Ernest Kronberger and Sandra Kraft appeal from an order denying Casey Kronber-ger a new trial on the ground that an ex parte communication between the judge and the jury was harmless error. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
This appeal involves a personal injury action against six-year-old Dustin Zins for damages sustained by seven-year-old Casey Kronberger in a “dirt ball fight” involving neighborhood children. At the close of Kronberger’s case, the trial court dismissed the claims against Dustin Zins’ parents, Arnold and Carolyn. After the jury returned a verdict favoring Dustin Zins and the court entered judgment, Kronberger moved for a new trial on the ground that the court improperly conducted ex parte communications with the jury contrary to section 28-14-19, NDCC. 1 In support of his motion, Kronberger offered affidavits from one of the jurors and the clerk of court.
The clerk of court’s affidavit indicated that during the jury’s deliberations, the bailiff received a note from the jury which he passed to the clerk. The clerk telephoned the judge at his home and relayed the question to him. She wrote the judge’s response on the note submitted by the jury, gave the note to the bailiff, and he returned the note to the jury. The juror’s affidavit stated that she “had written a note asking a certain question as to what the jury could or could not do which was given to Adam Geiss, the bailiff, and that the jury had received an answer to such question from the bailiff, who had informed them that the Judge had told them what they could or could not do.” The juror’s affidavit also contained a statement about the juror’s confusion with one of the *658 questions on the jury verdict form. 2 The special verdict form contained five questions. The first three inquired as to the existence of negligence on the part of Zins, Kronberger and “someone other than Dustin Zins, Casey Kronberger, or their parents .... ” The fourth asked the jury to apportion fault among Zins, Kronberger, and “other persons.” And the fifth question dealt with damages. Neither affidavit stated the content of the jury’s question or the judge’s response. The judge did not notify the parties when the question was submitted to him, and the note was not preserved.
In opposition to the motion for new trial, Zins offered second affidavits from the same juror and the clerk of court. The juror’s second affidavit stated that “the question I wrote out for the bailiff was whether the jury would have to award money damages upon a finding of 50 percent negligence on plaintiff Casey Kronber-ger and 50 percent negligence on defendant Dustin Zins.” The written response from the judge, the juror said, was “yes.” The clerk of court’s second affidavit contained a recitation of the question put to the judge that was identical to the juror’s. The clerk also stated she “contacted the Honorable Benny A. Graff by telephone and read the jury’s written question over the telephone to Judge Graff; that Judge Graff instructed [the clerk] to have the bailiff respond to the jury, in writing, that the jury was to complete the remaining questions on the verdict form.”
The trial judge agreed that his contact with the jury constituted error, but concluded that Kronberger was not prejudiced by the communication. In his order denying Kronberger’s motion, the Judge said, “The inquiry from the jury was generally in the nature of whether, upon answering question 4 of the special verdict form, it need proceed to question 5 of the special verdict form. The affirmative response of this Court was to allow the jury to assess whatever percentages of negligence it chose as well as damages.” Kronberger appeals from the denial of a new trial and renews his challenge based on the ex parte communication.
The decision to grant or deny a new trial rests in the sound discretion of the trial court and will not be set aside on appeal unless there is an affirmative showing of manifest abuse of discretion.
Olmstead v. First Interstate Bank,
Relying on
Ferderer v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co.,
Ferderer
was decided before the July 1, 1957 effective date of the North Dakota Rules of Civil Procedure and specifically,
*659
the harmless-error rule embodied in Rule 61, NDRCivP. Since the adoption of Rule 61, only two North Dakota cases discuss the burden of proving that an error is prejudicial, and not harmless, and they state that, generally, the burden is on the appellant.
Allen v. Eleven,
Kronberger offered proof that a written question was submitted by the jury to the judge and that the judge answered the question out of court, without notice to or the presence of counsel. Zins argues that the ex parte communication was not error because it was analogous to the instruction given in
Andrews v. O’Hearn
which we said was “proper.” In that case, we found that the non-prevailing party was not harmed by the judge’s repetition, without notice, of a previous, proper instruction admonishing the jury not to expose itself to material extraneous to the evidencé presented in trial.
The determinative issue is, therefore, whether the trial court abused its discretion by finding in effect that Zins had met his burden of proving harmless error. Harmless error exists when the defect in the proceeding does not affect the substantial rights of the parties. NDRCivP 61. Kronberger had a right to have the jury instructed as the parties agreed or with exceptions noted to instructions with which he did not agree. NDRCivP 51. Because the judge did not call the jury into court, as required by the statute, there was no record made of the question or the court’s response. The juror and the clerk of court’s versions of the question put to the judge vary from the judge’s own characterization of the question. The discrepancy illustrates the difficulty we face in reviewing the error acknowledged by the trial court to have been committed. Under either version, however, we view the jury’s question and the trial judge’s response as bearing on the law of the case and the jury’s application of that law in reaching its verdict. We cannot say that this ex parte communication did not harm Kronberger’s substantial rights.
Zins argues that the communication was harmless error under the rule of
Andrews v. O’Hearn,
Because Kronberger did not appeal from that portion of the judgment dismissing Arnold and Carolyn Zins, only Dustin Zins remains as a party defendant.
Notes
. Section 28-14-19, NDCC, provides:
“After the jurors have retired for deliberation, if there is a disagreement between them as to any part of the testimony, or if they desire to be informed of any point of law arising in the case, they may require the officer to conduct them into court. Upon their being brought into court the information required must be given in the presence of or after notice to the parties or counsel.”
. Because the first affidavit from the juror went beyond the questions of extraneous communication with the jury, and described the juror's mental state during deliberations, the judge could not consider that portion of the affidavit describing the juror’s “confusion.” NDREv 606(b);
Keyes v. Amundson,
