100 Ky. 728 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1897
delivered the opinion of the court.
Tliis was an action for damages, alleged to have been caused by-the gross neglect of Jacob and Henry Bickel, the appellants, in making an excavation for a cellar on Market street in Louisville, extending into or near the sidewalk of the street by leaving it exposed without a proper barrier or lights to prevent persons, passing on the street from falling into it.
It was alleged that the appellee, in passing down (Market street, fell into this excavation, whereby he received injuries which resulted in permanent impairment of his mind. The averments of appellee were denied, and contributory negligence was pleaded.
No affidavit of any person is filed to show that Gallagher was not in fact sworn as a juror; on the contrary, upon motion and grounds for a new trial, filed immediately after the verdict was rendered, it appeared by the joint affidavit of Gallagher and three others who signed the verdict that “they were sworn as jurors in the above-styled action, which jury returned a verdict herein on the;-5th day of April, 1894, and were present at all the deliberations of said jury.”
Thompson on Trials, volume 1, edition of 1889, page 6, says: “When the entries of the record are contradictory as to the number of jurors who sat at the trial, so much of the record as states that the jury consisted of twelve men will be regarded as stating the truth, and tbe contradictory statement will be rejected as a clerical error, the legal presumption being that the portion of the record is true which answers the requirements of the law unless the contrary be made to appear by the bill of exceptions.”
We conclude, therefore, that the trial court did not err in overruling the motion to vacate the judgment as Amid upon this ground.
The only other ground upon which much stress is laid in argument is the ground, set up in a motion for a new trial, of malice or prejudice on the part of the jury, amounting to actual bias. By the affidavits filed on the motion it appears, that a few days before the trial Walter Stone and Jacob Bickel, one of the appellants, had become very hostile on account of charges
Upon the evidence introduced by the affidavits we concur with the lower court that a case for setting aside the verdict on the ground of malice, amounting to actual bias, was not made out. So far as regards the appellant, Jacob Bickel, whatever objection existed to Stone on account of the alleged hostility exhibited by him toward Bickel, should have been taken advantage of as soon as Bickel discovered the fact that he was on the jury, by motion to discharge the jury upon affidavit stating the fact, or the objection must be con
The further objection that the verdict was contrary to the evidence, and that the weight of the evidence showed that there was a sufficient barrier protecting the excavation was properly overruled by the trial court. There was sufficient evidence to warrant the jury in finding the verdict which they did, and the fact that the court might possibly not have given the same finding would not justify it in invading the province of the jury and setting aside the verdict.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed with damages.