THERESA MESZAROS AND BALINT MESZAROS, PLAINTIFFS-RESPONDENTS, v. CAROLINA GRANSAMER, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.
Supreme Court of New Jersey
Argued December 3, 1956—Decided January 14, 1957.
23 N.J. 179
Mr. Francis M. Seaman argued the cause for the respondents (Messrs. Seaman and Seaman, attorneys).
JACOBS, J. This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiffs pursuant to a verdict of the jury in an automobile accident case. We certified the matter while it was pending in the Appellate Division.
On January 28, 1954 the plaintiff Theresa Meszaros was a passenger in an automobile being driven in a southerly direction along Route 1 in Middlesex County. The defendant was then the owner and operator of an automobile which, while being driven in a northerly direction, crossed the center safety island and collided with the automobile in which Mrs. Meszaros was a passenger. She was injured and she and her husband thereafter instituted their action in the Superior Court, Law Division, Middlesex County. After trial the jury returned its verdict for $7,000 in favor of Mrs. Meszaros and for $3,000 in favor of her husband. A motion for new trial was denied and thereupon the defendant filed her notice of appeal to the Appellate Division. However, she failed to file her brief and appendix in time and, in response to a motion to dismiss, the Appellate Division directed that she file her brief and appendix by April 2, 1956 and pay costs and a counsel fee. On April 2, 1956 the defendant filed a brief and appendix but the plaintiffs renewed their motion to dismiss on the ground that essential parts of the record had been omitted. The Appellate Division declined to dismiss the appeal but directed that
The first and main contention advanced by the defendant is that she is entitled to a reversal because the “B-Panel” of jurors from which her jury was selected was not drawn in compliance with
It seems entirely clear that in the instant matter the defendant suffered no actual harm or prejudice in the departure from
“This case was tried by a struck jury, and at the trial there was a written challenge to the array, because one of the 48 jurymen selected by the judge was dead; another was a fireman, exempt by law; and a third, whose name was on the panel of 24 jurors struck for the trial, was not summoned. The challenge was overruled, and an exception taken. There was no objection to the jury until the trial was called. Had the attention of the court been directed to these particular cases before that time, other names might have been supplied, or any omission of duty on the part of the summoning officer corrected. There is no allegation that there was any design or collusion for the purpose of affecting the trial, or that the defendants were prejudiced, and the statute makes ample provision for the rеquired number of jurymen by an award of tales to call others until the panel is filled for the trial. Patterson v. State, 48 N. J. L. 381, [19 Vroom 381]; King v. Hunt, 4 Barn. & Ald. 430.”
“Neither error in the admission or the exclusion of evidence, nor error in any ruling or order or in any action taken or omitted by the court, any аdministrative agency or public official or by any of the parties, nor any other matter, whether or not involving the exercise of discretion, shall constitute ground for granting a new trial or for setting aside a verdict or for vacating, modifying or otherwise disturbing a judgment, order or determination, unless a denial of the relief sought appears to the court to be inconsistent with substantial justice.”
Cf.
Dean Wigmore has reviewed fully the history and status of the rule that harmless or nonрrejudicial errors do not call for a new trial. See 1 Wigmore (3rd ed. 1940), 364. Cf. 7 Moore, Federal Practice (2d ed. 1955), 1001; Note, “The Harmless Error Rule Reviewed,” 47 Colum. L. Rev. 450 (1947). He points out that in the well-known case of
Since the creation of our new judicial system under the
In the Witte case this court, in an opinion delivered by Justice Heher, declined to reverse a conviction upon a showing of nonprejudicial errors and aptly summarized
“By rule of court, error in the denial of any matter resting in discretion, or in any other ruling or order made in the course of the trial, is not cause for reversal unless it is made to appear from the entire record of the trial proceedings that the accused ‘thereby suffered manifest wrong or injury.’ And it is also provided by the same rule that no judgment given upon an indictment shall be reversed for any defect of form or for ‘any error’ except such as shall have ‘prejudiced the defendant in maintaining his defense upon the merits.’
R. R. 1:5-1 . Such was the principle of section 136 of the old Criminal Procedure Act, enlarging the review on strict error. 2 Comp. Stat. 1910, p. 1863, sec. 136;R. S. 1937 2:195-16 . Vide State v. Yarrow, 104 N. J. L. 512 (E. & A. 1928); State v. Scott, 104 N. J. L. 544 (E. & A. 1928); State v. Lynch, cited supra [103 N. J. L. 64]; State v. Littman andWeinfeld, 86 N. J. L. 453 (Sup. Ct. 1914), affirmed 88 N. J. L. 392 (E. & A. 1915); State v. Lang, 75 N. J. L. 1 (Sup. Ct. 1907), affirmed Id., 75 N. J. L. 502 (E. & A. 1907).”
