62 Me. 302 | Me. | 1873
This is an action to recover damages for an injury sustained by the plaintiff through a defect in a highway of the defendant town. A verdict was rendered against him, which he moves to set aside for the misconduct of one of the jury.
Washington Robbins, the juryman in question, testifies that while the cause was on trial and during an adjournment, he went to the defendant town, distant some twenty miles from the place of trial; that he was at the place where the accident was said to have happened; that after he got there two inhabitants of the defendant town came along and stopped; that he was standing looking at the premises; that they spoke to him, making talk about the rock and road; that ho inquired of them if this was the place where the accident happened; that they said it was; that they were talking about the rock and the road all the time he was there; that the substance of the conversation was that the road was wide .enough and passable for anybody at the time of the accident; that they showed him where the rock, that was taken out, lay at the time of the accident; that if it laid where they said it did, no part of it was any obstruction to the road'; that he could not tell at that time from the appearance of the face of the earth how far the innermost point .of the rock projected into the road; -that he with the assistance of these men, made admeasurements; that they told him they were familiar with the road before the accident;
The jury were sworn in all causes betwixt party and party committed to them to give a true verdict therein, according to the law and the evidence given them. R. S.; c. 82, § 68. It is apparent that two of the jury did not give a verdict according to the evidence given, but that their judgment was based upon evidence not given them; upon the unsworn statements of two of the citizens of Washington, and upon hearsay statements. “The court,” observes Steele, J., in McDaniels v. McDaniels, 40 Vermont, 363, “set the verdict aside, not as a punishment to any one, but in justice to themselves as well as to the defendant, that the trial may be conducted fairly so that the verdict, when finally rendered, may be entitled to the respect of both parties and the confidence of the court, as the result of a trial substantially according to law, and upon the evidence in court.” Bradbury v. Cony, ante, page 223. It would be difficult to imagine a case of greater misconduct than the juryman details in his testimony of what he saw, heard and did, and for which he is justly amenable to punishment. One of the men, Hibbert, who had the conversation with the juryman, knew that he was a member of the panel before which the cause was being tried. If one inhabitant can be allowed to hold conversations with a juryman, making statements material and relevant to the cause, so may others, and there will be no limit to such interference. The town must be held responsible for the wrong doing of its citizens as a party is for his own misconduct. Heffron v. Gallupe, 55 Maine, 563.
It is admitted that neither the plaintiff nor his counsel had any knowledge of the facts proved till after the trial.
There was no occasion for the report of the whole evidence.