124 Cal. 311 | Cal. | 1899
This action was prosecuted in the court below to recover from the defendant, a corporation, damages for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by its negligence. The plaintiff recovered judgment in the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, and defendant appeals therefrom and also from an order denying its motion for a new trial. After the appeal was perfected, said Cherubino Lombardi died testate, and Jeanne Lombardi, the duly qualified executrix of his will, was thereafter, by an order of this court, substituted as plaintiff and respondent herein.
Appellant contends for reversal:
1. Because the court should have sustained defendant’s challenge of the juror, Harris Schemansld, for cause; that because of the refusal of the court to sustain said challenge, defendant was obliged to challenge said juror peremptorily; that all its peremptory challenges were exhausted before the jury was completed, and thereby defendant was compelled to accept jurors whom it would have otherwise challenged peremptorily.
Counsel for appellant presents the question in two ways, being in doubt as to the proper practice. They first set out in their statement on motion for a new trial the examination of the juror, the ruling of the court denying their challenge, and an exception thereto, and specify said ruling as an error of law; and they also, in support of their motion for a new trial,
As to the question of practice it need only be said that the mode of presenting the question must depend upon circumstances. If the facts appear without contradiction, or in such form that but one conclusion can legally be drawn, it involves purely a question of law; otherwise, whether the juror is or is not qualified is a question of fact. Hence the circumstances of each case must determine the manner in which the question should be presented upon appeal. But it does not necessarily follow that because the court erred either as to the law or the fact that the judgment or order denying a new trial should be' reversed, because a challenge for cause was improperly disal-' lowed, since the constitution, while guaranteeing the right to an impartial jury, does not guarantee the right to any particular jury or juror. (Asevado v. Orr, 100 Cal. 293, 301.) If, therefore, it should appear, for example, that the court erroneously refused to sustain a challenge for cause, and the complaining party ivas thereby compelled to challenge the juror peremptorily, and it should be made to appear that a jury was- secured without exhausting his peremptory challenges, he could not say that by the erroneous ruling he was compelled to submit his case to a jury that was not wholly impartial. In this case the affidavit of counsel shows that all his peremptory challenges were exhausted before the panel was filled, and that the defendant would have exercised other peremptory challenges if they had not been exhausted, and these facts .stand unquestioned. If, therefore, the court erred in refusing defendant’s challenge to the juror Schemanski, the judgment and order should be reversed. (People v. Brown, 72 Cal. 392.)
The challenge was made under subdivision 7 of section G02 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section provides: “Challenges for cause may be taken on one or more of the following grounds: .... 7. The existence of a state of mind in the juror evincing enmity against or bias to or against either party.”
The juror, after being questioned as to residence, et cetera, was asked: “Do you know any reason why you cannot give a
Does this examination show “the existence of a state of mind in the juror evincing” a bias in favor of the plaintiff? If so, is this ground of challenge removed or overcome by the statement of the juror that if the evidence was against the plaintiff that he would go against him; that “he would go according to the evidence of the court,” and the other similar statements?
That the juror was candid, honest, and sincere in all his statements is beyond question; and any such man, if compelled to serve as a juror, would, to the best of his ability1-, decide according to the evidence and the instructions of the court. When pressed with questions of that character he could .only reply as he 'did. If he had said, “Yo; I will decide for my friend whatever may be the evidence,” he would have shown himself _ to be a man who would not even try to do right. It may be that some men may be just and impartial toward an enemy, or even remove from their minds and memory and heart all the leanings, inclinations, and desires that so naturally draw them to the side of a friend. But the statute makes no exceptions. It does not add the qualification: “But if the juror will swear that he can impartially try the case, notwithstanding his bias toward his friend, or his prejudice against his enemy, the challenge shall be disallowed.”
It is apparent that such an addition to the statute would make a material change; but can the court, by any line of examination it may see proper to permit, thus change it? Doubts that a juror may entertain as to the weight, effect, or credibility of the evidence are not to :be resolved by the ties or persuading in
Bespondent contends, however, that the evidence heard upon the trial of this challenge was conflicting, and that therefore the finding of the court cannot be disturbed. The only evidence heard upon the trial of the challenge was the testimony of the juror. As to whether the juror was biased in favor of the plaintiff there was not even the shadow of a 'conflict or contradiction, and the only controversy was as to whether, notwithstanding his bias, he could impartially try the case—a matter about which the juror could only express an opinion, and which could not be affected by its expression.
