147 N.Y.S. 900 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1914
If the verdict of a trial jury is to be considered as determinative of the credibility of witnesses and controverted questions of fact, the deliberations of the jury must be kept free from prejudice, passion or misake, and likewise free from the operation of influences foreign to the testimony actually received. If the defendant in a negligence action is to be entitled to assert that a jury verdict in its favor stands upon a special basis of immunity from judicial interference, so far as the weight of evidence is concerned, then surely the defendant’s counsel must share with the court the responsibility for seeing to it that such a verdict is in no way influenced by considerations outside the record, and certainly not by considerations explicitly refused a place in the record. Because convinced that the verdict rendered for the defendant in the case at bar was influenced profoundly, and perhaps brought about solely, by a flagrant infraction of these fundamental rules, the trial court accepts its own primary responsibility for the proper conduct of the proceedings before it, and directs that the verdict rendered be set aside and that a new and fair trial of the plaintiff’s claim be had.
The question here presented is, in substance, whether the trial justice, where he has sustained all the objections made to the conduct of counsel in reiterating to the jury the contents of vital documents not received in evidence and has instructed the jury that they should pay no heed to such statements by counsel, is bound to assume that his efforts to eradicate the effects of such misconduct were effectual, or whether he may nevertheless set aside the resultant verdict, if convinced beyond a doubt that the misapprehensions created by the conduct of counsel remained a decisive factor in the jury’s deliberations. The fact that it is seriously suggested that I have no right or power to
The action is for damages for personal injuries. The negligent acts complained of were those of the conductor and motorman on one of the defendant’s surface cars, in suddenly starting such car in motion just as the plaintiff, a man of upward of fifty years of age, was on the step of the car, in the act of boarding the same, at the south crossing of One Hundred and Sixth street and Madison avenue. The plaintiff was thrown to the pavement and injured. The defendant’s theory of the accident was that the plaintiff did not attempt to board the car until the conductor had rung the bell and the car was in motion, and that accordingly the plaintiff was blamable for what befell him. Inasmuch as the plaintiff concededly sustained some injuries and some loss of earnings, for which he would be entitled to be compensated were his version of the accident to be accepted, the jury must, under the circumstances of this case, be deemed to have believed and accepted the defendant’s version and to have determined that the plaintiff and his witnesses were unworthy of belief.
Under ordinary circumstances, a verdict so palpably reached by a determination that the plaintiff and his witnesses had committed willful perjury or had been grossly mistaken in their recollection as to the main facts of the occurrence, is peculiarly the kind of a verdict with which no court should interfere. After carefully reviewing the events of the trial, however, I am confirmed in the view, strongly held by me at the time, that this determination of the jury was brought
In deciding to set aside the verdict rendered before me, I am not unmindful of the claims made by the defendant as to the peculiar status of a verdict in its favor in an action like that at bar. A jury of twelve disinterested men of affairs, chosen at random from the community, is, of course, the best instrumentality yet devised for determining the credibility of witnesses and sifting out the truth where facts are controverted; and it is the settled law of this state that the court has no right or power to substitute its own judgment for that of a jury which has been permitted to hear
The course pursued by the trial counsel for the defendant offended most seriously against the principles above stated, and I have no hesitation in saying, from .a very close observation of the atmosphere of the trial and its developments, that this transgression was, in spite of such efforts as were made to eliminate its effects, the turning point of the trial and the decisive factor in the determination of the jury that the story told by the plaintiff was not to be believed; It is the common experience of men familiar with the workings of a. jury system that the mind of a jury is far more easily affected by tangible objects or documentary evidence than by oral testimony—evidence given formulation only at the moment of the trial. Especially in determining the credibility of witnesses, the contents of documents written out perhaps before the suit arose, or prepared by persons in no way interested in the outcome of the suit, are commonly very influential, or even decisive, with jurors, as affording a test of who is lying and who is telling the truth. No form of evidence is commonly given more weight, in the determination of whose oral testimony is to be believed and whose rejected, than the silent narrative furnished by the contents of documents the circumstances of whose origin were such as to negative all possibility that their contents were influenced by any exigency of the litigation. For the mute confirmation afforded by the contents of such a document, a jury has far more respect than for any technical rule of evidence which may
In the case at bar the credibility of the plaintiff and his witnesses, as compared with that of the defendant’s witnesses, was the sole issue in the case. This issue arose as to two questions: (1) The manner in which the accident happened; and (2) the extent of the plaintiff’s injuries, the duration of his enforced idleness, and the diminution in his earning power after he resumed work. Upon both of these matters the testimony of the plaintiff, confirmed in substantial portions by the testimony of other witnesses who bore some personal or business relationship to him, was clear, explicit, circumstantial and convincing — so much so that it inevitably became the principal contention of the defendant’s counsel that the plaintiff’s whole case was willfully perjured and that its circumstantial details were, to use the phrase of the defendant’s brief, “ creatures of the imagination of some one possessed of a more fertile intellect.” The testimony as to the extent of his injuries, the period of his idleness, the place at which he finally resumed work, and his diminished earnings thereafter, was equally explicit and detailed with that which he gave as to the happening of the accident; if one seemed true, the other seemed likewise true; and, if the plaintiff’s version of the accident were to be believed by the jury, the conclusion was irresistible that the defendant had been guilty of negligence.
