and the respondent Tarabochia will be treated as the sole respondent.

The evidence was that the respondent slipped and fell into a hole between plastic bags of urea, a crystalline substance, which he was unloading. There was a conflict in the evidence as to whether a number of plastic bags had broken and spilled urea and whether this urea had become wet, causing a slippery condition and making the unloading hazardous. The respondent’s shoes, a plastic bag like those in which the urea was stowed, and two samples of urea, were introduced in evidence, and were taken to the jury room without objection on the part of the respondent. Members of the jury mixed the urea with water, put it on the plastic bag, and “conducted an experiment” on the bag. The nature of the experiment was not revealed by the affidavits.

The respondent successfully contended in the trial court *753 and now contends here that this experiment was prejudicial to his cause and resulted in the adverse verdict.

As the appellant’s counsel pointed out during argument in the trial court on this motion, the results of the experiment performed by the jury were not disclosed in the affidavits secured by the respondent. They are not shown in the record. All of the testimony on the question at the trial was that a mixture of water and urea on a plastic bag would be slippery. The respondent suggests that it is possible, or even probable, that the jury’s test showed that this combination of substances would not produce a slippery condition. If we are to assume this to be the fact, we must also assume that all of the witnesses who testified on the subject were in error. This would mean that the witnesses on both sides testified out of ignorance or colluded to deceive the jury. We cannot assume such an improbability.

The trial court, however, was of the opinion that, under our holding in Cole v. McGhie, 59 Wn.2d 436, 447, 361 P.2d 938 (1962), the results of the experiment were immaterial. In deciding that a new trial was required, it quoted and relied upon this language from that case. 1 “ ‘ “ We cannot determine with certainty, nor is it necessary that we should, that the acts complained of did influence the verdict. It is sufficient cause for reversal if they are likely to do so.’ ” ’ ”

In the case of Cole v. McGhie, supra, the court had conducted a jury view of the scene of an accident in which the plaintiff had fallen over a timber which was designed to serve as a brake to the front wheels of cars parked in the defendant’s parking lot. The question at issue was whether the plaintiff should have seen the timber and avoided falling over it. An effort was made to simulate the lighting conditions on the night of the accident, and the members of the jury were instructed to walk between two parked cars, *754 as the plaintiff had done, to ascertain whether they could see the timber.

We held that this procedure was more than a jury view and was in fact an experiment, whereby the jury obtained new evidence not introduced at the trial, and that the conducting of this experiment was prejudicial error.

We also held that the plaintiff had not waived the error by inviting or acquiescing in the experiment, but on the contrary had protested and argued against it.

While it is true that we approved the rule that it is not necessary to show that an experiment influenced the verdict, but only to show that it was likely to do so, we did not hold that the results of the experiment are immaterial when considering the question of whether it was likely to influence the verdict. On the contrary, we based the decision on the fact that none of the jurors failed to see the timber and all of them succeeded in stepping over it — simply because they were looking for it, and this was the factor that made the conditions of the experiment unlike those which existed when the accident occurred. The jurors knew the guard rail was there; the plaintiff did not.

Thus it was because the result of the experiment was bound to be that the jurors did see the guard rail and did step over it that we held that the experiment was likely to influence the verdict.

There is no such certainty in regard to the outcome of the test performed by the jury in this case, unless that certainty is that the results of the test conformed to the uncontradicted testimony introduced at the trial.

There is nothing to indicate that the jurors obtained new evidence which was not introduced at the trial. In the case of State v. Burke, 124 Wash. 632, 637, 215 Pac. 31 (1923), relied upon by the respondent in support of the order, the jurors used a magnifying glass to examine a hacksaw which had been introduced in evidence, and found on it fine particles of wood dust. The presence of these particles tended to connect the defendant with the crime, but there had been no testimony about them at the trial. This court *755 held that this amounted to the reception of new evidence and stated the applicable rule as follows (quoting from 16 R.C.L. 299):

“If the effect of such an experiment is to put the jury in possession of evidence which should have been but was not offered on the trial, it is not permissible, but if the experiment involves merely a more critical examination of an exhibit than had been made of it in the court, there is no ground of objection. . . .”

In State v. Everson, 166 Wash. 534, 7 P.2d 603, 80 A.L.R. 106 (1932), the jury used a magnifying glass to examine a walking stick which had been admitted in evidence. This court cited State v. Burke, supra, and held that, inasmuch as the examination did not reveal any new material facts not already in evidence, it was merely a more critical examination of the evidence and did not vitiate the verdict.

In a Texas case, Ingram v. Texas, 363 S.W.2d 284, 285 (Tex., 1962), the defendant had testified that snuff which he was using when he was arrested smelled like rum, and said that this was what caused the arresting officer to think that he had been drinking.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
440 P.2d 187, 73 Wash. 2d 751, 1968 Wash. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarabochia-v-johnson-line-inc-wash-1968.