This consolidated lawsuit arose out of an automobile accident which occurred in 1969. On March 25, 1976, a jury verdict was returned in favor of plaintiffs Joan and Loretta E. Hoffman and Charles J. Mentel against the defendants and in favor of the defendants against Rosemary Mentel, the driver of the car in which the other three plaintiffs were passengers. The jury was polled individually and affirmed the announced verdict. However, following discharge of the jury, the jurors approached the defendants’ attorney and told him that they had not meant to find against defendants. Defendants then moved for and were granted a new trial. This new trial resulted in a verdict being rendered for the defendants on December 29, 1978. Plaintiffs’ motion for new trial was denied. Plaintiffs now appeal as of right.
It is generally recognized that jurors may not impeach their verdict by oral testimony or by affidavit,
McDonald v Pless,
In Michigan, the present law on verdict impeachment is in great disarray. The advisory committee on adoption of the Michigan Rules of Evidence expressly declined to adopt a state counterpart of FRE 606(b) which would limit inquiry into the validity of a verdict or indictment; thus, we have no statutory guidelines. Committee Notes to MRE 606. Within the case law, there is language supportive of the "Iowa rule”, but this standard has never been expressly adopted. See
Graham, supra, People v Moreland,
In
Routhier, supra,
the Supreme Court upheld the trial court’s recalling of the jury the day after discharge. The Court stated that the judge properly set aside the verdict based on a juror’s affidavit that he had never agreed to the recorded verdict. In
Metz, supra,
the jury was polled and discharged. The Supreme Court upheld the trial
Confronted with this divergent case law, the Court of Appeals panel in Rushin, supra, chose to limit its post-discharge jury problem decision to criminal cases. Although this distinction was declared to be based on the double-jeopardy clause, most of the policy and reasoning put forth by the panel throughout the opinion applies equally to both civil and criminal cases.
It is clear that in jurisdictions applying the "Iowa rule”, the claimed error in the instant case could not be investigated through juror affidavits. Looking behind a verdict to determine if the finding is contrary to the jury’s intent is directly contrary to the rule prohibiting examination of jury mental processes.
Mitchell v Burleson,
A clear dividing line between allowing and disallowing verdict correction has been the discharge of the jury, often precursed by individual polling. Jury comment regarding errors inherent in the verdict will not be received after the jury is so released.
Van Wart v Van Wart,
We hold that in all cases, whether civil or criminal, once a jury has been polled and discharged, its members may not challenge mistakes or misconduct inherent in the verdict. After that point, oral testimony or affidavits by the jurors may only be received on extraneous or outside errors (such as undue influence by outside parties), or to correct clerical errors or matters of form. See
Mattox, supra, Harrington v Velat,
We acknowledge that a better rule would be that prohibited information will not be received following discharge alone, rather than following polling
and
discharge. However, this delineation would conflict with the almost 30-year-old case of
Routhier.
We believe that
Routhier
was wrongly
In Pizzino, supra, 105, the Supreme Court quoted from 8 Wigmore on Evidence (3rd ed), § 2355, p 4:
" 'Hence, the fact that the verdict as delivered was by one or more individual jurors not assented to by them in the jury-room, or
is different from the one there informally assented to by them, is no ground for later
We must conclude that the judge in this case erred in setting aside the first verdict following individual polling and the discharge of the jury, when the sole reason for doing so was the claimed disparity between the informal agreement within the jury room and the formal, on-the-record, unanimously and individually reiterated result at trial. See Metz, supra, Rushin, supra. This error unequivocally mandates reversal.
In light of the disposition of this case, plaintiffs’ other contentions need not be addressed.
Reversed and remanded for reinstatement of the original verdict and for judgment on that verdict.
