154 N.Y.S. 12 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1915
Each of these trials was presided over by a different member of this court, and none of them, upon the previous trials,-felt impelled to set the verdicts aside; and now 12 jurymen, in addition to the previous 36, have found the facts of this case in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant.
“If the provision of the Constitution is to remain ‘inviolate forever,’ it must not he violated either in form or spirit. There can be no justification, where there is évidence to support a proposition, to continually set aside the verdicts of juries until a jury happens to be found to agree with the trial court.”
He further said:
“ ‘When evidence is weighed, to determine whether a fact has been proven thereby, all the qualities going to make up what is termed ability and credibility in a'witness must be fully considered in order to arrive at a truth. And*15 who should so weigh and consider these qualities? Most evidently the jury. The court cannot discharge this duty for them, because the very opinion which they may form from these questions of ability and credibility in truth determines their finding. * * * If the witness, from want of intelligence, or from any other cause, is incompetent under the rules of law, the court will not permit him to testify; but, when the evidence of the witness is before the jury, all questions of credibility are for them, and for them alone.’ We have not seen the witnesses. We know nothing of their appearance upon the stand, and the thousand and one little matters that enter into the problem of credibility, and 36 men, fixed upon by the Constitution as the triers of fact, having held with the plaintiff, and even the trial justice not appearing to have acted upon any conviction of his own that the trial was not fair and impartial, it would seem to be time that we recognized the right of the jury to assume the responsibilities of this controversy and to end the litigation by restoring the verdict.” 126 App. Div. 307, 110 "N. X. Supp. 668.
In McCann v. N. Y. & Q. C. R Co., 73 App Div 305, at page 307, 76 N. Y. Supp. 684, at page 685, Justice Laughlin says:
“Where the right to a jury trial exists, it is intended that the verdict of the jury shall be conclusive upon the facts, in the absence of legal error or bias, passion, prejudice, or corruption. Verdicts are set aside as against the weight of evidence, and new trials are granted" on the theory that the jury have been influenced by bias, passion, prejudice, or corruption. Juries are sometimes thus influenced; but a case would have to present exceptional and extraordinary features to justify the inference that three different juries selected at different times, without any knowledge of the previous history of the case, would be thus influenced.”
And further on (page 308 of 73 App. Div., on page 686 of 76 N. Y. Supp.) he says:
“The court should hesitate lest it usurp the functions of the jury. A sufficient number of trials has now been granted to remove any suspicion of the existence of bias, passion, prejudice, or corruption, and it becomes a mere matter of judgment on questions of fact. The administration of jurisprudence, where trial by jury is preserved, goes upon the theory that the judgment of 12 laymen upon a question of fact is safer than that of a smaller body of judges who are more removed from the people. An unwarranted exercise of this power to set aside verdicts as against the weight of the evidence would sooner or later bring the judiciary into disrepute.”
See, also, Williams v. Delaware, L. & W. R R. Co., 61 App. Div. 444, 80 N. Y. Supp. 945, a case wherein a fourth verdict in favor of a plaintiff was held to be binding upon the court.
I am aware that the doctrine of the conclusiveness of three successive verdicts in favor of the same party, as announced in the McCann Case, was later overruled in the First Department in Meinrenken v. N. Y. Central & H. R. R. Co., 103 App. Div. 319, 92 N. Y. Supp. 1015. It has not, however, been abrogated in the Second Department, where the Ridgely Case is still followed. Four juries have without dissent agreed that the plaintiff in the present case has proved his case by a preponderance of the evidence. They are (or should be under our system) the final arbiters of .the facts; and, if I am compelled to choose between sustaining what I believe to be a just verdict and bearing the charge of apparent recalcitrance, I must, with the greatest deference, adopt the former alternative.
. Motion denied, and exceptions granted to both parties. Thirty days’ stay and thirty days to make case allowed after service of notice of entry of judgment.