108 Mo. App. 6 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
(after stating the facts). — Action for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff while a passenger on one of the defendant’s cars,.
“Q. You would go in the jury box having the same feeling, the hard feeling you think you have the right to have against the Transit Company? A. I could not get over that.
“Q. And it would require the defendant to make a stronger defense than if the defendant were some other company where you had not been injured at all by an act of the other company? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. In other words, it would require more evidence for you to render a verdict for the Transit Company than some other defendant? A. Yes, sir.”
That testimony disclosed a very strong bias in the mind of the venireman; not exactly a prejudice in the strict sense of that word; for he had not prejudged the particular case, nor formed an opinion about it. Yet it is plain that he cherished a bitter and resentful feeling against the defendant which would be apt to prevent a dispassionate consideration of the case. It is true the juror swore he did not think his feelings would affect his judgment and that he could give the defendant a fair trial. But his entire testimony produces the conviction that his conception of a trial which would be fair to the defendant, embraced the notion that it would be incumbent on the defendant to clear itself of blame for the accident by stronger evidence than other defendants, in similar actions, ought to adduce. Such
We have not found the decisions plentiful on the precise question of what bias against a party to a suit will disqualify a venireman; but. the whole spirit of Anglo-Saxon jurisprudence is that causes shall be tried by men who are free from partiality or bias for or against the litigants; which indeed is the essence of a trial properly so-called; for every one knows how much a feeling of sympathy or aversion will influence the mind in coming to a conclusion on given facts. The rule of Lord Mansfield, a judge particularly attentive to the composition of his juries and their selection by the summoning officers, was that “a juror should be as white as paper and know neither plaintiff nor defendant, but judge of the issue merely as an abstract proposition upon the evidence produced before him. He should be superior even to a suspicion of partiality.” It has been said that this rigor of qualification is now relaxed because of the difficulty of procuring such men when the news of events is generally spread by the press and that the prevalent test is the one stated by Chief Justice Marshall in Burr’s case: “That light impressions which may fairly be supposed to' yield to the testimony that may be offered, which may leave the mind open to a fair consideration of that testimony, constitute no sufficient objection to a juror; but that those strong and deep impressions, which will close the mind against the testimony that may be offered in opposition to them, which will combat that testimony and resist its force, do constitute a sufficient objection to him.” Thompson & Merriam, Juries, sec. 207. The standards.
The juror challenged in the court below was not in a mood that left his mind open to a fair consideration of the defendant’s testimony and hence was disqualified by Judge Marshall’s standard. In State v. Bauerle, 145 Mo. 1, 46 S. W. 609, the State’s challenge for cause of a venireman who was opposed to capital punishment on circumstantial evidence, was allowed, and the ruling was approved by the Supreme Court, although the venireman swore he believed he would convict the defendant on such evidence, if his guilt was established beyond a reasonable doubt; but that “it would take a great deal of it (i. e. circumstantial evidence), and it would have to be very strong. ’ ’ That man’s bias was like the bias of the juror challenged in this case, in that both were in a temper to resist the effect of the evidence they would have to weigh. Of course, an appellate court more readily sustains than reverses the ruling of a trial court on such a question, which is one largely of discretionary action. But the decision of a case by jurors not inspired by animosity against one of the litigants is so important in the administration of justice, that when a venireman is challenged ón his own confession of ill will towards one of the parties, deep-seated enough to prevent him from returning a verdict for such party on proof that would satisfy him were someone else concerned, we feel justified in saying it was error to overrule the challenge. McCarthy v. Railroad Co., 92 Mo. 536, 4 S. W. 516; State to use v. Clotham, Bank, 10 Mo. App. 482, 80 Mo. 626.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.