Under these circumstances the defendant’s counsel placed on the stand Mr. Greenberg, of the firm of Greenberg & Co., and Miss Dunkelman, an employee
The defendant’s counsel thereupon had before him
Counsel’s persistence in stating the contents of the documentary evidence, over the plaintiff’s objections to such statement, made at the time, created irresistibly the impression that the plaintiff had willfully lied
When defendant’s counsel began to sum up the case to the jury, he again stated in substance what he believed the books would have shown, had they been received in evidence, and said that he regretted the court’s ruling that the jury could not have these docu
Must the trial court presume that the efforts which it made to induce the jurors to disregard and dismiss from mind the improper statements were wholly ineffectual, or may it set the verdict aside if convinced that its efforts were not effectual? I think that by the undoubted weight of American authority the trial justice has both the right and the duty to vacate the verdict. In Illinois it has repeatedly been held that to base argument upon, or draw inference from, excluded testimony in addressing the jury is an 11 improper and pernicious practice ” which constitutes ground for va
It will be noted that,, in the case at bar:
(1) Counsel for the defendant at no time acknowledged either the incorrectness of his purported statements of fact as to what the documents showed or the impropriety of his making such statements.
(2) He did not ask the jury to disregard Ms errone
(3) Although the admission or rejection of the books was the most conspicuous and hotly-fought issue of the trial, the jury was enjoined on only one occasion to disregard what defendant’s counsel had said were the contents of the books.
(4) No one ever suggested to the jury that what defendant’s counsel had said as to the contents of the books was untrue; the impression was left that the truth had been excluded from the case for purely technical reasons.
The leading American decision upon the subject is the luminous opinion of Chief Justice Ryan of Wisconsin, in Brown v. Swineford, 44 Wis. 282. The Wisconsin court held that it was “ error sufficient to reverse a judgment, for counsel, against objection, to state facts pertinent to the issue and not in evidence, or to assume arguendo such facts to be in the case when they are not.” The learned court also stated the reasons why the fact that efforts were made, on the trial, to-eradicate the effects of the objectionable conduct of counsel, cannot be deemed necessarily effectual to that end. “ Doubtless the circuit court can,” said Chief Justice Ryan, “ as it did in this case, charge the jury to disregard all statements of fact not in evidence. But it is not certain that a jury will do so. Verdicts are too often found against the evidence and without evidence, to warrant so great reliance on the discrimination of juries. And, without notes of the evidence, it may be often difficult for juries to discriminate between thé statements of fact by counsel, following the evidence and outside of it. It is sufficient that the extra-professional statements of counsel may gravely prejudice the jury and affect the verdict. ’ ’
In the case at bar it appears clearly (1) that the references to the extraneous matters were made in palpably bad faith, with plain purpose to prejudice, and with clear knowledge that the documents whose contents were stated had been explicitly rejected when offered, and (2) that such references practically beyond peradventure prejudiced the jury against the plaintiff, because indicating him to be wholly worthy of unbelief upon the vital issues of the case.
In Hodges v. Guardian Life Ins. Co., 51 N. Y. 638, the plaintiff’s counsel was permitted, in summing up, to read from and state, after objections, the contents of a certain pamphlet which had been rejected when offered in evidence, although proved to have been issued by the defendant. It was held that “ the ruling of the court was error which may have prejudiced the defendant, ’ ’ and a new trial was ordered. It has repeatedly been held by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court that where counsel for the plaintiff has indulged in remarks foreign to the record, for the palpable purpose of prejudicing the jury, a verdict for the plaintiff will be set aside, even though efforts were made by the court to impress it upon the jury that they should disregard such improper statements by counsel and be governed by the evidence alone. The error is not deemed necessarily cured and the prejudice necessarily removed by the court’s endeavors to that end. Bagully v. Morning Journal Assn., 38 App. Div. 522; Halpern v. Nassau Electric R. R. Co., 16 id. 90; Benoit v. New York Central & Hudson River R. R. Co., 94 id. 25; Strickland v. New York C. & H. R. R. R. Co., 88 id. 367; Stewart v. Metropolitan St. R. Co., 72 id. 459. In the Bagully Case, supra, a new trial was directed even where the plaintiff’s
I find nothing contrary to this view in Dimon v. New York Central & Hudson River R. R. Co., 173 N. Y. 356; Chesebrough v. Conover, 140 id. 382, or Cole v. Fall Brook Coal Co., 159 id. 59. In the Dimon case the Court of Appeals held that its power to review a judgment was necessarily based upon objections made and exceptions taken on the trial, and that it could not
Under the view above taken it is unnecessary to discuss at length the question whether the verdict was so shockingly against the weight of evidence as to require the trial court, as a matter of conscience and substantial justice, to set the verdict aside. I am of the opinion that such was the case, and the order vacating the verdict may so recite. A careful reconsideration of the testimony actually received in the case, the appearance and manner of the witnesses while testifying, and the whole atmosphere of the trial convinces me that to permit this verdict to stand would amount to a substantial denial of justice to this plaintiff.
The verdict of the jury is accordingly set aside, without costs, and a new trial ordered. The ease may be restored to the day calendar for trial on any day of the present term which may be agreed upon by counsel and incorporated in the order entered hereon.
Ordered accordingly.