134 N.Y.S. 475 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1911
This is a motion for a new trial because of misconduct of the jury.
The plaintiff had sold to the defendant laundry machinery to equip his plant, with an agreement to properly install it. Claiming that it was not properly installed, the defendant had refused to pay, and this action was brought to recover for the machinery and the installation of the same. In part the defense was that an engine and extractor installed by the plaintiff were improperly installed and insecurely attached to the foundations. Plaintiff’s witnesses had testified that these articles had been placed upon concrete foundations and attached to the floor with iron bolts running from a board underneath the concrete through the- iron plate or base and fastened with nuts. A witness had also testified that, when the machinery was taken up by the plaintiff, as it later was, these bolts were still in the floor; and another witness testified that the condition of the place in which the
Four of the jurors, during the progress of the trial, without the knowledge of either party and evidently without any knowledge that such conduct was improper, went into the place where the machinery had been installed,- and some of them examined the floor and the place where the said engine and extractor were said to have been located. . In the affidavits "presented by the plaintiff for the motion, it is stated that the deponent went into the cellar with three men; one of them pointed to a place on the floor and said, “ that is where the engine stood ”; and, again, one of the three men said, “ that is where the extractor stood.” At a later day, two men visited the premises; one the deponent states was a juror on .the trial of the action, the other man he did not know; but, in conversation, one of the men said they were jurors in the case on trial and they would like to look in the cellar and see where the machinery, which was the subject of the trial they were jurors on, stood. In the afternoon- of the same day, two other men came, and one of these men felt around with a lead pencil in the holes which he saw in the. concrete there and said he did not think there were any bolts in there; and one of them said, “ that is just as they said.” Another one said, “ from the looks of that groove the thing did not stand solid.'”
In reply to the moving affidavits the defendant has presented the affidavit of' each of the jurors who did view the premises. In these affidavits there is no direct denial of what is stated in the plaintiff’s affidavits as to what occurred while the jurors were in the cellar, but each of the jurors has stated in substance that his action as juror was not at all influenced by what he saw, and that he went to the premises-to enable him to appreciate the evidence. The language in each of the jurors’ affidavits is substantially the same. It is a necessary inference, also, that the jurors went to the premises to see for themselves something.
This action of the jurors in visiting the premises was plainly misconduct." In Buffalo Structural Steel Co. v. Dickinson, 98 App. Div. 358, Judge McLennan holds that: “ It is
The misconduct of the jury is admitted, but it is claimed by the defendant that such misconduct did not affect the verdict. The misconduct being shown, the presumption is that it was harmful. In 38 Cyc., on page 1824, it is said: “ So the verdict is vitiated where it clearly appears, or it can reasonably be inferred, that the unauthorized view or inspection influenced the verdict, or where the court cannot determine, with any reasonable certainty, whether the result was affected or not; under these circumstances it will be assumed that it was.” In Matter of Vanderbilt, 127 App. Div. 408, the court said: “We cannot determine with cer
I realize that there has been a good deal of trouble and expense connected with the trial of this case, but the right to a trial by jury in open court, -where each party has full opportunity to be heard upon all matters of evidence which are brought to the attention of the jury and full opportunity to make exception or answer thereto, must be secured to each party; and, in a case like this,-where the court is not able to say that the verdict was not affected by information received by the jurors, when they went to view the premises, I am with much reluctance forced to grant the motion for a new trial.
I have given close attention to the affidavits of the jurors, hut they do not specifically deny any of the facts disclosed as to occurrences in the cellar when the jurors were examining the premises; and it is the most natural thing for. a juror who has innocently made such a mistake to explain
An order for a new trial may be presented.
Motion granted.