Plaintiffs/appellants Robert and Vesta Meintzer brought this personal injury and loss of consortium action against defendant/appellee Charles Weinberg after plaintiff Robert Meintzer was injured by a weed eater operated by defendant. The jury returned a verdict against plaintiffs and judgment was entered accordingly. Plaintiffs appeal, enumerating three errors.
1. In their first enumeration of error, plaintiffs argue that the trial court erred in refusing to excuse juror Guy Sears for cause, which action, according to plaintiffs, forced them to use one of their peremptory strikes against the juror.
As to this issue, the record shows the following: Plaintiffs’ counsel asked the potential jurors to indicate if any of them believed it wrong for a neighbor to sue another neighbor, as was the situation in the case at hand. Juror Sears raised his hand and then responded “I just feel like it’s wrong to sue your neighbor under any circumstances.” Although during further questioning juror Sears indicated that he would try to follow the judge’s instructions, and that he would have to “weigh the circumstances,” he opined further that he did not think that he could be fair “because it’s wrong to sue your neighbor.” The juror concluded by indicating that his belief about it being wrong to sue a neighbor was a moral conviction held by him, and responded affirmatively when asked if he would have to go with his moral conviction above what the judge might instruct.
Under these facts, we agree with plaintiffs that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to disqualify the challenged juror, who clearly indicated a fixed and definite opinion in cases involving a neighbor against a neighbor. See generally
Morris v. Bonner,
2. We have examined plaintiffs’ remaining enumerations and find them to be without merit and unlikely to recur upon retrial.
Judgment reversed.