In 3 Am. Jur., Appeal and Error 600 (1936) the editors point out that the general principle “that error to be ground for reversal must be prejudicial” applies to matters relating to the jury including the procedure in its summoning and impaneling. And in 50 C. J. S., Juries, § 164, p. 890 (1947) substantially the same result is reached on the ground that procedural directions (embodied in statutes or otherwise) for summoning and impaneling the jury are ordinarily directory and departures therefrom do not call for reversal on appeal in the absence of prejudice or manifest injury. See 1 Thompson, Trials (2d ed. 1912), 37; Hilliard, New Trials (2d ed. 1872), 51; Thompson and Merriam, Conduct of Juries (1882), 112, 120; Grahаm, New Trials (2d ed. 1855), 34; 1 Waterman, New Trials (1855), 159. A long line of New Jersey cases has voiced approval of this latter approach. See Gardner v. State, 55 N. J. L. 17, 21 (Sup. Ct. 1892), affirmed 55 N. J. L. 652 (E. & A. 1893); State v. James, 96 N. J. L. 132, 142 (E. & A. 1921); State v. Calabrese, 107 N. J. L. 115, 116 (E. & A. 1930); State v. Simmons, 120 N. J. L. 85, 88 (E. & A. 1938); In re Housing Authority of City of Newark, 126 N. J. L. 60, 63 (E. & A. 1941); State v. Grundy, 136 N. J. L. 96, 101 (Sup. Ct. 1947); State v. Stewart, 2 N. J. Super. 15, 21 (App. Div. 1949). But cf. State v. Lapp, 84 N. J. L. 19, 21 (Sup. Ct. 1913); State v. Rombolo, 89 N. J. L. 565, 567 (E. & A. 1916). In the Gardner case the court, in declining to reverse a conviction for larceny, rejected a challenge to the array even though the sheriff had failed to comply with a statutory requirement that he maintain in his office a current list of the qualified jurors from which the general panel was to be drawn; in the course of his оpinion for the court Justice Depue expressed the general rule to be that “statutory provisions respecting the preparation of lists and the drawing of the panel are regarded as directory only, and that irregularities therein are no ground of challenge,
In State v. Rombolo, supra, the court reversed a first degree murder conviction because the sheriff had, without notifying court or counsel, placed in the box only 31 of the special panel of 48 jurors which had bеen drawn from the general panel; Chief Justice Gummere referred to the importance to the defendant of having all of the names from which the jury would be selected placed together in the box and found that the sheriff‘s erroneous conduct had “worked to the manifest injury of the defendant.” In contrast reference may be had to the much later case of State v. Calabrese, supra, which was likewise a conviction of murder in the first degree; there the Court of Errors and Appeals unanimously refused to reverse even though it assumed, for purposes of its holding, that there had been error in drawing from a part of the general panel rather than from the entire general panel. In the course of his opinion Justice Lloyd took the position that since all of the names in the box were those of potential jurors who were presumably qualified, the defendants could not assert prejudice because other qualified jurors were omitted; and he expressed the view that “harmless irregularities, even errors, cannot be availed of to defeat the results of a fair trial.” Since the case before us is a civil matter, we have no present occasion to pass on the precise scope of the harmless error doctrine in first degree murder cases. In State v. Wynn, 21 N. J. 264, 271 (1956), Justice Oliphant aptly suggested that where the life of an accused is at stake a stricter approach may be warranted;
Throughout history the ever present goal has been to attain a better system of justice which affords to every person a fair, inexpensive and speedy trial, unshackled by needless technicality and formalism. This goal is frustrated by every new trial for a procedural error which did not impair the fairness of the first trial nor the justness of the original verdict. In this day there should be ready recognition of the absence of justification for such new trial except in the unusual instance where it is really essential to insure future observance of a prescribed practice safeguard or the vindication of a fundamental principle. It will not suffice that we have solemnly set forth in a fоrmal practice rule (
“The problem of prejudicial error is a problem in profеssional psychology. No rules can be framed which will solve it, for rules can only be drawn in general terms, and it is in the interpretation
of the rules that the difficulty comes * * * The only permanent and effective cure for technicality in this respect is a better conception of the purpose of all procedure. In England in the year 1924 not a single case from the King‘s Bench Division was reversed for error in admitting or excluding evidence. That simple fact еxplains why the intricacies of practice no longer annoy the English lawyer. And it explains the success of the whole judicial establishment. Procedure has become a practical means to an end. Its rules are no more exacting than efficiency requires. * * * Every judgment which is reversed merely because obtained contrary to rules, shows a failure of the courts to serve the main purpose of their existence.” Sunderland, “The Problem of Aрpellate Review,” 5 Texas L. Rev. 126, 146 (1927), as quoted in 7 Moore, supra, at 1002.