The right to unbiased and unprejudiced jurors is an inseparable and inalienable part of the right to a trial by jury guaranteed by the constitution. Upon this proposition all the authorities agree. As was said by Sir Edward Coke (1 Coke, 157, b.), in discussing the right of trial by jury, under the head of propter affectum: ‘Tor all which the rule of law is that he must stand indifferent as he stands unsworn.”
The rule excluding jurors for actual bias in civil cases must not be confounded with the rule stated in section 1076 of the Penal Code in relation to opinions founded or based “upon public rumor, statements in public journals, or common notoriety,” and which permits the acceptance of the juror “provided
Appellant contends that the court erred in admitting certain evidence as to the profits plaintiff was realizing from his business at the time of the accident, and in giving to the jury certain instructions on that subject.
The complaint, after alleging the cause and manner of the accident and the character of the injuries received, alleged that thereby he had suffered damage in the sum of ten thousand dollars. The complaint then proceeded as follows:
“7. That plaintiff has been for a period of three months confined and sick, owing to said injuries, and has been compelled to employ nurses and physicians during all of said time and up to the date hereof, to his damage in the sum of six hundred dollars.
“8. That plaintiff has been unable to attend to his business on account of said injury, and has been compelled thereby to hire said business and work done during all of the time since said accident, to his damage in the sum of two hundred and thirty dollars, and will be compelled to hire said work done in the future”; and prays judgment for ten thousand eight hundred and thirty dollars.
The accident occurred on March 31, 1895. It appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff, without objection, that at the date of the accident he was engaged in the restaurant business on Pine street, between Montgomery and Kearny streets, with his partner, Jules Semeria, each having an equal share in the business; that plaintiff was the chief cook, and that Semeria attended to the other part of the business; that after the accident he could not work, because he could not use his arm. The plaintiff was then asked by his counsel: “What was the income you were making from your business in March, 1895?” "Defendant objected on the ground that it was not an element of damage, and therefore immaterial and irrelevant. The objection was overruled, and an exception reserved. The witness an
Jules Semeria, plaintiff’s partner, called by plaintiff, was asked., in chief: “Can you state what the net proceeds of this business were, on the average, for some months prior to this accident?” Defendant objected that the question was immaterial and irrelevant, and not authorized by any allegation in the complaint. The court overruled the objection, and defendant excepted. The witness answered that it was on an average four hundred dollars per month. These rulings were erroneous.
Waiving the question whether in some possible ease the profits of the plaintiff’s business may be shown to be an element in the computation of damages in actions of this character, when properly pleaded, it must be clear, as a general proposition, that such profits cannot be looked to in- estimating the plaintiff’s damages. A business, such as that conducted by the plaintiff and his partner, includes capital as well as the services of other people, as shown by the evidence, and may be conducted without the personal attention or services of either or both of the owners. The complaint alleged that plaintiff was compelled to hire another to take his place and do his work, and alleged his damage because thereof to be two hundred and thirty dollars, and that covered all the time from the date of the accident to the filing of his complaint. What he paid represented the value of his time. There is no allegation that the business suffered, or was otherwise less profitable, because of his inability to do the work he had formerly done. The authorities are not agreed as to the extent to which the evidence may go in the absence of allegations as to special damages sustained by the plaintiff, but I know of no exception to the rule that where the plaintiff has. specially alleged a particular damage resulting from the injury, and the amount of such damage, that he is concluded by his allegation; and, having alleged the value of his time as the basis of estimating his pecuniary loss, he cannot give evidence of the net profits resulting from the business in which he was engaged. There are many eases in which it has been held that without a special averment the plaintiff may show that he was incapacitated from attending to “his business” or
In this connection we would refer to instruction No. 15, in which the jury were told that in estimating the damages to be assessed, while they could not take into account the wealth or poverty of the plaintiff, they could take into account the character and extent of the business in which he was engaged, together with the incapacity caused by the injury to transact such business.
Under the allegations of special damage set out in the complaint this instruction was misleading and erroneous, for reasons hereinbefore stated.
I advise that the judgment and order appealed from he reversed.
Gray, C., and Pringle, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Garoutte, J., Harrison, J., Van Dyke, J.