Union Electric Company v. Turner

446 S.W.2d 430, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 541
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 6, 1969
Docket25121
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 446 S.W.2d 430 (Union Electric Company v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Electric Company v. Turner, 446 S.W.2d 430, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 541 (Mo. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

MAUGHMER, Commissioner.

This is a condemnation suit brought by the Union Electric Company against C. Ray and Mariana Turner. By this condemnation a perpetual easement was established across the defendants’ farm so that the Union Electric Company might construct electrical transmission lines. The easement covered a tract 150 feet wide, 2,583 feet long and included 8.89 acres.

Trial resulted in a verdict for defendants in the sum of $6,750.00. The court sustained the company’s motion for a new trial on the stated ground that the court erred in refusing to sustain the company’s challenge for cause of the juror John Jennings. The defendants have appealed. Did the court err in granting a new trial ? That is the only question presented by this appeal.

Inasmuch as the whole appeal has to do with the qualification of the juror John Jennings, we incorporate the pertinent parts of the voir dire examination as it concerns him.

QUESTIONS BY MR. SPENCER. (Attorney for Defendants)

Q. Are any of you presently being represented by the firm of Smith and Lewis in any legal matters, or have you recently or do you regularly call on them for any legal matters ? The only reason we would ask this is * * *
A. y cs bir.
Q. Mr. Jennings.
A. Not represented by them, but as far as I know it is still pending, a workmen’s compensation case that they were representing the * * *.
Q. The other side?
Mr. Jennings: The other side.
Q. * * * Now do any of you work— have you ever worked for Union Electric Company? Do you have any close relatives that work for this company? Have you been connected with them in any way that would give you — that would tend to give you a business connection with this company ?
A. Yes sir.
Mr. Jennings: I had — they filed a condemnation suit against me approximately three years ago which we later settled out of court.
Q. That was settled out of court.
Mr. Jennings: Yes sir.
Q. Would the fact that you had that case, would it affect your determination in this case? Could you sit and hear the evidence and make a decision from the evidence in this case and from the instructions given by the court?
Mr. Jennings: I feel that I could.

QUESTIONS BY MR. LEWIS (Attorney for Union Electric Company).

Q. Now, Mr. Jennings, you said you had a suit once by Union Electric Company against you. Was it this same kind of a transmission line easement?
A. Yes sir, it was.
Q. And that was settled out of court you say?
A. Yes, it was settled out of court.
*432 Q. Did this occurrence cause you to have any harboring of ill feeling against the company so that you couldn’t hear this case fairly and decide it properly?
A. There was some ill feelings at the time but I think that is gone now. I don’t feel any effect from it.
Q. All right. Now you also said, and I wasn’t aware of this, but you said we were on the other side of a workmen’s compensation case with you.
A. Yes sir.
Q. What is the name of your employer ?
A. I am the employer.
Q. Oh, I see. Is it a farm policy?
A. A farm policy — I don’t know enough about it myself, all I know is that the only contact I have had with you is several letters.
Q. You were hurt on the job while you were working in other words.
A. No, the other employee was working for me. James Smith.
Q. Oh, I see. Well I have not worked on this particular matter. That is why I am so ignorant about this case. Are we on your side or his side?
A. His side.
Q. In other words we are representing your employee who was hurt.
A. That is right.
Q. And you are covered by a workmen’s compensation policy?
A. No I am not covered.
Q. I thought you had said previously it was a workmen’s compensation case.
A. It is supposed — we are supposed to have a hearing before workmen’s compensation.
Q. Oh, I see.
A. Now there is another company involved. There is an amendment to make me primary, where now I am secondary.
Q. Oh, I see. In other words, the company is trying to get out of it and put it on you ?
A. Right.

This juror Jennings was one of the ten members of the jury which returned the verdict for defendant. Three years before this trial Union Electric had brought an identical suit against him and although it was settled out of court, Mr. Jennings stated that it had caused him to have ill feelings against the company at the time. In addition, the law firm of Smith and Lewis, counsel for Union Electric here, also represented one James Smith, former employee of juror Jennings, in a workmen’s compensation claim, and in which case an effort was being made by some unnamed company to have juror Jennings declared to be the primary employer of the allegedly injured workman. This matter was active and pending. We believe the challenge should have been sustained and Mr. Jennings excused.

In the following brief memorandum opinion the court gave its reasons for granting a new trial.

“As to the refusal of the Court to excuse juror John Jennings for cause: Although the trial Court has broad discretion in determining whether or not a juror is qualified to sit in a particular case, and the juror is not to be the judge of his own qualifications, the circumstances may be such that refusal to excuse a juror may be an abuse of judicial discretion. The fact of former condemnation by the very plaintiff involved in this case coupled with the fact of pending litigation (albeit presently before the Workmen’s Compensation Commission) in which counsel for plaintiff’s firm was an adversary of the juror would lead to the conclusion that the Court abused its discretion in refusing *433 to excuse said juror for cause. Such an obvious conflict should not subject the juror to further examination on the point, noi the Court to the exercise of any discretion therein.
“Accordingly, for error in refusal to excuse juror Jennings for cause, plaintiff will be granted a new trial.”

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Bluebook (online)
446 S.W.2d 430, 1969 Mo. App. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-electric-company-v-turner-moctapp-1969.