We find no just basis for reversal in the appellant‘s first point and come now to her second contention which relates to the injection into evidence of allegedly “improper items of injury and damage.” After the accident, X-rays of the plaintiff Theresa Meszaros were taken and their readings which became part of the hospital record indicated, inter alia, that there werе fractures of the eighth and ninth ribs. When the plaintiff Theresa Meszaros answered interrogatories as to the extent of the injuries suffered she referred to “fractures of the left eighth and ninth ribs in the anterior line.” At the trial Dr. Wiesenfeld, testifying for the plaintiffs, examined the X-rays and stated that “the eleventh, tenth, ninth and eighth ribs show breaks—the most severe, of course, is the eighth and ninth.” Counsel for the defendant objected to the reference to the tenth and eleventh ribs because they were not mentioned in the answers to interrogatories; counsel for the plaintiffs then stated that the answers to interrogatories were based on the hospital record and that he was unaware of what the X-rays actually showed until the preceding day. However, he did not bring the discrepancy to the trial court‘s attention before calling upon Dr. Wiesenfeld to testify nor did he move for amendment of the answers to the interrogatories as cоntemplated by
The defendant contends thаt notwithstanding the court‘s ruling and instruction in her favor she is entitled to a new trial because of the doctor‘s original reference to the tenth and eleventh ribs. We consider her contention to be wholly without merit. Plaintiffs’ counsel should have brought the matter to the trial court‘s attention before the doctor‘s testimony was called for and this might have led to an amendment of the answers to interrogatories with a short continuance to enable such further inquiry and prеparation as the defendant‘s counsel might reasonably require. However, since the testimony came without prior warning, the trial court immediately sustained the defendant‘s objection and clearly instructed the jury to disregard the matter complained about. We assume that the jury did so and there is no suggestion whatever in the record to the contrary; under the circumstances a new trial would be uncalled-for under the enlightened principle embraced in
Affirmed.
WEINTRAUB, J. (concurring). The characterization as directory of a statute which does not purport to confer discretion does not mean that the officials chargeable thereunder are free to ignore it. On the contrary, so far as the officials are concerned, the statute is mandatory. 3 Sutherland, Statutory Construction (3d ed. 1943), sec. 5801, p. 76; In re Smock, 5 N. J. Super. 495, 501 (Law Div. 1949). It is with respect to the impact of a violation upon the result
I hesitate to subscribe to a blanket rule that all provisions relating to the selection of a jury are directory in the sense stated, or that absent an affirmative showing of prejudice there can never be a reversal except to vindicate a principle. Despite the breadth of languаge frequently used, the authorities, if measured in terms of results reached, do not go that far. See 3 Sutherland, Statutory Construction (3d ed. 1943), sec. 5825, p. 122; 1 Thompson, Trials (2d ed. 1912), secs. 33-4, pp. 37-41; Abbott, Civil Jury Trials (5th ed. 1935), sec. 65, p. 137; Abbott, Criminal Trial Practice (4th ed. 1939), secs. 182-3, pp. 331-338; Busch, Law and Tactics in Jury Trials (1949), secs. 87-8, pp. 133-7; 50 C. J. S., Juries, § 164, p. 890; 31 Am. Jur., Jury, sec. 77, p. 611. Rather, it seems to me that where the objection is timely made the test is whether the violation goes to the essence of the selection system, which usually means whether what was done or omitted operated to remove or to cast grave doubt upon the intended assurance of a fair and impartial jury. If it does, the violation may well be deemed to be prejudicial per se, especially if in the nature of things it is impossible to establish or exclude more specific prejudice, on an inquiry into the subject would necessarily lead to the kind of exploration of a juror‘s mental operations whiсh is proscribed for greater reasons of public policy. State v. Kociolek, 20 N. J. 92 (1955). Perhaps the expressions in this area would be less divergent than superficially appears if all started with a common conception of what constitutes a showing of prejudice.
I agree the violation here involved should not lead to a reversal, but I would reach that result on the test suggested above.
Mr. Justice BURLING has authorized me to state that he concurs in the views expressed herein.
BURLING and WEINTRAUB, JJ., concurring in result.
For reversal—Justices HEHER and OLIPHANT—2.
