Plaintiffs-appellants, Charlotte and Thomas P. Hoosic (appellants), appealed the denial of their post-verdict motion for a new trial in this diversity tort action arising out of an automobile accident. In their complaint, appellants alleged that defendant-appellee, Mary D. Fedders (appellee), negligently operated her vehicle, causing appellant Charlotte Hoosic to lose control of her automobile and collide with a tree, thereby sustaining serious injuries. Thomas Hoosic, appellant’s husband, joined as a party-plaintiff, alleging loss of consortium as a result of his spouse’s injuries. Appel-lee defended the action on the basis of contributory negligence.
The case was submitted to a jury with special interrogatories on April 18, 1989. On April 19, 1989, the jury advised the district judge in writing that it was unable to arrive at unanimous responses to each of the interrogatories. In an effort to resolve the impasse, the court delivered a supple
*357
mental charge modelled on the traditional
Allen
instruction.
See Allen v. United States,
Subsequent to further deliberations, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the appellee. Appellants thereupon moved for a new trial, arguing that the
Allen
charge did not conform with the Ohio Supreme Court’s decision in
State v. Howard,
42 Oh.St.3d 18,
Appellants argued in this appeal that the district court erred with respect to each of these decisions. This court finds the assignments of error to be without merit. A supplemental
Allen
jury instruction is purely procedural, and consequently the district court was not compelled under the doctrine of
Erie R.R. v. Tompkins,
The Sixth Circuit has consistently announced that the traditional
Allen
charge is a permissible method of instructing jurors to reconsider their respective positions in an effort to arrive at a verdict without abandoning their conscientious convictions with respect to the proper outcome of a case. The district court in the case at bar “hewed closely” to the format of the original
Allen
charge and, thus, the charge was not coercive.
2
See Williams v. Parke,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court denying appellants’ motion for a new trial is hereby AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Allen charge was modified in the case at bar so as to reflect the fact that this was a civil case, implicating a preponderance of the evidence standard of proof.
. “In determining whether or not an instruction is 'coercive,' a reviewing court must consider the totality of the circumstances surrounding the instruction and evaluate it in context."
United States v. Markey,
