This appeal presents questions concerning jury misconduct. Faye S. Ferguson sued James Walter Fountain, a minor, and his father for personal injuries which she sustained when James Walter Fountain drove a vehicle into the rear of her vehicle. Fountain’s defense was that he was confronted by an emergency when the brakes on his vehicle suddenly and unexpectedly failed. The trial court sustained a motion for instructed verdict for the defendant father, and rendered a judgment on a jury verdict that plaintiff take nothing as to James Walter Fountain. Plaintiff moved for a new trial grounded upon jury misconduct, but the trial court overruled her motion. She then appealed to the court of civil appeals without bringing forward a statement of facts. That court reversed the trial court judgment because of the jury misconduct about which plaintiff complained.
The answers to the special issues show the jury (1) found James Walter Fountain failed to keep a proper lookout, (2) refused to find that the failure to keep a proper lookout was a proximate cause of the collision, (3) refused to find that Fountain was driving at an excessive rate of speed, (4) found Fountain failed to turn his vehicle to avoid the collision, (5) but such failure was not negligence, (6) refused to find that Fountain drove his vehicle too closely behind the vehicle in which plaintiff was riding, (7) found that, on the occasion in question, Fountain was confronted by a sudden emergency, (8) and he did what an ordinary prudent person would have done under the same or similar circumstances. The jury further found that plaintiff sustained damages in the sum of $6,476.62.
Plaintiff filed a motion for new trial in which she complained of jury misconduct. At the misconduct hearing, plaintiff presented three jurors who testified about three forms of jury misconduct. There was evidence that the foreman, on two occasions, said that every man was innocent until proved guilty beyond a shadow of a doubt, and that he also told other jurors that the answers to the first two issues, stated above, were immaterial in view of the answers to the damage issues. Another juror made the statement that she once had the experience of her brakes failing and that she could understand how it could have happened to Fountain.
The one complaining about jury misconduct has the burden to prove the overt act of misconduct, that it was material misconduct, and “from the record as a whole that injury probably resulted.” Rule 327, T.R.C.P.; Crawford v. Detering Co.,
The trial court’s order overruling the motion for new trial impliedly found that misconduct did not occur, since it contained no express finding of misconduct. Monkey Grip Rubber Co. v. Walton,
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The point in time during jury deliberations at which misconduct occurs is an important factor in determining the probability of injury. Baird’s Bread Co. v. Hearn,
It is not necessary for us to determine whether a conflict in findings would exist as plaintiff contends, since plaintiff failed to prove that misconduct of the jury probably caused the adverse answer to the proximate cause issue. The record which plaintiff has brought forward consists only of the transcript and the record of the testimony developed at the misconduct hearing. The statement of facts on the main trial is not before us. Rule 327 expressly fixes the burden upon the one complaining of misconduct to prove that “it reasonably appears from the evidence both on the hearing of the motion and the trial of the case and from the record as a whole that injury probably resulted. •* * *” Ross v. Texas Employers’ Ins. Ass’n,
The term “record as a whole” has been broadly construed to include “any and all parts of the record which may throw light on the question of injury.” Barrington v. Duncan,
The extent to which this court has gone in passing upon the law question of probable injury is even more fully illustrated by our comments about probable injury under Rules 434 and 503 in Aultman v. Dallas Railway & Terminal Co.,
“* * * The ‘whole record’ clearly includes the statement of facts, and there is small point in looking to the latter, if we are to ignore the most essential thing which it discloses, to wit, the state of the evidence. If the evidence is such that we believe the jury would in all probability have rendered the same verdict that was *509 rendered here, whatever the argument of the defendant’s counsel or lack of it, how can we logically say that the argument probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment based on that verdict? It is true that the rule in question cannot in every type of case be given the broad application which its words literally invoke. For example, in a case of an incorrect submission to the jury, we could hardly by-pass the error by making, in a sense, a decision on the weight of the evidence. Even in improper argument cases, we should doubtless consider the state of the evidence with much caution. But, with some slight apology to consistency, we think that in argument cases we may properly reason, as we do in this case, that since the evidence so preponderated in favor of the finding that the alleged accident did not occur, and since the worst of the offending argument had no direct reference to that specific matter, the argument probably did not cause the verdict and judgment to be as they were.”
In evaluating probable harm, this court has held that the preponderance of the evidence may be considered. Houseman v. Decuir,
We conclude that the plaintiff in failing to bring forward the statement of facts failed to prove that the misconduct of the jury rather than the state of evidence probably caused the jury to answer the special issue adversely to plaintiff. We reverse the judgment of the court of civil appeals and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
