Vaughn v. Scade

30 Mo. 600
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 30 Mo. 600 (Vaughn v. Scade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughn v. Scade, 30 Mo. 600 (Mo. 1860).

Opinion

Scott, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action for negligently driving a carriage, whereby a child of the plaintiff was injured, by which the child’s services were lost and expenses incurred in curing him. There was a judgment for the plaintiff.

The case originated in the' law commissioner’s court, and was tried there. On the cause being called for trial, the plaintiff demanded a jury, and • thereupon the defendants required that the action be tried by a jury of twelve men, objecting to a less number; but the court refused to have empannelled a jury of more than six, to which the defendants excepted.

The law commissioner’s court is a court of record, exercising its jurisdiction according to the course of the common law. The act organizing that court prescribes that in all jury trials in said court the jury shall consist of six lawful jurors, or a less number, if the parties shall consent thereto. (Sec. 6.) The eighth article of the declaration of rights annexed to the constitution of this state declares that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate. This is not the first occasion on which the attention of this court has been called to this provision in the declaration of rights. In the case of the Bank of Missouri v. Anderson, 1 Mo. 176, decided as early as 1822, it was the opinion that the provision in the bill of rights under consideration required that the jury should consist of twelve men, and, among other things, that they should be-unanimous in their verdict. Certainly if there are any essential requisites in a jury trial, among them must be the number of jurors and unanimity in their verdict. If the declaration of rights does not preserve these elements of the trial by jury from change, then it is in the power of the general assembly to take away from that mode of trial all those incidents which have endeared it to the people among whom it has prevailed. If, in cases where the right to a trial by jury is secured, the number of jurors can be reduced from twelve to six, with equal propriety it [604]*604can be reduced to two or four. The term “ trial by jury” was well known and understood at the common law, and in that sense it was adopted in our bill of rights. Of course the non-essentials of that institution, such as concern the qualification of jurors, the mode of summoning them, and many other such matters, were left to the regulation of law. The constitution is preserved in retaining the substance of that form of trial as it was known and practiced among those from whom we have derived it. This subject has undergone examination in other tribunals, and we find them concurring in those views. They unite in declaring that where there is a constitutional guaranty of the right to a trial by jury, twelve is the number of which the jury must be composed*. (Work v. The State of Ohio, -, 296; Byrd v. The State, 1 How., Miss., 177; The State v. Cox, 3 Ark. 436; Dowling v. The State, 5 Sme. & Mar. 664.)

We are of the opinion that, as the court of the law commissioner is a court of record, having common law jurisdiction and proceeding according to the course of the common law, that in trials in that court a party is entitled to a jury of twelve men when he demands it; but if the trial proceeds with a less number, and he takes no exception on that ground, he can not afterwards avail himself of the error except by motion in arrest of judgment, which of course would be made within the time prescribed by law or the rules of court. In the absence of one party, the opposite party should see that his proceedings are regular. There is nothing in the bill of rights which would prevent the parties, by consent, from trying their causes in the law commissioner’s court as heretofore with six jurors, but in such cases the consent, should always be entered on the record.

In coming to the conclusion that a jury in the court of the law commissioner must consist of twelve men, we do not wish it to be understood that it follows as a matter of course that a jury in a justice’s court must likewise consist of twelve men. We are of the opinion that justices’ courts, not being courts of record, are not within the constitutional [605]*605provision, and that it’would be competent for the legislature to make all the causes in such courts triable by the justice alone. Juries did not form a part of the machinery of such tribunals at the common law. It is not disputed that the article in the bill of rights securing the right to a trial by jury did not extend to proceedings in courts of chancery. The legislature in its discretion may give assistance to justices in the exercise of their jurisdiction, and that may be any number of men that is deemed expedient. Moreover, from the judgments in justices’’ courts there is an appeal to the courts of common law-where the parties are entitled to a trial by jury unless it is waived. (Emerick v. Harris, 1 Binn. 416 ; Work v. The State of Ohio,-, 296; Norton v. McLeary, 8 Ohio, N. S., 205.)

We see no errors in the giving or refusing instructions such as would warrant a reversal of the judgment. The only thing that surprises us is their number. We can not conceive how parties expect to aid juries in coming to a correct verdict by such a multitude of instructions. Instead of enlightening the jury, they serve only to confound them. It would be a great deal better if the courts would take this matter in hand and instruct the jury in such a way as would aid them in forming their verdict. From the instructions offered on both sides, the court might frame one or two which would be sufficient in most cases.

He who undertakes to drive a carriage in a crowded street must exercise a diligence proportionate to the dangerous nature of that employment. He must know that there are women and children in the street, and that their necessities compel them to be there. If one is found off the crossing, he is not therefore liable to be run over. When, by a diligence proportionate to the nature of the service in which one is employed, he can avoid injuring one who is found off the crossing, it is his bounden duty to use reasonably that diligence in order to do so. A driver who sees a child lacking discretion in the street, should exert more care to avoid doing an injury than he would use for the safety of a person whose [606]*606presumed age and experience would prompt him to take steps necessary for his own security.

There was no foundation laid for examining the defendants for each other. It was not shown that the matter offered to be proved was such that, whilst it would authorize a verdict in favor of the defendant examining his co-defendant, it would not also be favorable to the defendant who was sworn.

We do not see what the state of the health of the plaintiff’s wife had to do with the case, nor the arrest of the driver.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded;

Judge Ewing concurring. Judge Napton absent.

[continued TO VOL. XXXI.]

[607]*607INDEX. A ABATEMENT. See Practice, -24. ACCOUNT. 1. Where a creditor in stating an itcconnt between himself and his debtor gives a credit therein to the latter'by mistake, or is induced to give such credit on terms and ‘conditions that are not afterwards complied with by the debtor, he ought to be permitted to avail himself of these facts in a suit against the debtor to recover the item for which the credit was allowed. Moore v. Albright, 249. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. See Conveyance. Justices’ Courts. ADMINISTRATION. See Guardian. 1.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Mo. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughn-v-scade-mo-1860.